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Khalil’s Journey by Ashraf Kagee, Winner of the 2012 European Literary Award

Released from Jacana:

Ashraf Kagee, winner of the seventh annual European Union Literary
Award, evokes the richly-textured beauty of everyday life of the last
century’s Cape Malay and Indian cultures, and deftly captures the lyrical
resonance of voices long forgotten by history.
Khalil, ‘the Companion’, is given his name by The One Above at his birth
in 1903. Despite evidence of this divine interest, Khalil’s eighty-odd years
of life remain fairly ordinary – even though many of these years are spent
under the far from ordinary conditions of The System in South Africa.
In fact, apart from the high moments – an adolescent trip to India, the
fleshly delights on his wedding night, and a memorable evening spent with
the Black Pimpernel at an abortive meeting organised by the New Unity
Movement – Khalil’s later life is mostly taken up with trying to keep his
wife and children happy and fed, first as the owner of a general dealer in
Woodstock, Cape Town, and later as a less-than-convinced lackey in a
wheeler-dealer consortium selling polonies and saffron. Nevertheless, just
as Khalil’s birth was a matter offering material for considerable discussion
for the doekie-wearing aunties of the neighbourhood, at the end of his life
Khalil finds there is more than enough to chew over in his life’s journey.

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