But Africa was not
paradise and life could be as hard here as the life that they had left
behind. Crops failed to germinate or died from lack of water, they had
to protect themselves from furiorous wild animals and there were different
illnesses from the ones they had faced at home. Some people returned
home disillusioned. Others stayed because, although it was not paradise,
it was still a beautiful country lit by a golden light. The boy loved
the country he lived in. He loved the smiling, hardworking people who
moved lethargically though their day, as if they were aware of the brevity
of their lives and had no wish to hasten to its demise. But he wanted
something more. Like most children he needed to escape from the reality
surrounding him into a more exciting world. Whilst his friends lost
themselves in their books and their games, the world he lost himself
in was bigger, and visible to all on the large silver screen at the
only cinema in the country. That was where he wanted to be. Not on the
ground with the rest of the people but elevated above them, flickering
in the dark, forever immortal.
Sometimes at night,
when it was too hot to sleep, he would creep out of the house and lie
on the cooling ground. The sky would be spread above his head like a
thick, dark-blue, velvet blanket covered in tiny moth holes that allowed
the light beyond the blanket access to earth. Lying there, listening
to the sounds of an African night and staring at the distance flickering
stars, the images from the silver screen would flash across his mind
and he knew that one day he would have to leave.
Africa is not actually
a country, it is a continent made up of lots of countries, many of them
financially improvised. The boy became a man and in order to fulfil
his dream he had to leave one continent and travel to another. So he
left his country in the south of Africa and eventually arrived in England.
England was very different from his homeland. It was cold and full of
unsmiling people who rushed about. The noises were different. The noise
of machines filled the air here; aeroplanes, cars, even snatches of
thumping music. It smelt different too; exhaust fumes and fast food,
cigarette smoke and artificial perfumes. But mainly the light was different,
some days it was grey and the sun refused to shine, other days it was
as clear as crystal and some days it had a blue quality, but it was
never golden.
The man clung to his
boyhood dreams. He had already started to convert them into a reality
at home with study, and by grabbing any acting opportunities he was
fortunate enough to be presented with. Now, alone in his new home, he
had to keep on trying. Yet he knew he could do it. Slowly others started
to believe he could too. Sometimes the acting parts were small. Sometimes
no one seemed to want to let him act. But enough people were willing
to give him his chance and he was able to repay their faith in him.
But when his dream had come true he discovered that creating one star
in the sky wasn't enough, he had to create more until the sky was covered.
No one's dream dies when it is fulfilled. Instead, phoenix-like, another
raises to take its place. So the man continues to stride onwards as
more stars appear in his sky.
Sometimes, when the
man is alone, he looks at the night sky over the crowded London rooftops.
The pollution from the thousands of street lamps mean that it is less
dark than the African sky of his childhood and he sighs. One day he'll
return to Africa with its strange beauty, its golden light and its dark
sky full of real stars.
Denise J Hale
26th October 2001
Not to be reproduced in any form without permission from the author.