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Home is not only a place but a state of mind - an interview with
Rory Kilalea
Conversations
with Writers
March 26, 2009
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/African_Writers/55138
Rory Kilalea has worked
in the Middle East and throughout Africa, directing documentaries
as well as in various production, script-writing and management
positions. Films he has been involved with include Jit (1990), A
Dry White Season (1987) and Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of
Gold (1986).
He has also taught broadcasting,
writing and performance at the University of Zimbabwe as well as
improvisational drama at the British Council in Athens, London,
Johannesburg, and in the Middle East.
Writing under the pen
name Murungu, his poetry and short stories have been published in
magazines and anthologies in countries including Ireland, Malaysia,
the United States and Zimbabwe.
His writing includes
the collection of short stories, The Arabian Princess & Other
Stories (Zodiac Publishing, 2002); Whine of a Dog, which was shortlisted
for the Caine Prize 2000; Zimbabwe Boy which appears in Asylum 1928
and Other Stories (Fish Publishing, 2001) and was shortlisted for
the Caine Prize 2002; and Unfinished Business, which appears in
Writing Now: More Stories from Zimbabwe (Weaver Press, 2005).
In 2005, one of his plays,
Zimbabwe Boy was adopted for the Africa Festival at the London Eye
and has been performed at the National Theatre in London. Other
plays he has written include Ashes; Diary of David and Ruth; and
Colours.
In a recent interview
with Conversations with Writers, Rory Kilalea spoke about his concerns
as a writer.
Conversations
with Writers: When did you decide that you wanted to be
a writer? And who would you say has influenced you the most?
Rory
Kilalea: I have always written. I suppose I knew that I
would write when I was 11 years of age and a class was captivated
by a story I wrote. I still have a copy of it. It was a transformational
story about a young girl who becomes part of a vision that she saw.
Doris Lessing, Katherine
Mansfield and [Joseph] Conrad were formative short story influences.
What I found appealing about them was the fact that they were able
to create in a short format, an indelible image that never left
my imagination. I still think of The Secret Sharer or The Lumber
Room and imagine what these writers did with spare use of words
to create a world of the ‘now'. It was then that I realised
that the short story is more than a simple ‘story' -
it is a moment that can have great impact. Alice Munro does the
same - and even though I sometimes feel, when I am reading
her, that I do not want to go further into the (often) dark areas
of her characters, I am compelled to. Her skill is the teasing away
of layers until you get to a core. These writers are masters.
Then I began to read
local Zimbabwean writers - [Charles] Mungoshi captivated me.
He dared to write about and think things which I had not seen written
by a black Zimbabwean. In his writing, he was able to show the same
struggles, the same hopes as all Zimbabweans - and of course
his writing was of such quality that it had a universal appeal.
[Shimmer] Chinodya is also another example of daring to say what
others feel (or may feel) is not correct, or politically correct,
to record or explore. That is our function as writers - to
tell it as we see it. And these writers do.
Conversations
with Writers: What are your main concerns as a writer?
Rory
Kilalea: The role of an outsider looking in.
Conversations
with Writers: In what way are you an outsider? And, when
you look in, what do you see?
Rory
Kilalea: Hmm . . . now here is a tough question.
Psychoanalysts would
say that growing up as a poor white person in a black country may
have been part of the reason that I was not part of the normal (whatever
that means) white community; that I went to a non-racial school
in Bulawayo; that my parents were very Catholic to the extent of
praying that I would become their salvation by being a priest. But
I tell you when it first occurred to me, I was standing against
a mesh gate of our small house in Paddonhurst in Bulawayo and watching
a machine tarring the road, splattering pieces of liquid tar into
the air, smelling poisonous, but nicely intoxicating. And I refocused
and saw a black boy on the other side of the road doing exactly
the same as me. I knew, just as I knew in the Zimbabwean writers
I read later, that we were on a similar path. We saw similar things,dreamt
similar things. But there was fence between me and the boy.
I am looking into a struggle
of achieving and understanding our role as Zimbabweans and all of
the strange contradictory nature of that.
I have left behind the
intellectual romantic hopes of togetherness, and now watch with
a detachment. As a result, without the anchor of my family's
faith, I have extracted a terrible price for being adrift. Feeling
is different from observing and I have been left with the heart
of a romantic and the mind of a cynic.
And there is another
thing - I do not fulfil the ethic of a ‘Rhodie rugger
bugger'. For example, I appreciate male beauty - which
of course is anathema to the president in his current situation.
As much as I know that most of this rhetoric is politics, it does
not ever make the ‘otherness' go away. Perhaps I have
always lived as the secret sharer and want to share that place with
my readers.
Conversations
with Writers: How have your personal experiences influenced
the direction of your writing?
Rory
Kilalea: Very much. My life has been a disparate one and
thus - whether through filmmaking, the anti-apartheid periods,
the war in Zimbabwe or living in the Middle East - has always
provided material.
Emotional values are
of interest to me when you use different life experiences. For example,
as a Zimbabwean making a film about an Arab wedding, observations
become my palette I suppose.
Conversations
with Writers: What would you say are the biggest challenges
that you face and how do you deal with them?
Rory
Kilalea: Finance. The work ethic to keep on doing the writing
when I know that I am short of money and then have to go away on
another venture to make films or do radio or whatever.
I try to be disciplined.
This is much harder than anyone can imagine. The hurdle after a
hiatus brings with it the terror of wondering whether what you write
has any relevance or meaning or quality at all.
Conversations
with Writers: How many genres do you work in?
Rory
Kilalea: I think I have written about forty short stories.
Five theatre plays. Zillions of film scripts and adverts. Many radio
plays for SABC, Zimbabwe Radio and the BBC.
I have many published
short stories all over the world: A collection of poetry, one children's
book on Arabian fables, a book which is to-ing and fro-ing about
Islam and life in the modern Middle East, three half completed novels
and one that is complete and in the final stage of edit -
which is terrible.
Princess of Arabia, the
book of folktales, was published by Zodiac Press. My short stories
have also appeared in the Caine Prize anthologies and in Zimbabwean
publisher Irene Staunton's various anthologies. I have also
been published in anthologies by Silverfish books in Malaysia, as
well as in Ireland for the West Cork Literary Festival.
The other novel, as yet
unfinished, is untitled and based on the corruption of life with
rigid rules in Arabia.
Plays I have written
include Friends, which is based on the life of John Bradburne, the
man who lived with the lepers during the bush war, and Colours,
which was adapted for radio by the BBC.
Conversations
with Writers: Are there any links or connections between
your writing and the work you are doing on film and radio?
Rory
Kilalea: The main connection is that it is communication.
I am currently writing
another play for the BBC - so the writing can join the disciplines
together sometimes. The bad thing about it is that it does tire
you creatively and then it is doubly difficult to get from a news-reading
desk to the computer for a script.
Conversations
with Writers: Do you write everyday?
Rory
Kilalea: Yes, every day but not always on the same thing
though. The hardest pieces are the ones I try to put on the back
burner, which is the worst thing any writer could do. For example,
The Reluctant Mombe was really tough. I had the experience of meeting
a woman in the situation of being forgotten as a person of age.
To try and retain truth and be honest at the same time took some
soul-searching as well as being ruthless.
The story began when
I was employed by the BBC to interview old people who had been forgotten
by their families and who were living in penury. To divorce oneself
from the horrible reality of seeing old people who had grown up
with hope and now felt discarded was very hard. Mortality and the
finiteness of human loyalties and love were the issues I had to
contend with and in fact divorce myself from when I wrote the piece.
The other hard piece
is section of my novel that deals with Zimbabwe - again the
same problem - divorcing myself from the realities of a hard-felt
life.
Conversations
with Writers: What is the novel about?
Rory
Kilalea: The Disappointed Diplomat is about the role of
a young man trying to forget his home in Zimbabwe and finding that
home is not only a place but a state of mind. He walks away from
the woman he has fallen in love with, and asks the question: ‘Perhaps
the bus driver will know the way home?'
The man is trying to
forget the heartache of a broken love affair - both with his
country and with his black girlfriend (he is white). He has to deal
with the expectations of the English establishment and, much like
the people who search out spies for their own causes, he feels he
is being courted for reasons beyond his comprehension.
He never does have the
full answers. Perhaps the novel is more of a journey to a stage
where he can at least ask the salient question knowing that there
will be another journey ahead.
Conversations
with Writers: Which aspects of the work that you put into
the book did you find most difficult?
Rory
Kilalea: The middle section of the novel, which is about
Zimbabwe. The passion I have for my home and the plethora of ideas
were too much for the shape and structure. The old ‘less is
more' dictum was very hard to follow.
I love Zimbabwe like
no other place and can so fully understand the need to justify one's
existence by having a piece of land - which was why the war
was fought, or partly anyway. And perhaps that too is part of the
problem - that our unflinching loyalty to the land has caused
a blinkered attitude to the realities of what and how we are governed.
You see, for most of us in the diaspora, the ‘Zimbabwe'
we think of is romanticised into a nirvana, which in fact is not
a reality.
I am working in the Middle
East now, as I could not afford to continue teaching at the University
of Zimbabwe. And this poverty affects me. How does it affect people
in the bush? I know how it affects them. But do I see the starving
bellies and the hopeless eyes of the street kids? Ah no, just like
the chefs, I pass by in my car and wonder if the old man they are
leading to beg alms for is really blind. Of course I know he is
not, but I also see the kids are hungry. I see people rolling up
their windows as if they are trying to press a nosegay to their
face to avoid a bad smell. Ah yes, I can see - but I do not
really look? - and that is a crime.
The mirror is an unkind
place. Yet we all sit back and wait for the old man to die and wish
for a better future. It was the same with Ian Smith and with Welensky
etc. A blinkered reaction to the reality.
I will never leave Zimbabwe
forever, it is inconceivable. I have lived in many places in the
world, picking up stories and experiences. But home is Zimbabwe.
I do not think it will get better soon. Rankness in Denmark is not
as easily assuaged as it was in the final act of Hamlet. From cheating
sanctions during Smith's days to doing black market deals
in Mugabe's, it is the same behaviour and we have grown up to think
only in those terms. To conceive of a straight society where you
change money in a bank for real is ridiculous. We have never done
it. That is how deep the level of damage has been.
Conversations
with Writers: What sets The Disappointed Diplomat apart
from the other things you have written?
Rory
Kilalea: It is a novel. My metier is poetry and short stories.
I had too much to say. The long form was also a challenge and I
had to push myself further
Conversations
with Writers: In what way is it similar?
Rory
Kilalea: Good question - from the short form to the
long form was the mission - and finally I had to employ the
same writing technique - spare writing. I was not inclined
to do that in the beginning and a number of the first of drafts
were pedestrian and unprofessional.
It was a learning curve
to be able to spill out as much as possible for the story -
then realise that the same techniques of short story could be used
as well to convey meaning and narrative. I started by putting too
much into the story - overwriting and making basic errors.
Re-reading ensured that I had to edit and make it more professional.
Conversations
with Writers: What will your next book be about?
Rory
Kilalea: An action and cruel novella about the undercurrents
of life and the questionable morality of living in Dubai. Drug importation,
pimping . . . the list goes on and on . . . despite the maxim
of the prophet. A man would be married and have two boyfriends for
sex. The more rules you impose on a people, the more they seem to
want to break them. I would come home to my house and find blocks
of pure resin being sliced up for sale in the market as unadulterated
coke and dagga. Wrong?
Who can say? But it does
beg many questions - and perhaps I saw the similarity of the
corruption of soul in our country to what the Arabs are doing in
this plastic Dubai where western society has taken over their sleepy
life and left them feeling disassociated
* Rory Kilalea
is a Zimbabwean filmmaker, playwright and author.
* This
interview appears courtesy of Conversations with Writers. If you
are a writer interested in participating, please contact Ambrose
Musiyiwa amusiyiwa@googlemail.com
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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