Aziz Hassim - a short biography and bibliography of this KwaZulu-Natal author.
Durban-born Aziz Hassim, now a retired accountant,
spent most of his early years fraternising on the streets
in Durban's Casbah area.
The Casbah, a predominantly Indian - but also
multicultural - area had a kind of romance and bittersweet
lifestyle during the fifties and sixties, which lives on
only in the minds of those that inhabited
it at the time. Hassim's debut novel, The Lotus
People, which won the 2001 Sanlam Literary Award for
an unpublished novel, spans the events and moods of
this era and served as a form of catharsis for the 66 year
old Hassim. While he
calls the cleansing process his "personal TRC",
he also wished to record a past
he is convinced has disappeared forever for the younger
generation who think he
is "making up stories" when he tells them about
that era. Although Aziz Hassim
carried the novel within himself, it is by no means
autobiographical, but rather
a product of the environment he lived in during those
days. Of this novel, poet
and author, Stephen Gray says,
"Hassim's unputdownable tale is the sort that
vindicates what Sanlam is doing. It is one of those one-off,
unpredictable
things ... an absolute masterwork that has never seen the
light of day." Aziz
Hassim is currently working on his second novel, which he
expects should be
ready for publication in 2006.
Selected WorkFrom The Lotus People (2002)
Within a few minutes they were back on the
street, at the corner of Commercial and Grey Streets. At
last, Jake stopped and
lit a cigarette. "The Casbah is another world, Sam.
Another country. When you
know your way around an army of cops wouldn't find you.
You could disappear for
weeks, move around freely. And don't ever think this is
the only such place. You
can lose yourself just as easily in the Dutchene or May
Street or in any of a
dozen other mini Casbahs."
"But we're not ducking from anybody, Jake. Why didn't
we just walk on the
pavements?"
"It's not wise to be seen all the time. The less
anyone knows where you are the
better. It's a good rule to follow."
Jake was on the move again. A hundred yards in front of
there was the West End
Hotel, at the corner of Pine Street, and he headed for it.
After a few minutes,
they entered the non-European bar. Sam saw Sandy, sitting
on a stool. As soon as
Sandy saw them he stood up and signalled to the elderly
barman and whispered
something in his ear. The barman nodded and jerked his
thumb over his shoulder,
pointing to a room behind him. Sandy ducked under the
swing top and Jake and
Sam followed.
They settled around a rickety wooden table, the
uncomfortable globe chairs
creaking under their weight. Sandy wasted little time on
preliminaries, getting
straight to the point.
"Sam, there's something we would like you to do for
us. It's very important and
if you're game we'll make sure you do well out of it. It
isn't anything heavy
and, if you're sharp, you won't get into trouble. How do
you feel about it?"
Sam simply shook his head up and down, feeling a little
excited at the prospect
of being a part of whatever Jake and Sandy had in mind.
Sandy studied him carefully for a long while before he
spoke again, choosing his
words with care. "How much do you know about the
gangs in town?"
Sam's forehead began to crease as he thought about it.
"I've heard of the gangs,
we talk about them in school all the time. But I only know
some of the Dutchene
guys, to say hello to ..."
Sam had led a fairly cloistered life and was still too
young to understand the
structure of the many street gangs that operated in the
various Indian and
Coloured communities around the city. Their status was
clearly defined and,
although all of them were of mixed orientation, mainly
Indian and Coloured,
there were a few African members within each grouping.
Regardless of which race
group predominated, the leader was always the best street-
fighter or the most
fearless and daring amongst them. In the school-grounds it
was these leaders
whose names were mentioned in awe and a touch of hero
worship.
zoom
 Hassim in Grey Street
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Bibliography2002. The Lotus People.
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