All posts by: Commonwealth Youthchoirs Media

Hi,

Just to let you know i saw the choir at my son’s school last night (Rondebosch Boys Prep School in Cape Town) and they were absolutely brilliant. I was blown away.

My boy Kirk (9) sings in the Junior choir there.

Regards

Ken Nicol

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This morning we took a ride down the peninsula to the Cape of Good Hope. This is where the Atlantic and the Indian oceans meet – or so the folk lore goes. Reaching the Point and taking a group photo was another “full circle” moment for Joe and me. (See “then” and “now” photos to be posted) Hard to believe it’s been ten years since that first photo was taken, and that all of those boys are now young men in college and beyond. What a ride it’s been. How quickly time flies when you’re making great music with young people and touring the world.

The ride down to the Cape is magnificent. I used to wonder how something so ugly as apartheid could have happened in such a beautiful place. I came to realize that it’s because the country is so rich in natural and mineral beauty that so much violence and discrimination has marred this land. People wanted to control it at any cost.

Cape of Good Hope KSB2011

View the Photo Gallery on Flicker: Cape of Good Hope

We had an emotional goodbye with those leaving early. It’s always hard when the choir is split in two. This morning on the news, I saw two sports teams shaking hands after a game. I thought, why not? So we made two lines: those going home Tuesday and those going home Wednesday. It was a great way for everyone to have a chance to say good bye. Lots of hugs and tears.

watch the slide show:

View the Photo Gallery on Flicker: Goodbyes

More later…

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Spectacular Cape Town! Spectacular Concert! Spectacular Sunset!

We had a lively little crowd at our “casual” concert at the outdoor Waterfront amphitheater yesterday. Folks came and went, but as we sang more, we drew a big crowd. The sound system was quite good, so the voices of the boys filled the Waterfront and enticed people as they strolled about.

Something quite extraordinary happened earlier in the day. When KSB was first in South Africa ten years, we came across an outstanding ten-man singing group (think Ladysmith Black Mambazo) from the township who were performing for money at the Waterfront. We hired them to work with our boys. We found an abandoned shed and had a fantastic musical exchange. Well, ten years later, low and behold, I ran into them. The very same group! So we invited them to join us for the end of our concert at the outdoor amphitheater.

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: A&E Wharf Concert

We invited them up on stage and asked them to do their own set. They sang an amazing version of Shosholoza. A totally different style than ours. Mesmerizing. They then joined us for Nkosi Sikeleli, as well as our new fabulous set of South African songs. When we got to our version of Shosholoza each of our graduating seniors were ‘adopted’ by one of the ten guest singers. Right in the middle of the performance, the men taught our seniors their version of Shosholoza. The two versions melded into one. It was such a quintessential South African moment. Rehearsal and performance all in one. It’s difficult to articulate what the moment was like. It seemed that the entire Waterfront was singing with us. I would have to say it was theemagical moment of countless magical moments on this trip.

And then another magical moment. (It’s an embarrassment of riches, really. Every day better than the next.) We boarded our buses and climbed up Signal Hill to see Cape Town from above. The vistas took our breath away. The city. Table Mountain. And the sea! Unfathomably beautiful. We gathered the boys and arranged them so that they faced the setting sun. It always a special moment when young people “get it.” We talked about how hard they work during the season and that moments like this are their reward. We talked about how it doesn’t get much better than this. Making music together, and profoundly enriching lives – our own and the countless people our music has touched.

KSB SA 2011-Sunset Hill

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Sunset on Signal Hill

If I had arranged it with God himself, it could not have been a more perfect sunset. I can describe it in words, but they won’t do the picture justice. The metaphor was not lost on anyone. The sun was setting in more than one way. Tour winding down. For some, their KSB career winding down. As Joe ansd I conducted the boys singing our own National Anthem and Nkosi Sikeleli,our backs were to the sun, but we could see it setting in the faces of each and every boy. What a gift.

After a very full day, we returned to our homestays. The families have, in a very short time, fallen in love with your boys. Several of them have informed me they are keeping them. Let me know if you parents are open to that concept J

More later…

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The boys made their trips to Robben Island in two groups. The Island was used for Naval training and protection, as a leper colony, but most famously as the political prison where Nelson Mandela spent 27 years. The tour started with the ferry ride from Cape Town, then a bus tour of the island (where we saw penguins!). The inside prison tour was given by a former political prisoner. One of the guides had been a student organizer during the Soweto uprising.

Prisoners were kept in group cells of 40-50 men if they were not considered “instigators” or “rabble rousers.” Those, including Mandela, were held in solitary confinement in a separate building. Mandela himself was allowed to keep a garden and it was there that he hid the drafts of his biography “Long Walk to Freedom.”

KSB SA 2011-Robben Island

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Robben Island – July 25

Robben Island from Wikipedia
Robben Island Museum
Robben Island Explored
SA Places: Robben Island

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This is an e-mail to me from the Board Chair of Tygerberg. He references Hennie, the conductor of Tygerberg and an icon in the choral community here in South Africa:

“Hi Steve

Just got off the phone with Hennie who hasn’t stopped singing Keystone’s praises. He reckons you’re the best choir we’ve ever hosted – focused, energetic, musical… a real performance choir it seems. Bravo… great stuff… Hennie does not praise lightly being such a perfectionist.

Enjoy the rest of the tour and do not hesitate to call on us for help of any kind whatsoever!

Cheers
Charl”

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We flew to Cape Town – a two hour flight. The stewardess made a fuss over the boys on the intercom. She saw our picture and article in the inflight magazine and was very impressed. It’s a neat thing for the boys to see themselves in print. Color no less!

Saturday night we met our Cape Town homestays. I knew just from looking at our group of hosts that the boys were in good hands. They’re wonderful folks, and the boys are quite happy with their adopted families. Not bad, to have a place to stay in Cape Town. I have no doubt some of the boys will return one day. Hopefully they’ll get up on Table Mountain next time. The cable cars are down for maintenance. We will drive up half way (as far as buses can go) on Signal Hill at the end of the day today.

On Sunday afternoon we had our major concert in Cape Town – a stunning hall with a very cool contemporary design in the suburb of Parrow. The Tygerberg Children’s Choir, considered the best children’s choir in the country, sang the first half of the program, we sang the second.

KSB SA 2011-Tygerberg Concert

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Tygerberg Concert

The reception we received was perhaps the most enthusiastic one of all our formal concerts. There were thunderous applause at the end which went on for many minutes. The warm audience seemed to love every song more that the next, but were especially ecstatic over our version of their National Anthem and our new South African medley. We had the concert recorded live so you’ll eventually get to hear the program.

Another incredible moment was when we sang Eternity in the hall. We dedicated to Tybergberg, who gave us this song ten years ago. We traded it for “The Storm is Passing Over” – their director remembered the trade! To sing this beautiful piece so well, in such a gorgeous acoustic, ten years later, was a really highlight for Fitz and me. Talk about coming full circle! (Shout out to alumni Jordan Thomas: wish you could have been there Jordan! You would have been in heaven)

The conductor of the Tygerberg Children’s Choir, Hennie Loocke, is an icon in the choral community here. He gave a stirring speech after the concert to our boys. He spoke of their excellent musicianship, their aesthetic, and their joy for singing. He said he and his choir (an incredible one at that) learned much from us and that it was “the best Sunday afternoon of his life.” Of course he was being kind, but he and his choir community did seem genuinely moved by the boys’ performance. His wife told me quite sincerely that she had never heard a choir sing South African songs so well, including South African choirs. I’m not quite sure about that, but it was quite the compliment regardless.

Francois, the Choir Manager, told me this morning that many choirs come through Cape Town, and that we are the exception to the rule in terms of quality. Another parent who is a music educator, told me we give the Drankensberg Boys Choir a run for their money. (Draakies, if you’re reading this, we still say you guys are hands down the best in the world J) As a community-based boychoir, to even be in the ball park with a choir school as exceptional as Drakesnberg is a great compliment to us. It’s also a testimony to all of us in the KSB family for our dedication and commitment to giving boys a world-class singing experience. I’ve heard several times on the trip: “how did you do this in ten years?” I then show them the open veins at my wrists. 😉

I’m waiting for the crew to get back from Robben Island. Can’t wait to get their impressions. They shopped this morning, which makes them very happy boys. Chaps too. Warning: many African drums coming your way, and losts of fun African gifts for family members. It’s a mad rush now, as the clock winds down on our concert tour. The first wave departs tomorrow afternoon, so it’s shop ‘til we drop.

We have a sound check at 2:30pm at the Waterfront amphitheatre. Hour performance at 3pm. It’s winter, so I don’t expect a big crowd, but it should be great fun. And the setting is to die for. From where the boys will be singing, they’ll be able to see the breathtaking Table Mountain. As the boys drove into sight of the Mountain, a rainbow appeared. They broke into a chorus of “Somewhere Over The Rainbow.” It does feel like paradise here. A great way to wrap up this incredible journey.

More later…

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KSB SA 2011-Goodbye Pretoria - 7:23

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Goodbye Pretoria 7/23

We sang a fond farewell to our Pretoria homestays and headed to Soweto – South West Township – outside of Johannesburg. This is a vibrant, sprawling black South African community that is the size of a small US city. The boys had been in several townships, but nothing could prepare them for the sheer size and scope of “the mother township.” The dichotomy of utter poverty and joie de vivre never ceases to amaze me.

We spent an hour in the Hector Peterson Memorial. Very emotional. We prepared the boys for the intensity of the exhibit, but it’s only when you experience it first hand that you come face to face with the tragedy that was apartheid. It took the death of an innocent thirteen year-old boy (and sixteen others that day) to wake the world up to what was happening in South Africa. Many other young adults would be imprisoned, tortured, and killed before the revolt ended in the late 80’s. It would take fourteen years until Nelson Mandela was released and another four years for him to be elected president, the official start of the new South Africa. But June 16th, 1976 was the turning point.

KSB SA 2011-Hector Peterson

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Hector Peterson 7/23

The high school students of Soweto decided to organize a march to protest the insistence by the National (white) government that the children of Soweto begin learning their subjects in Afrikaans. In a nut shell, the government feared that the young blacks were becoming too educated. By forcing them to learn in Afrikaans, it would insure permanent disability and therefore inequality. I asked the boys to think of their hardest subject (math!) and then imagine trying to learn it in, say, Russian. They got it.

But the teenagers of South Africa were not having it. We know well the resolve of teenagers when they get something in their head! Some things never change, and teens are the same the world over.

As Antoinette Peterson was marching, with fellow students, towards the square where the local police headquarters sat, she passed by the school of her younger brother Hector. He spotted her, and asked where she was going. She told him never mind, to stay put at his school. But Hector – your typical pesky little brother – followed her against her wishes. So she told him to stay close at her side. When the two of them arrived in the square, thousands of teens had gathered. The police were waiting for them. It started out peaceful, but at some point, tear gas was released, rocks began flying, and then, shots were fired. Antoinette went to shield Hector, but in the chaos, he had already run off. She began searching for him desperately. And then, to her utter horror, she spotted him on the ground, bleeding profusely. He had been gunned down by the police. An older boy she did not know (the name escapes me) picked him up, and the two of them ran for help. But Hector was already gone. The very famous shot of these three children captured the nightmare of apartheid in a way nothing else had or would. The imagine flashed around the world. Before long international sanctions were placed on South Africa. All because of one life tragically ended by the brutality of discrimination.

I have had the honor of knowing Antoinette, who now runs the educational program at the Museum, for over ten years. When KSB came the first time, Antoinette stood with us at the very spot where Hector was gunned down. We sang in his memory.

This time around Antoinette was not able to be there in person, but we sang to her into my phone. We ad libbed a folk song that was central to the struggle that I had forgotten about until I read about it in the Museum. (Senzenina: “What have we done?”) The Chamber Choir then sang “Prayer for the Children.” As you can imagine it was profoundly moving.

I’ll never forget Antoinette’s words. “Your singing made me cry, but I’m sure, somewhere Hector is smiling.”

What an honor it is to come into these peoples’ homes, hearts, histories – lives.

From there we went to Regina Mundi Church where we got a tour of this historic meeting place during the struggle. Police could not enter a place of worship, and so it was a safe haven for Nelson Mandela and fellow freedom fighters to gather and organize. Eventually the police disregarded the separation of church and state and would storm the church from time to time. There are still bullet holes and broken pieces of furniture in the chancel area that we saw up close.

KAB SA 2011-Regina Mundi & Soweto

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Regina Mundi and Soweto Goodbye

We then had a “Sing-In” with the Regina Mundi Church Youth Choir. They sang for us, we sang for them, and then we sang together our new South African pieces. Great fun. We shared a delicious, traditional township lunch: meat, pap. choca-laca, and salad. At the end of the lunch we passed a basket around and the boys donated money. It will benefit a needy member of the Youth Choir. The boys gave generously and it felt good to give back to the people who’ve given us so much.

After saying goodbye to our Sowetan friends, we headed off for the airport. Last stop: beautiful Cape Town.

More later…

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The Jakaranda Children’s Choir

We’ve had an amazing stay in Pretoria. Our homestays from the Jakaranda Children’s Choir were most understanding with our late arrival (4 hours!) After more than a week of hostelling, the boys were happy to go off to their homestays for a little TLC. And laundry! God bless the parents of Jakaranda. Every boy had a full suitcase of very dirty, smelly clothes. But no longer. Bai Dankie!!!

Wednesday we visited the Vortrekker Monument. Impressive. (Check it out online) It memorializes the Great Trek of the 1800’s, when the British forced the Afrikaaner from the Cape area into the African velt. This precipitated war between the Afrikaaer and the black tribes throughout the land – the most famous conflict being the Battle of Blood River. You may have heard of Shaka, the Zulu King is one of history’s most fierce, feared, and brilliant warriors.

KSB SA 2011-Voortrekker

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Voortrekker – July 20

The boys were able to climb the monument for terrific vistas of the Pretoria / Johanesburg region. We also sing – an amazing acoustic. We sang Nkosi Sikeleli so beautifully that the staff asked for us to sing it again. And then they asked us to sing it a third time! After our mini-concert, we lunched at the picnic area where the boys were able to run around.

Wednesday evening we had a wonderful joint concert with the Jakaranda Children’s Choir. The hall had a brilliant acoustic.

KSB SA 2011-Jakaranda Concert

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Jakaranda Concert 7-20

Sublime Visit to the Palace of Justice

Thursday morning we rehearsed. This is one of the great opportunities of tour – to rehearse the boys each day. With daily rehearsals and concerts, we get them to a level of performance that is quite fine, one not possible at home.

We then headed off to the Union Building (equivalent of our Capitol Building in Washington) where Nelson Mandela was inaugurated as the first President of the new South Africa. The boys got some more sun as they lunched on the gorgeous grounds.

KSB SA 2011-Union Building

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Union Building – 7/21

From there we went to the National Zoo. It was a bit strange to see animals in cages after seeing them in the wild at Kruger. I think we’ve created some animal activists!

KSB SA 2011-Pretoria Zoo

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Pretoria Zoo – 7/21

We finished our day of sight-seeing at the Palace of Justice, where Nelson Mandela gave his famous speech before being sentenced to life imprisonment on Robben Island. I had never been in the space, so this was thrilling for me. As a student of South African history, it gave me goose bumps to be in the room. The world, was expecting Mandela to be sentenced to death, as was Mandela himself. Because court procedure allowed a criminal to speak before sentencing without time limit, he decided to take what might be his last opportunity to make his case to the world. Those in the courtroom was the speech, which lasted four hours, felt like four minutes. It was that compelling.

I will post the last paragraph of his speech on this wiki space. I read it to the boys while the sat in the courtroom, and we followed it by singing the Nkosi Sikeleli and our new South African folk song “Nelson Mandela.” For me personally, it was a sublime a moment as I’ve ever had on tour. I think the boys also were moved. Or they were just aware of the zen moment I was having, and indulged me. J

We were then brought down to the cell below the courtroom where Mandela spent many months before his trial. VERY COOL. The graffiti of many political prisoners from the apartheid era covers the walls. Mandela himself drafted the ground-breaking Freedom Charter on a section of it. Amazing that there was no glass over the walls. If this was an American tourist attraction, it would have already been “Disney-ified.” (Is that a word? It not, it should be.) The boys walked through the cell in one long line in total silence. It was quite chilling.

KSB SA 2011-Palace of Justice

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Palace of Justice – 7/21

Thursday night we had another great concert at the stunning concert hall at the University of South Africa (UNISA). The acoustics are not very live, but it’s a good theatrical space, and a good fit for KSB. We performed with two very good high school choirs (girls and boys), and so the boys had to bring their A game to the stage – which they did. I was worried they would have low energy as we had a long day running around Pretoria. I challenged them to make me say afterwards “I was wrong.” Sure enough, this morning, they made me say it. I did, with great pleasure. Well, it hurt a little.

KSB SA 2011-Unisa Concert

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Unisa Concert – 7/21

Right now, as I’m typing, I’m watching the boys run around a beautiful park on a beautiful day. Balmy. More pleasant than your dog days of summer we’ve been hearing about on the news!

This afternoon we are going to a local mall so the boys can see they new Harry Potter movie. They are psyched, as are the adults. Martha’s family wants me to let them know she is NOT going to see the movie.

More later…
After the verdict came in, there was great relief that Mandela’s life was spared.

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Marge Copeland
A Eulogy

First a few thank you’s. To Father Riceo, Ken Rowe, and St. Francis of Assisi Church, Marge’s parish for 70 years. To our dear family friend Lisa who cantered, and to Susan Ashbaker and Alex Bessen, who represents the Keystone State Boychoir here today. Special thanks to the nurses and aides who cared for Marge these last few years, including Vivian and Ruth, and especially Linda and her husband John. And of course, the family is grateful to Marge’s three daughters, Peggy, Kathy, and Suzanne, who so lovingly, in their own unique way, cared for her. They ushered their mother out of life just as she had lovingly ushered them into life. A personal note of thanks to my father John and sister Diane who were faithful to Nana day in and day out for so long. Finally, thanks to my family, Marc and Julianna, for being here in my absence.

I am so sorry I can’t be with you today. Very few things on earth could keep me from my dear grandmother’s funeral. But I am in South Africa on a concert tour, charged with the safety and well being of 68 children. I hope Nana is looking down on me “from a distance” with understanding. Although, knowing Nana, I’m not completely sure. I can almost hear her: “Now wait, now wait, now wait. Steven, listen to your Grandmother. Family comes first.” That’s is how Nana lived her life – with family at its center.

I learned of Nana’s passing just a few hours after it happened. I hadn’t called home since departing the States, and something told me to call. It was Nana whispering in my ear. I was in a little town in South Africa called, of all things, Bethlehem. A word that brings to mind not death, but birth. Of course the two go hand in hand. I know Nana is in heaven, reborn, free from the struggle that she faced at the tail end of her life. What a full life it was! Not only did she lead a wonderful one, but she enriched the lives of her family in so many ways. What I loved was her stories. Each one had a life lesson. I’m not sure Nana realized it, but her stories taught me so much. You can’t sum up a life in a few minutes, but I will try.

Margaret Catherine, affectionately called Marge, was born on April 29th, 1917. She grew up in the Kensington section of Philadelphia with her beloved sister Catherine – forever known to my generation as “Aunt Catherine.” A question remains. Who’s older? Nana or Aunt Catherine? Nana insisted she was the younger. Eventually we learned that Nana was in fact older, but there’s still a bit of doubt in my mind to this day, as Nana was so earnest in her claim. Marge also had two brothers: John and Jimmy. I remember well parties up at Uncle Jimmy and Aunt Helen’s house. Jimmy, like all the Dornish’s, was a real character. We’re still waiting for a ride on his yacht. Another remaining question: did Uncle Jimmy even have boat? Life lesson: Lying about your age or your yacht is at a family party is perfectly okay. Nana loved her parties and her Manhattans. She told me a while ago that she wanted us to have a good cry at her funeral and then have a Manhattan for her. Life lesson: A cocktail is one of the great joys of life.

Upon graduating from eighth grade, Grandmom Dornish told Marge in no uncertain terms that when her father asked her if she wanted to go to work or continue with high school, to choose the latter. Most girls in those days, including Nana, didn’t see much use for a high school diploma, and wanted instead to go out and make money. But dutifully, Marge went off to Hallahan Catholic High School for girls. Looking back, she was glad she did, and was always proud of her high school education and grateful that Grandmom Dornish insisted. Life lesson: listen to your mother. Whenever there was a conflict in the family, Nana always felt it was the younger person’s responsibility to extend the olive branch to the older person. Right is right and wrong is wrong she would say. Life lesson: Respect your elders even if they’re imperfect.

Sometime after graduating from high school, Marge met the love of her life – Raymond Copeland – at the Adelphi Roller Skating rink. Ray was skating with Nana’s friend Mary. But then Mary suggested a trio. Meaning, three people skating at the same time. As you may have guessed, Mary got the short end of that stick. The rest is history. It was the beginning of a great love affair. Their skating and dancing brought them great joy throughout their lives, as it did to all of us who ever witnessed them in action. Such grace. Remember the West End Boat Club? I felt like we were royalty as the grandchildren of the Marge and Ray. Life lesson: It’s okay to steal your friend’s beaux, but only if you’re sure it’s you soul mate. Marge and Ray certainly were that. They were totally devoted to each other. Like all couples they bickered, but their love to each other was unshakable. Oh, and Nana was the jealous type. No matter how many years had passed, she was never amused by the fact that Pop danced with a French woman or two in Europe. Ray Copeland was her dance partner, and her’s alone.

Nana told me that when she and Ray were “courting” they couldn’t afford to go out on dates, so they would sit on her front porch at night. She said that when you’re in love, it doesn’t matter what you’re doing if you’re together. When things would get a little too “friendly” on the porch (Nana called it ‘necking’), apparently Grandmom Dornish would tap her shoe on the floor of her bedroom, which was above the porch where they sat. Nana said Pop knew it was time to propose when one night, as their passion flaired on the porch, one of Grandmom Dornish’s shoes came flying down the stairs onto the porch. Life lesson: You don’t need a lot of money to have fun with your soul mate, but if you want to really have fun, you better put a ring on it.

Nana was a hard worker. During high school she worked at Philco during the summers. After high school, she went on to work for Sears and Roebuck. And she was smart. Before she left Sears she had 22 girls under her supervision. I often wonder, if she had grown up at a different time, what she might have become. Not that Nana wanted more from life. She was wholly satisfied with her lot.

Nana was the boss. Just ask Pop. She certainly was the boss when it came to money. When it came to money, Marge not only wore the pants, but shirt, tie, and jacket. She was a saver. The $4,600 she put aside from Sears – an extraordinary amount of money in those days – was used for a down payment on their first and only house. 109 Wayne Avenue. Her insistence on saving money allowed her and Pop to have a wonderful retirement with lots of great trips. Life lesson: Put something away every paycheck. “Even if it’s 50 cents,” she used to say.

Nana could be frugal, but could also be incredibly generous. Every year down the shore she would give her three daughters money to treat their families to something special. Who can forget the summer she lost the $3,000 she was going to give to her girls. She was sick about it, but it didn’t stop her from giving her daughters the spending money anyway. You could always come to Nana for a loan. I’m sure every single grandchild at some stage borrowed money from ole Nan. She was good for it. But she wanted you to pay it back. She’d say, “that way, I’ll have money when you come back for another loan.” Life lesson: If you borrow something, give it back. And always pay your own way.

Marge was strong. We certainly saw that as she held onto life, and held on, and held on, and held on. She gave birth to their first born, Peggy, alone, because Ray was down South in boot camp during World War II. Pop saw baby Peggy briefly and then went off to Germany. Marge kept the home fires burning until he returned. Then came Kathy and Suzanne. Nana would recount how she dressed all three girls each afternoon, would greet Pop Pop at the trolley after work, and then sit up for dinner. Every night. That’s just the way it was back then. Life lesson: Sit up to dinner with your family.

When Pop went on strike, Marge again went out to work. Delaware County Memorial Hospital. When they interviewed her, they said she was a little too old to hire – it was the 1950’s – you could say that. But Marge pleaded, and so they gave her a shot. Life lesson: Be persistent.

She proved a terrific worker in the records department. Years later, when computers were first being introduced, the hospital told Marge they’d have to let her go for younger people “more apt for the new technology.” Nana’s response: “teach me, I can learn.” And so they did and so she did. Life lesson: Don’t be afraid of change or learning something new.

Nana was a good friend. Her dearest one was Doris Mason. They raised their families together, just two doors apart. She liked to say that Doris and she never had a fight. “What was the secret to a successful friendship?,” I asked one time. Nana said it was because they lived two doors apart rather than right next store. Life lesson: Fences make good neighbors. Nana said her and Doris laugh a lot, never held grudges, kept a secret, and always respected each other’s privacy.

Through the over 50’s club and her Canasta group, Nana had many friends. People loved Marge. And she loved people. But at the end of the day, it was her and Ray. A couple in every sense of the word. In the best sense of the word. Life lesson: There’s nothing more valuable than a good friend; and at the end of the day, your partner is your best friend.

Like most families, the holidays were spent with Nana and Pop Pop. Christmas rotated between the three daughters. It always made the holiday extra special when you learned that this year was your families turn to have Nana and Pop. We were always a bit deflated to learn that it was another families turn. After dinner, the Fishers, Gallaghers, and Dunderdales would gather at Nana’s for dessert. There we would get the Christmas envelope. It was not a lot of money, but it was tradition. And if a family friend joined us for dessert, there was always an envelope for them. Everyone was welcome at Nana’s, everyone part of the family.

Easter dinner was always at Nana’s house. We used to joke and even complain that it was the same menu every year. Ham, Turkey, potato salad, and of course Mrs. Dunderdale’s coconut Easter bunny cake. What we wouldn’t do now for one more Easter dinner at Nan’s. And one more Easter hunt. There was even less money in the eggs than there were in the Christmas envelopes. But even as we got older, we loved the tradition. Quite a sight, college students running around for dollar-filled eggs.

Nana was strict. As kids, when we learned that Nana was coming to watch us while our parents were going away for a weekend, we were not happy. She didn’t take any nonsense. She’d threaten: “no fussin’ or you’ll get a lickin.” Of course she never did give us a lickin’, but the fear was enough to keep us in line. The three sisters say she was even stricter as a Mom. We found that hard to imagine. But you always knew Nana loved you, and she obviously knew what she was doing, evidenced by the wonderful daughters she raised.

A Eulogy about Nan would not be complete without mentioning “the shore.” Nana instilled in all of us a love for the shore that carries on to this day. The list of shore traditions are too many to mention all of them. But they all can be traced back to her and her generation. Crabbing, Hor d’ourves night, the boardwalk, donuts in the morning, and the grand daddy of them all – Groffs. Nana went there as a child herself, and now, three generations later, we all still go, faithfully. I’m sure there will be a fourth and a fifth generation. Great portions, great price, great food. And those pies! As long as we’re still eating at Groffs, we’ll never forget about Marge. The two are one in the same.

A shore tradition I associate strongly with Nana is Kohr’s ice cream. As children, she would buy us one, but she wouldn’t buy herself one. Instead, she would as for a lick from each of us. Well a lick from Nana was half the cone. I soon learned to get our ice cream and then stay as far as away from Nana as possible. Another favorite memory was seeing her and Pop sleep in the same twin bed. Beds were always short, and Nana would say, we don’t mind at all.

Nana was not one to talk about death. She feared it, as most of us do. When it would come up, she would change the subject. But the last time I saw her, the day before I left for my trip, the fear was gone. I knew it would be long. When I told her I was going a way for a while, she asked for how long. When I told her three weeks, her reply was, “well we should talk then.”

First she told me to kiss her. I did, and then she said, “that was nice, how ‘bout twice?” So I did again. She commented how wonderful everyone has been and thanked me. I told her it was us who should be thanking her. She told me that she was tired, and I told her that she could go whenever she was ready, that she had done real good. She asked, “do you think?” I replied, “I know you did.” She told us to take care of Ray. I told her we would, that that’s what families do is take care of each other, and that she had taught us all that. She then instructed us to let Pop wipe the counters as much as he wanted – that it would “keep him busy.” If you don’t know, Nana would often chide Pop for wiping the counters too often.

We sat for a while in silence and then I thought she said again, “Kiss me.” I said, “you want more kisses.” And she said, “no MISS ME.” I started to cry, but she did not. She just gazed at me, lovingly, with no sadness. And then she went on to say it several times. “Miss me. Miss me. Miss me.” I told her I would. That we all would, every day. That we could carry her in our hearts always. More silence. And then, the most extraordinary thing happened. Out of nowhere, she sang ten words. “I’ll be seeing you, in all the old familiar places.” Neither of us could remember the rest of the song, so we just hummed the tune. She then fell off to sleep and I just held her hand. I thought back to the time I the opportunity to meet Peter Yarrow from the famed folk group “Peter, Paul and Mary.” Retired now, he goes around with his guitar to nursing homes and sings with people on their deathbed. He told me that in the very end, there is one thing left. Only on thing that matters. And that is love. And perhaps, he said, if you’re lucky, a song on your lips. Nana gave me both love and a song that last time I saw her. As a musician, it was a gift I’ll always treasure. Perhaps she gave similar gifts to others at the end. I hope so. But if she didn’t have the chance to give it to you, I’m quite sure her words were meant for all of us to hear.

In South Africa, there is a very special word. Ubuntu. It means, “A person is a person through other people.” In other words, as humans, we cannot realize our humanity; we cannot reach our full potential as a human being, except though our relationships with others. It means that a successful life is not measured by how much money we have, how big our house is, what we achieve as an individual. A meaningful existence can only be achieved by our connectedness to family and friends. By this measure, Marge had an extraordinarily successful life. As a daughter to two. As a friend to many. As a sister to three. As a mother to three. As an aunt to at least ten. As a grandmother to fourteen, and a great- grandmother to twenty-four. And, of course, as a wife and soul mate. To just one. Ray.

How miraculous then, that even though I’m 10,000 miles away, Nana is here. As I witness Ubuntu everywhere I go in my travels here in South Africa, I am reminded of her. I see her beautiful face in the beautiful people all around me. I hear her strong and loving voice in the enthralling singing around me. I feel her beautiful presence in the breathtaking nature around me.

Thank you Margaret Catherine, Marge, Margie, Aunt Marge, Nana, Matriarch of our clan. Thank you for your beautiful life. I was profoundly honored to be your grandson, as I know everyone here was honored to play a part in your life. You are with us – always.

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Nelson Mandela Day and the vistas on the way to Pretoria

Nelson Mandela’s birthday began differently depending on which choice each boy made. The boys had the option of sleeping in and shopping, or getting up at the crack of dawn and doing a fourth game drive. A little more than half the boys (and adults!) chose to sleep in, and the rest went out for one last shot at racking up the big five. Although we did not see a leopard (some did on an earlier game drive), we were treated to another beautiful African sunrise, elephants, giraffes, baboons, a vulture, several eagles, some very cool birds, and the cutest warthog ever – if warthogs can be cute.

KSB SA 2011-Another Sunrise Safari

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Another Sunrise Safari – July 18

After a leisurely afternoon of shopping at the camp store, we headed to the Convention Center for our early afternoon concert.

The Convention Center at Kruger has to be the only convention room in the world that has a great acoustic. Normally, these venues are a nightmare for a choir: ceilings that are too high or too low, no shape to the room that allows for the science of acoustic to do its magic with the overtone series. But this room had gorgeous African wood walls that created a cathedral like sound.

The concert began with speeches by VIPs of the Park, and was followed with a performance by the Kruger National Park Choir and traditional African dancers. We then sang a 40 minute program that was very well-received. As a finale we sang South African folks songs with the Park Choir, including one called, aptly, “Nelson Mandela.” The song thanks Mandela for bringing peace. It’s great fun, and we’re bringing it back to the States to sing it for our audiences back home.

The Park hosted a dinner afterwards with both choirs and the VIPs. And, as usual, the room broke out into song and dance. You’d have to be in the room to witness it. Everyone, including the servers, the chaps, the VIPs (even Fitz) get caught up in it. Picture a room with everyone joining in, singing, clapping, and stomping. One of the Grads described it as a “folk song mosh pit.” I’m not sure I know what mosh pit is, but it sounds right.

On their return to the dorms, the boys had to pack their bags and have them checked before they could go to bed.

KSB SA 2011-Madiba Concert Day

View the Photo Gallery on Flickr: Madiba Concert Day

This morning we were up at the crack of dawn to head to Pretoria. On the way of the park, we were treated with a few more sightings: baby elephants, some kudos, and too many impalas. “Impala to the rrrrrright, Impala to the leeeeeeeft.” (ask your sons)

On the way, we were treated to thrilling vistas: God’s Window, Blyde River Canyon (third largest in the world), and Striidom Tunnel. Words won’t do any of the justice. I encourage you to look them up on line, and know that your boys took it all into today. When young people are impressed by landscape, you know it’s got to be good.

We just watched a stunning sunset. We’re three hours late for our homestay rendezvous in Pretoria. Police activity, road work, lost bus drivers and other tour moments have held us up along the way. Hopefully our hosts will be understanding. To add insult to injury, the boys have to ask their homestays to do laundry. The state (and smell) of their clothing is truly scary.

For a whole host of boys, this is their first international homestay with KSB. They’re excited and nervous. We are coaching them on how to have a successful one.

More later…

P.S. Our wonderful photographer, Laurie, is doing informal portrait photos of all the boys. We started with the day of the Drakensberg concert. All portraits will be collected on another page – when internet time permits.

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