Zulu Lesson Longing
I blame Hollywood. It’s dead, but its lines are kept alive by Nigerian movies, Netflix, Tyler Perry soaps and YouTube movies. ‘I miss you,’ says Jack to Jill.
Today’s lesson is about the sun. Miss you is langaza in Zulu. Miss is not even appropriate because it has a connotation of something that is misplaced and found eventually. It’s like mama coming back from work and saying: Where are my kids? You know I can’t talk back and say mama I’m here. That’s the cross I have to bear as the first daughter.
La-nga-za is longing, very very long longing. It comes from the sun, which is called ilanga in Zulu. That feeling must be good if it’s named after something wondrous like the sun. Langaza is dangerous because it invades your whole face, and prompts people you live with to ask if there’s something wrong. It's painful like Rihanna when she sings Diamonds. She always cries. Longing shuts out everybody else and zooms in on one person who is not in the room, but under the floorboards of memory.
La-nga-za. You say the first part like lie, the second like hunger and the last part like Zara.
By: Nonqaba waka Msimang.
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