Memories of Zanzibar
by Zehra Peera 2002
From http://www.dewani.ca/af/guestbook/
of Abdulrazak Sheriff Fazal
I enjoyed going through your Memoirs. It brought back a lot of
pleasant memories, in particular those of Vaddi Bhajar(Hurumzi). It was indeed
a lively street and probably nicknamed “Vaddi Bhajar” by the Kutchi-speaking
settlers. The rows of houses facing each other, within earshot, shops on ground
level and dwellings above shops, created an atmosphere that made the early
migrants feel as if they were at a home away from home.
The shops in the street catered for most daily needs, such as
grains, spices, and herbal medicines. Most of the goods were imported from India .
Chocolates and biscuits imported from Britain were also available in our
shop on the street. Our shop carried the signboard advertising Cadbury’s
Chocolate over the door. In 1988 Issa, my husband, visited Zanzibar . He was shown a book in the planning
department about Zanzibar streets, prepared by a
team of Swedes working in Zanzibar .
The book had a picture of the Cadbury’s Chocolate signboard over our front
door. The Swedish architect who showed the book to Issa said that the signboard
was a feature of such curiosity that it deserved to be included in the book.
Name-tags were common in Zanzibar
as you mentioned in your Memoirs – some no very complimentary though! Mostly
they indicated businesses. In Vaddi Bhajar we had Jafu Msumari who sold nails
and cement, and we had Saleh Madawa who sold herbal medicines. As children we
were often sent to Chacha Saleh’s shop to buy herbal medicine. No sooner we
named the ailment to him, e.g. constipation, he stretched his hand out and drew
the right box from the shelf at the side or back without turning his head. He
knew precisely the position of the box on the shelf, and its contents. He
wrapped the right amount of herbs in the paper and handed it to us.
Our shop was a meeting place with Marhum Bha Taki on his chair (left
on baraza day and night) presiding over the group until late at night. We had
regular daily visitors from your end of the town as well as the other, Soko
Mohogo. The grand chair was on the baraza for a long time after the family’s
departure. In 1997 though, when I visited Zanzibar ,
after nearly 25 years, both the chair and the Cadbury’s signboard had
disappeared.
The Wednesday evening Majlis for men, and distribution of fateha to
children on Thursday evening were weekly family features. Besides men, a couple
of elderly women also came to Majlis regularly and we all sat in the room
across from the Men’s area, with curtains drawn across the door, listening to
recitations. As to Thursday’s fateha, I remember standing at our shop door
chanting “ Wa toto fateha” and hearing the response “ Kina nani” from afar. I
replied “Kina Ali Khaku”.
You must have been in the group of children returning from Forodhani
and knew what to expect. Besides the Wednesday Majlis at my house, one evening
every year Vaddi Bhajar would be closed to the traffic for celebration of
Hazrat Abbas’ birthday. It was like “Khushiali Ya Bankro” at Junni Masjid. On
one occasion Laila (your sister Zainab’s sister-in-law) and I, together with
some other children from the street, took part in reciting Kasida. I was
reminded of this occasion when I was talking to Laila recently.
Issa remembers attending a function once and being given a “ladu”.
These ladus were made by Laila’s aunt, Mami Tahakro, who lived in the vicinity.
The barazas in Zanzibar
served multiple purposes. The elderly on their long walks used to sit on them
for resting and the hawkers like Ali Bajia (another name-tag) put their wares
on the barazas to serve their customers.
As children we used barazas to play a game called “ crocodile
chase”. The street was the ocean and the barazas were the shores where we would
be safe from the crocodile’s jaws. Also, to avoid being run down by fast-moving
hamali carts delivering goods from
the wharf to the shops, we jumped onto the baraza when we saw one coming.
The street separating the rows of houses on either side were so
narrow that we could hear and see what went on inside the households around us.
Neighbours standing at their windows gossiped across the street space. We threw
packets of eatables to our friends through their windows. We also sat at the
windows to listen to new songs from the Indian films being played in the
neighbourhood, to memorise the lyrics.
Growing up as children in Vaddi Bhajar, life was never dull. During
Ramadhan, as the dusk approached, someone from my household and someone from
your grandparent’s house would stand at the windows. Laila would be at her
window from which she could see the minaret at Nai Masjid. When she saw the
Muazzin reaching the top, Laila would come over to the window overlooking our
house and cry, “Haya”, at which we rushed to the dinner table.
We had good connection with Parsees. We were friendly with quite a
few Parsee families because we attended the same school as their children, Saint Joseph ’s Convent
School . Dara Mistry’s
family lived in the neighbourhood and as children we spent a good deal of time
with them. According to Issa, I speak Gudjerati as Parsees did, which was
somewhat peculiar.
In your memoirs you describe Washiri
coffee sellers. Their style of pouring coffee in tiny cups and stopping in time
to avoid overfilling the cup was a skillful performance. So was the juggling of
cups to announce their arrival. A coffee seller had certain streets for his
territory by common consent with others to avoid competition. On his rounds, he
would stop at the shops and pour coffee for the shopkeeper and whoever else was
present in the shop.
A shop was a venue for trading gossip and rumours. The coffee seller
was also a purveyor of news, rumours and gossip which he picked up on his
rounds. To this day, Issa brews coffee which he calls Kahawa ya Unguja every morning and drinks it from one of the tiny
cups brought from Zanaibar. I even have a doll replica of the coffee seller in
his traditional costume carrying his dele.
Occasionally I make Haloowa Ya Manga which I learnt to make from
Ukera Kassamali Peera on one of my visits to California . Dinesh Pandya's letter took me
back to my student days in Arya Samaj.as well as my teaching days at Bait ul
Raas. I remember his father panpati shop under Arya Samaj. Harish Pandya was my
student at the Teachers' College Zanzibar .
I have written a couple of articles on Zanzibar
too. One article was prompted by an article I had read in the local paper which
opened with the words "The light
died, the fan stopped, I fell for Zanzibar .