Monday, December 29, 2008

Updates to Site

Well, here I am, logged in again to this site after nearly a year. I was prompted to log in after finally remembering my password to my gmail account, and to my great surprise, found hundreds of emails waiting there for me, going back months and months.

If you have written to me, my apologies. I am going through all the emails and will answer each one in due course.

Amongst the emails I found a batch from some crank at IDASA, with a batch of pictures mainly from the lower Fox Street end of Johannesburg, near the old Anglo-American head office. With these pictures he was trying to persuade me that the city was actually wonderful and I was just a liar etc. etc.

Well, as anyone who is familiar with Johannesburg knows, of course the part of the city around the AAC offices and lower Fox Street is almost (but not quite) the same as it always was.

In fact, one could actually say that the whole city used to look a bit like that.

The fact that private enterprise has managed to more or less keep that one section like it was, merely emphasises the mess of the rest of the city!

Anyway, the one valuable thing that my IDASA crank friend did send me, was a picture of a 'rescued' building in Marshall Street. This, he said, was proof that the city was being rejuvenated.

My original picture looked like this: (taken in 2006)


According to my IDASA friend, the same corner now looks like this: a cheap restaurant, which nonetheless has a coat of paint:
Now I thought, let's give credit where credit is due, that is an improvement, even if that is a 'restaurant' in which I would not want to eat.

But then to my astonishment, the very next picture my IDASA friend sent me was this one, which is the building right next to the 'refurbished' eatery. You can see the end of the 'restaurant':

Oh dear, it seems as if the slum was not quite eradicated after all! Tough luck, IDASA sock-puppet, try again next time! Still, thanks for the effort.

These pictures above, by the way, should be clickable through to larger size and better definition. I will soon be starting to replace the pictures on the rest of the site in the same way, so that those of you who want better definition pictures will be able to get them without having to email me.

My apologies for taking so long in getting all your (hundreds and hundreds) of comments approved. They are all now done.

I intend to fully update this site with new pictures in 2009, so keep checking back!

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

joeys was my city too and so sad to see what has become of the city, the brow and yeoville.
the shame of the anc? not likely! mandela promised everyone a proper place to live in, and more than ten years on........ nuffink! the guys at the bottom of the pile have even less than what the nats allowed. the only people to have prospered have been anc cronies.

try see the documentary made by louis thereoux aired on bbc2 a few weeks ago about crime in joeys

~PakKaramu~ said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

LOL - Thanks for the laugh, that picture made my day. Have standards dropped that much in South Africa ? To think that a lick of paint improves the standard of a building is ridiculous but then to imagine that it improves an entire area is simply ludicrous. It also goes to prove that electric fencing is part and parcel of South Africa's architectural identity.

I am not surprised to see that maintenance is still not part of the "new" South Africa's vocabulary, could the powers that be spare a lick of paint and re-paint the name of the street or is that too much to ask - lol.

I wouldn't worry too much about the idiot that sent you the pics, he or she is probably un-skilled, trapped in a city that he or she doesn't want to be in and therefore tries to justify their existence there and/or suffers from delusions of grandeur.

ulla said...

hi there - am linking to my site about the insisters from 80's jozi ... would be extremely grateful for a link back, but no probs if you don't wanna. am going to link to you in a post about rockey street and on the blogroll.

http://insisterws.blogspot.com

Anonymous said...

I was glad to have found your blog and the pictures you took of Jo'burg spoke volumes. I'm originally from Pretoria and I'm sad to say, the mid-city district there is following Jo'burgs' lead in this way too.
Well done on the pictures. The world outside has to see this, specially any tourists thinking of going to SA.
Liezel

frogman said...

I was born and grew up in Yeoville (started at the OLD Yeoville Boys' in 1961). Mamas (proper name La Lanterna) was on the corner of Cavendish and Rocky, not Raymond. Before becomeing a restuarant it was Phil's Cafe. It was half a block up from the Piccadilly and opposite Scotch Corner.

Anonymous said...

My oh my.. The real is back!
Nice to read your writings again.
Having voted with my feet, I'm situated in little Denmark.
Alwayr room for a white saffer passing by my farm here. Cannot promise you tripe though, but good boerekoos.
Sincerely
bedrichvanalten at yahoo dot com

Anonymous said...

I'm from the US and just visited SA and Joburg for the 1st time this past month. The Cape Town CBD is still in much better shape, but have it be known, I was still mugged at Long Street at night and had to pay a prostitute ransom to get my wallet back, but never recovered my camera.

US University tourist

Brian L. said...

The ANC just veered over towards more communism? Guess Johannesburg won't be recovering anytime soon... :-/

Keep up the great blogging - I look forward to seeing how Johannesburg looks in 2009!

Regards,
Brian

Lady Chuckles said...

Wow... I can really see the changes too :)
It's great!

I stumbled onto your blog as I used to have a South African friend and was curious about the country itself :)

Thanks!

Mikaela H B said...

oh thats´s a huge difference! Bad :S

Unknown said...

I think all you guys are chickens for running away from South Africa. Most of us that are left here are enjoying ourselves and have chosen to stay here because we love our country. Why go and take some lousy photos and then make a scene about it. 99% of South Africa is still beautiful.
Julle is maar net 'n klomp moffies.
Whats the bet the countries that you stay in now also have run down areas. SA is beautiful and most of the Blacks here are nice hard working people. It just a handful (as well as in the other races here including whites)of blacks who are giving SA a bad name, including all of you moffies.

Álvaro said...

A real pity! Very interesting blog.
Greetings from Spain.

Anonymous said...

You should web google "Detroit Ruins" and see how the same savages summarily destroyed the City of Detroit,Michigan USA. Once a city of 2,000,000 white residents in the 1940's, "motown"became a 95% black city of 1,400,000 by 1970. According to the 2010 US census, population is now under 700,000. 40 square miles of vacant city block after block. Vast areas reclaimed by forest and praire. Vast 50 story skyscrapers vacant and crumbling. Detroit is America's Acropolis! The black mayor Mr Bing is ordering the demolition of thousands of beautifull buildings, in order to prevent whites from moving in to renovate and gentrify. Thats right. They'd rather destroy Detroit rather than have whites renovate and move in! Only the Hispanic white ethnic Mexican area in southwest Detroit is preserved, just like when Detroit was white. Blacks have tried to movve in,but the" racist" hispanics wont let them in. lol. Joes is heade the same way,for the same reason....the original whites who built these places were replaced by blacks ,who destroyed it. See" march of the titans" (history of the white race) look up Detroit section.

Viking said...

It's embarrassing to see generations of otherwise intelligent, well educated, well meaning men and women struggle, despite all the blatant evidence against them, to prove there are, other than skin color and shape, absolutely no significant differences between blacks and whites.

I have relatives that stayed in South Africa and "Rhodesia" when the rest of us emigrated, leaving for North America. Something about the differences between blacks and whites rings true here (in Canada and the US) just as it does back home. I've done my very best to remember and be as objective as possible.

1) Blacks seem to want something simply because someone has it and they haven't. They might not even know what it is, how it works, what it's supposed to do. They get it, they're unable to understand or find the same value others found in it and they toss it aside. Cars, houses, yards, jobs, spouses, children, education, rights, freedom, cities, countries and continents.

2) It seems blacks are unable to comprehend value except in having more than, having lots, not through scarcity, rareness, uniqueness. To whites, there often seems to be more gratification through those intangible qualities; to blacks, there more often seems to be gratification through volume, through having what those in power have and being sure it's generally well known they have it.

3) Blacks seem not to appreciate, to nurture, to persevere, to value what's to come, what's unknown and what they might not understand. Education is a perfect example. Contrasted with many, likely the majority, of Asian immigrants to North America, blacks often seem not to comprehend there is a value--to them--in the future benefits of education. On the other hand, many
Asians--Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Korean--sacrificed everything, EVERYTHING, to make a dangerous journey, sometimes as indentured servants, to an unknown land not even to educate themselves, but the lives of possibly their children and definitely their grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Some, the Japanese, were even rounded up and put in relocation (concentration) camps. US citizens since birth, never even having visited Japan, they lost everything, again, and started over, valuing education, thrift and possibilities. Intangible but more valuable than anything material.

We were warned about this and it's very, very true: Do not throw your pearls before swine!

Gillian Morris said...

I used to work in the ACC building back in 1995 - 1998. We used to lunch at the Marshall Inn and walk up the the public library on a Friday. Amazing how things have changed.