The long journey of Oupa Lodewyk
It is pitch dark but for my car’s headlights; the N1 is vast and empty. It’s Friday 14 June 2019 and I’m on my way to Colesberg after an absence of nearly four years. I’ve finally finished my documentary film, The Lost Carts of the Karoo, which I began making in 2012. The family at the heart of the film, the Louws, have moved from their two-roomed zinc shack in Plakkerskamp, a township on the shoulder of the R369 on the north-western fringe of Colesberg, to their first ever brick house in Riemvasmaak, a sprawling RDP-built neighbourhood that stretches nearly 2000 structures deep into what was once just barren veld.
The Louw household consists of Oupa Lodewyk Slinger, Ouma Sina Louw, two of their sons, Salman and Isak Louw, Isak’s wife Hanneline, and her and Isak’s three children, Celeste, Hayno and Lizandre. (Oupa and Ouma were never legally married, hence their sons carry Ouma’s surname.)
Oupa Lodewyk and Ouma Sina were once karretjiemense (cart people), which is to say they spent most of their lives traversing the Karoo in a donkey cart, working from farm to farm, often as sheep shearers and fence-fixers. The cart would carry all their belongings, including dogs, chickens and heavy corrugated iron sheets to build a home once they’d reached their next destination.
Most of their 12 sons – of whom six are still alive – were born on the road. Some, like Isak, left the Karoo in
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