Agnes Lottering - a short biography and bibliography of this KwaZulu-Natal author.Agnes Lottering (1937 - ) was born in rural
KwaZulu Natal’s Ngome Rain Forest. Her parents were
Benjamin
and Winnefred Rorke (neé) Nunn, both born of mixed
relationships. Agnes grew up in Ngome and attended the
Little Flower School, a Catholic mission boarding school in
Eshowe. She was forced to leave school after passing Std 6
so that she could help her ailing mother on their farm.
Her first love was Pieter - the son of a white farmer. Her
father disapproved of the relationship. She left Nongome to
take up residence in Vryheid. Here she met and married the
abusive, alcoholic, Lemmy Lottering, a man her father
despised. Her marriage to Lemmy Lottering caused her to be
estranged from her family.
Agnes and Winnefred took ten years to write - by
hand. It is
a book about family secrets and the author’s search for
identity. It tells the story of Winnefred, who, after having
two illegitimate children, is branded ‘spoilt’
by the
community. When widower Benjamin Rorke marries her, her life
takes an unexpected turn and she finds happiness, albeit
temporarily. Her happiness is short-lived when there is
fallout with the local Zulu chief and strange things start
happening to Winnefred. Her strange behaviour was believed
to be the result of the chief practising witchcraft on
Winnefred as his revenge against Benjamin. Agnes tells the
story of her mother from her own perspective.
zoom
 Agnes Lottering (Photograph reproduced with the permission of Marieke du Toit, Durban South Photography project)
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The second half of the book is Agnes’s own story: how she
grew up and how she fell in love for the first time. It is a
lost love and she moves away to Vryheid, to escape her
father’s abuse. She marries Lemmy Lottering and has four
children – two girls and two boys. After enduring many
years
of severe abuse at the hands of her alcoholic husband, Agnes
is forced to send her children to a children’s home in
Durban. Although this decision is painful for her and her
children, Agnes realises that it is the only way to shield
her children from their abusive father. She rationalises
that at an institution they would be fed properly and also
get a good education. She triumphs in the end when she moves
to Durban and is reunited with her children. She gets a job
in the clothing industry. Although the abuse by her husband
continues, she eventually becomes free of him when he is
institutionalised after being diagnosed with brain damage
caused by excessive alcohol abuse.
Agnes also finds new love – the kind she says she
never had
with her husband. She meets Tom, a policeman who saves her
from being nearly killed by Lemmy. For the first time she
experiences real romance. But this relationship is also
short-lived when Agnes is diagnosed with cancer. Although
she is treated and is rid of the cancer, she lives with the
fear that the cancer may return. She therefore turns Tom
away despite caring very deeply for him.
The book incorporates South African history of the early
apartheid era and also gives insight into how the apartheid
system thwarted inter-racial relationships. It also
highlights the role early pioneers played in South African
history.
Agnes Lottering lives in Wentworth, Durban.
Extract from Winnefred and Agnes (2002)
How do we explain this urge, which all the early pioneers
seem to have felt? I believe it was related to the fact that
they looked at this land and liked what they saw. Imagine
what it was like, or what it must have been like in their
eyes. It must indeed have seemed a Garden of Eden. The
intertwining pathways formed a tapestry of breathtaking
beauty; you saw only what the Creator himself had created.
It’s easy to imagine that the sensational rare beauty of
savage Chaka Land could cause a total delirium. My feeling
is that nothing could dampen the pioneers’ insatiable
appetite to conquer that which is rare and primitive.
This was a paradise, indeed a land of milk and honey, a land
free for everyone to roam and cultivate at pleasure and
leisure. There were no roads, no bridges, no railways and no
towns. There was simply no one to harass them for any kind
of market or industry. They were therefore independent,
self-contained, self supporting, and very resourceful. The
openness and freedom of choice must have overwhelmed them
with a kind of frenzy. Sometimes I think of it in the form
of a dream – vivid, grotesque, and yet real. An epic in
which people and terrain are indistinguishable.
Even the mystic dongas, wearing their ancient blood-stained
cloaks – showing a deeper dent here, and an even
deeper gash
there, as though a sword had left a gaping wound to bleed
forever – never bothered the pioneers. Terrifying ravines,
with their broken teeth and stubble beards of coarse briars
and thistles, and stagey old parched river beds seemed to
whisper in a hoarse thirsty undertone to the mountains who
bore such strong, unshakeable granite necks. And they all
seemed to turn around and utter a croaking sound: ‘Hey
there, brother – give a man a handshake.’
These pioneers were like knights – not in shining
armour –
in tattered and torn old battered ten-gallon hats, galloping
with the wind, leaving a trail of male essence. In stinking
riding breeches and far more stinking long-johns, concealed
by old soldiers’ uniforms, and smelling worse than their
horses’ perspiration, they headed, headstrong beyond all
measure, straight down the Tugela, down the Ulundi Valley,
across the Black and White Umfolozi, down to Pongola and
into the waiting arms of Swaziland where some of them found
peace and solace at last.
One interesting story about my grandfather, James Michael
Rorke, tells how the Great Chief Myeni of Ubombo got to know
about this noble white man and summoned him to go to the
rescue of his eldest son, who was being held to ransom in a
war in Swaziland. Chief Myeni, who inspired fierce respect
among his subjects, summoned his trusted indunas to travel
to Ngome where the young James Michael lived with his first
Zulu wife, who already had a few children, to ask him this
great favour. Would he dare to go to the rescue of the
Chief’s son in Swaziland? This was a risky task, but the
brave soldier could not refuse the Chief.
The journey to Swaziland took three days on horseback and
somehow James Michael succeeded in the rescue. He had to tie
the Chief’s son to his stirrup, allowing his weight to
hang
and float in the Pongola River which was swollen in flood.
The safe return home of his son caused great excitement at
the chief’s sprawling kraal. It was something unheard of:
the whole area was shouting and chanting warrior songs of
praise to this gallant white man who had done such a brave deed.
The white soldier had to go back home once the feasting was
over, but first the Chief called up the indunas to discuss
what reward would be suitable. They gathered in the cattle
kraal, as was customary in the Zulu nation – for that is
where all big indabas were finalised with the headmen. The
chief asked for order, and while everyone was all ears
announced that he would give the white man his daughter in
marriage, for that was the dearest and most valuable gift a
man could have – a gift to make a man of a man!
James Michael could not refuse. It would have been
discourteous and disrespectful not to accept such a gift
from the Chief. Of course many cattle were also given to him
together with the bride.
Bibliography
2002: Winnefred and Agnes: the true story of two
women For more information please visit
KZN Literary
Tourism
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