An Evening with Shevlyn Mottai, author of Across The Kala Pani (26th October)

An Evening with Shevlyn Mottai, author of Across The Kala Pani (26th October)

An intimate evening with author Shevlyn Mottai to discuss their book 'Across The Kala Pani'.
Guests are invited to engage the author over a light dinner in the beautifully appointed Tommy’s Bar at the Rand Club in Marshalltown, Johannesburg.

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About the Author:
Shevlyn Mottai works as a deputy headteacher and English teacher in a secondary school in England. Born in Pietermaritzburg in 1976, she descends from Indians who were part of the diaspora to South Africa, her forefathers having arrived in Natal through indenture in 1906. She has taken several courses in creative writing and has published poetry and short stories in competitions.

About the Book:
Four indentured women cross the black water to the Colony of Natal
Four indentured women cross the black water to the Colony of Natal In 1909, four women board a ship in Madras to cross the Kala Pani, the ‘black water’, to Natal. Lutchmee, a young widow, has escaped her vengeful mother-in-law and self-immolation on her husband’s funeral pyre. Vottie, from the brahmin caste, is an educated girl whose abusive husband tries to hold on to his caste at all costs. Chinmah, heavily pregnant when she boards the ship, is married to an older man as part of an unpaid debt. Gorgeous, shy Jyothi is single. On board ship, the women will form friendships and alliances. They will help each other through trial and trauma, even after they arrive and are separated.
Like many Indians desperate to escape unbearable conditions in their home country, these women are only too eager to believe what they’ve been told: that a blessed life awaited them in South Africa, where gold coins grow like chillies on trees, food is plentiful, and liberty will be theirs after just five years. But the brutal reality of life on the farms reveals the truth about the crossing: that it is usually a one-way journey, rife with misery, and that the hardship doesn’t end after the ship has dropped anchor in Durban harbour.
The epic stories of these immigrants – the brave, the bold, the kind; the weak, the cruel, the cowardly – is woven into the fabric of South Africa’s Indian population today. Shevlyn Mottai has drawn on her ancestors’ history to highlight the bonds formed between women during terrible adversity, and to celebrate their journeys of tragedy and triumph.
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