Ah,
Woe Is Me
A)
Summary of The Story:
In the
beginning of this short story we are introduced to Sarah, an aging black
servant living in South Africa. She works hard for an upper-class white family
and spends all of her money on education for her three children who are sent to
a boarding school. They come home once a year at Christmas, and the first time
the narrator meets the children, she is surprised at their well-mannered
behaviour. She finds, however, that Sarah is a bit harsh towards them, and she
comments on this. Sarah tells her that it is better to learn the lesson now and
grow to accept one's fate later. In the course of the following year, Sarah
must give up her job because of her legs, and one day her daughter comes to the
house. Slowly she tells her story to the narrator. How the younger brother is
working now, and how she is taking care of Sarah. The narrator offers her some
clothes and some money and invites her inside for a cup of tea. When she is
about to leave, she starts crying and can only mutter that her mother is very
ill. Unsure of what to do, the narrator hands her a handkerchief.
B) An
Essay About the Text:
The
setting in this story is South Africa in the 1950's. Apartheid and segregation
are words that describe the conditions under which the blacks (the native
Africans) live perfectly. The blacks nearly have no rights and must accept
being oppressed by the whites. Sarah is only one of many poor blacks who only
just manages to earn a living by working as a servant for a rich white family
(the narrator). Slavery does not exist anymore, but it can be difficult to
distuingish the life of a slave from that of a native African in the 50's
except from the fact that they do after all get paid for their work. Sarah is
very concerned about her children getting a good education. She probably wants
them to have a better life than she has had so far, and while that is a very
noble thought, the facts speak against it. Her children do not at this time
have a very good (if any) chance of getting a good solid education because it
is very expensive, and their mother does not make that much money. Even if she
did make enough money, her legs are bad, and at the end of the story, she has
to give up her job (and thus take her children out of the boarding school)
because she cannot afford to pay for the school. This is what could look like
the final blow to her children's future success in life. No education means no
chances of getting a better life in South Africa (and just about everywhere
else, too). But what if she did have enough money to give her children a proper
education - would that guarantee the children a good future life? I gravely
doubt it. As I said before, the blacks live almost like slaves, and as such,
they do not have the opportunity to climb the social ladder. All in all,
Sarah's hopes and dreams for her children are all very noble, but,
unfortunately, at that time and place, very unrealistic.
The narrator does not treat Sarah any better
than most other white people in South Africa at this time. While she allows
Sarah's children to stay in her house during Christmas, I think the only reason
she does it is because she tries to escape her own bad conscience. It is
Christmas after all. Throughout the rest of the year, she does not even think
about helping Sarah's children financially so they can stay in school. Even
though she presumably has more money than Sarah will ever see, the thought of
helping her servant out does not strike her at any point in the story. Her
servant is her servant, and servants' children are not someone she thinks
about. This point is also very clear to see when one reads the description of
the narrator's thoughts about Sarah's children. She is surprised at how well
they behave, how good their manners are; as if she was expecting a horde of
wild animals instead of normal human beings. She is undoubtedly not the only
one to think this way about the blacks, they were considered animals by many
white people at that time. However, the narrator seems to excuse her treatment
and behaviour towards Sarah and her family with ignorance (see lines 99-103). I
find it hard to believe that this ignorance really existed, but it is possible
that it did, because the whites and the blacks were so distinctly segregated by
the apartheid system. Yet I find it hard to believe that the narrator was
completely unaware of Sarah's almost inhuman standard of living. Surely, even
though apartheid almost divided the whites and the blacks into two separate
worlds, she must have known something about the conditions under which Sarah
and her children lived, and that it was getting worse as the days went by
(because of the mother's bad legs).
When Janet, one of Sarah's two daughters,
comes to visit the narrator in the end of the story, the narrator once again
displays her ignorance about the blacks, but this time she openly admits it.
Janet is, of course, in an unpleasant situation when she stands in the back
yard of her mother's former employer. Everyone has some pride in themselves,
and standing in the back yard, asking for alms is, of course, very degrading to
a proud person, no matter who that person is. Janet has probably tried being in
a similar situation before, but now that her mother is unable to provide for
the disintegrating family (her father has lost his job and her sister has
married and moved away), the life and death of her family depends solely on her
and her brother who are the only ones working. Janet is of course very
depressed and sad, but she cannot give up now. Her last hope is that the
narrator will help her out, and, fortunately, she does. The handkerchief is
actually the first thing the narrator has ever done to help Sarah's children.
It is not until that point in the story Janet realizes just how bad things are
with Sarah and her family. Of course, one could again be tempted to think that
it was only her bad conscience that made her give Janet the clothes, but there
is no way to be sure. I am, however, inclined to believe that the narrator has
finally realized how immense the difference between the "black world"
and the "white world" really is. However, the things she gives Janet
(some money and the handkerchief) will not last long, and what will Janet do
then? Come back for more, of course. I am not saying that the narrator is doing
something bad, but I do not think she realizes that Janet will probably come
back again. It is like giving a stray cat some food; it will always come back
for more. The question is if the narrator would give Janet more money if she
came back, and if it would be any help at all. The first question is easy: Yes,
she would give her more money if she came back - her conscience forbids her to
do otherwise. The second question is a bit more difficult to answer. Of course
the money is an instant help to Janet and her family, but only a very
insufficient one. The few dollars (or whatever currency they use in South
Africa) she gives Janet will only provide the family with a meal or two, and
after that they will be back to where they started, and would have to beg for
more money. Now, I am not saying charity does not help, but I do not think it
helps as much as many people would like to think it does. In many cases, it
only puts off the sufferings.
The apartheid system has officially been
abolished in South Africa today, but I think old habits die hard, so to speak.
I am sure there are still blacks like Sarah and her family who have to
subordinate to the richer white population even though - officially - apartheid
does not exist there anymore. Societies do not change overnight, especially not
when one group has to give up its right and privileges and share them with
others (whom they dislike). Sarah's story is undoubtedly not the worst example
one could find, but no one knows what happened after the scene in the
narrator's back yard.
Translation:
In the
beginning of his well-known novel about a missing principal, Hans Scherfig
gives the following description of how it all started:
On the tenth of October, a horrible
discovery was made on Amager Fælled. A soldier found the horribly mutilated
remains of a person who had literally been blown to bits.
The police immediately started an extensive
investigation, which was somewhat complicated by the fact that it was
impossible to identify the body. Some small pieces of clothing were sent for
chemical analysis, but since the results would not be available until a week
later, the police were unable to proceed directly with solving the mystery.
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