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Title: “Superintendent Officer Mthembu”
Author: Leroy Maisiri
Date: October 11, 2016
Language: en
Topics: police brutality, poetry
Source: Retrieved on 10th December 2021 from http://anarkismo.net/article/29677

Leroy Maisiri

“Superintendent Officer Mthembu”

If our pain was turned into an art museum the most popular exhibit would

showcase portraits of the South African Police Service with our bodies

on the floor as their footstools. Our silenced screams chock up the

airways in our throats, our tracheas burst out and with both hands we

grab the artery veins in an attempt to contain the bleeding, trying to

redirect this blood, this life back into the cause and yes, bang, bang,

bang; you keep shooting and yes bang, bang, bang, we keep running.

But please first allow me to start this poetic prose in Joza extension

7, the peripheral of the township itself almost excommunicated from the

centre of Grahamstown. Somewhere unclearly mapped by angry ground stones

who share their space with the kind of dust that does not easily settle

well on the road, is what looks like an afterthought of an RDP house. In

it is Superintendent Officer Mthembu. A child of the working class.

Mthembu on his tea breaks always jokes about how he wanted to be a

lawyer, most of his stories start with the words “and during the

apartheid…” he would recall those memories so well, remembering quite

clearly all the fights, the protests, the revolutionary climate that

engrossed South Africa. His stories would also always end with “...if

only I could afford the fees in ’94, I would have been a qualified

lawyer like Madiba”.

You would think that would be the cue for disappointment to enter the

space, to remind him that he was just another causality of a system that

did not care for his dreams, but like a comma with no manners, his smile

interrupts his thought process joining his past failures together with

the apple of his eye, his only beloved daughter Siphokazi, a final year

LLB student who carries her dreams in the same back pack loaded with her

father’s dreams and NSFAS loans.

On Wednesday the 28^(th) of September 2016, Siphokazi has all the

candles lit in their home, it’s still early not even dawn is aware of

how the day will unfold. 4 am sharp the good officer jumps to attention,

not waiting for the hot water that doesn’t exist; he tidies himself up

and rushes to report in for duty. Siphokazi awaits the slow pace sun

rise to commence before she can decide it’s a safe time to start the 10

kilometer walk to campus, she spent the entire night researching on

interdicts, and the right to free education.

It’s nearly been two weeks since the events of 28^(th) September she

tells me, she says they ran in all kinds of direction that day, shocked

at how something so small could hurt so much. The images rock her mind

so much I feel like I am extracting a physical memory as it tears

through her forehead and fills the room.

She takes me back to the lawns within campus, she points to the Drostdy

lawn walls with such disappointment in their in ability to shield the

students. On my right is a student I have never met before rolling on

the ground as if he is on fire only trying to locate where the pain is

coming from. On my left 9 students run into each other in chaotic

harmony, stun grenades go off again and again. I feel anger and fear

simultaneously race up to my temple. The corner of my eye catches two

female students attempting to run in the chaos, both their hands find

each other; they clatch on to each other as two lovers would in a dark

tunnel, but the grip tightens, the hand holding generates sweat that

turns into glue “don’t let go!” they both shout. I reach out my hand I

want to tell them it’s all over now, that this is just a memory, that in

this moment right now we are all in Siphokazi’s memory.

Truth is the police have been slaughtering generations long before we

even started looking for our voices. That on most days standing on

campus corners makes us feel like an endangered species, that at any

point we can be left looking like red confetti splatted on a concrete

sidewalk. That our voices sound unhinged, almost like the voices from

the primary and secondary high school kids whose dreams are lynched on a

daily basis. Dreams executed Monday to Friday by the failing education

system. Such that by high school all we have is a large spectacle of

hangings that occur at least twice a year –called exams.

There is nothing to examine if you cannot account for the massive

unlearning that needs to occur instead all it is – is an execution.

Bang, Bang, Bang! – shooting continues. The memory of September 28^(th)

feels like the first time the death of a close family member wraps

itself around you.

All of a sudden I remember the most profound metaphysic question, “if a

black body unarmed is shot by the police in broad day light, in front of

everyone, does it make a sound”. Does it matter? Did it really happen?

Working class struggle is not just a matter of theory; police brutality

is absolute despite your level of awareness. It’s not about keeping the

streets safe anymore; it’s about keeping them empty.

They make bullets different these days, these new bullets do not go in

and out, they get absorbed in the body – same function as a tampon to

suck and pull in all life. There is after all some reason why these

bullets seem to fall in love with melanin given the way they pursue us,

some reason why shotgun shells never run out for the working class. I

guess it’s pretty hard to fight back when all you have are your fists

and unhappiness.

Its September the 28^(th) 8pm, Superintendent Officer Mthembu arrives

home, extremely exhausted, he has scratch marks he cannot explain,

probably another protestor resisting arrest. He is greeted by the

emptiness of the one bedroomed house. According to memory by now

Siphokazi would have long been home and made him something to eat. He

grabs his cell phone only noticing now that he hasn’t paid much

attention to it all day. 19 missed calls from his daughter, 23 missed

calls from a private number, 10 text messages all of them looking like

an SOS, one reads – “hie sir your daughter was shot by the police today,

police opened fire on us with rubber bullets unfortunately Siphokazi was

in the front she got hit in the throat. She said if she doesn’t make it

– it’s important you know she was fighting for free education for the

both of you.