At the restaurant Mzansi in Cape Town
Feb. 17th, 2020 11:26 amAs a part of our Road Scholar trip to Southern Africa we went to lunch at a restaurant, Mzansi, in Langa, one of the neighborhoods in Cape Town that was designated as a place to move black people during the apartheid regime to make way for white people in other sections of the city.
At the end of the meal the owner and operator, Nomonde Siyaka, gave a fascinating talk about the history of the place. It was originally a very small house in whch her family lived in extremely crowded conditions.
The food was excellent - it is rated #1 in Cape Town on TripAdvisor - clearly for both the food and the experience.
There were marimba players in the front of the restaurant entertaining us and at the end they were quite loud and everyone joined in dancing.
At the end of the meal the owner and operator, Nomonde Siyaka, gave a fascinating talk about the history of the place. It was originally a very small house in whch her family lived in extremely crowded conditions.
The food was excellent - it is rated #1 in Cape Town on TripAdvisor - clearly for both the food and the experience.
There were marimba players in the front of the restaurant entertaining us and at the end they were quite loud and everyone joined in dancing.
In our home dance in Jamaica Plain we haven't used that terminology for 30 years - but these days lots of other dances are beginning to convert and at the Flurry there were several sessions that used Larks and Robins. Many people were wearing I Dance BOTH Role buttons: And it is common at the beginning of each dance to ask your partner which role they wanted to dance and there were many same-gender couples or people dancing the opposite role - definitely more than last year.