22
" With their strength, grace, and endurance, the indigenous move about naturally, freely, at a tempo determined by climate and tradition, somewhat languid, unhurried, knowing one can never achieve everything in life anyway, and besides, if one did, what would be left over for others? "
― Ryszard Kapuściński , The Shadow of the Sun
26
" L'europeo si sente schiavo del tempo, ne è condizionato, è il suo suddito in tutto e per tutto. Per esistere e funzionare deve osservare le sue ferree e inamovibili leggi, i suoi rigidi principi e le sue regole. Deve rispettare date, scadenze, giorni e orari. Si muove solo negli ingranaggi del tempo, senza i quali non può esistere. Ne subisce i rigori, le esigenze e le norme. Tra l'uomo e il tempo esiste un conflitto insolubile che si conclude inevitabilmente con la sconfitta dell'uomo: il tempo annienta l'uomo. Gli africani autoctoni, invece, intendono il tempo in modo completamente opposto. Per loro si tratta di una categoria molto più flessibile, aperta, elastica, soggettiva. È l'uomo (un uomo, beninteso, che agisca conformemente al volere degli antenati e degli dèi) che influisce sulla forma del tempo, sul suo corso e ritmo. Il tempo è addirittura qualcosa che l'uomo può creare: infatti l'esistenza del tempo si manifesta attraverso gli eventi, e che un evento abbia luogo oppure no dipende dall'uomo. Se due eserciti non si danno battaglia, la battaglia non avrà luogo (ossia il tempo non manifesterà la sua esistenza, non esisterà). "
― Ryszard Kapuściński , The Shadow of the Sun
29
" La storia è spesso frutto di una leggerezza. Il frutto bastardo della stupidità umana, un parto dell'obnubilazione, dell'idiozia e della pazzia. In questi casi la storia è opera di gente che non sa quello che fa, anzi che neanche lo vuole sapere, che respinge quest'eventualità con rabbia e disgusto. La vediamo precipitarsi verso la propria rovina, irretirsi da sola, annodarsi il cappio, verificare con cura che reti e cappi siano solidi, resistenti, efficaci. "
― Ryszard Kapuściński , The Shadow of the Sun
36
" History is so often the product of thoughtlessness: it is the offspring of human stupidity, the fruit of benightedness, idiocy, and folly. In such instances, it is enacted by people who do not know what they are doing—more, who do not want to know, who reject the possibility with disgust and anger. We see them hastening toward their own destruction, forging their own fetters, tying the noose, diligently and repeatedly checking whether the fetters and the noose are strong, whether they will hold and be effective. "
― Ryszard Kapuściński , The Shadow of the Sun
39
" One day a fellow countryman from Valencia, Jorge Esteban, arrived to stay with the sisters. He had a travel agency back home and was driving around West Africa collecting materials for a tourist brochure. Jorge was a cheerful, merry, energetic man, naturally convivial. He felt at home everywhere, at ease with everyone. He spent only one day with us. He paid no heed to the scorching sun; the heat only seemed to energize him. He unpacked a bag full of cameras, lenses, filters, rolls of film, and began walking around the street, chatting with people, joking, making various sorts of promises. That done, he placed his Canon on a tripod, took out a loud referee’s whistle, and blew it. I was looking out the window and couldn’t believe my eyes. Instantly, the street filled with people. In a matter of seconds they formed a large circle and began to dance. I don’t know where the children came from. They had empty cans, which they beat rhythmically. Everyone was keeping the rhythm, clapping their hands and stomping their feet. People woke up, the blood flowed again through their veins, they became animated. Their pleasure in this dance, their happiness in finding themselves alive again, was palpable. Something started to happen in this street, around them, within them. The walls of the houses moved, the shadows stirred. More and more people joined the ring of dancers, which grew, swelled, and accelerated. The crowd of onlookers was also dancing, the whole street, everyone. Colorful bou-bous, white djellabahs, blue turbans, all were swaying. There is no asphalt or pavement here, so billows of dust soon began to rise above the dancers, dark, thick, hot, choking, and these clouds, just like ones from a raging fire, drew more people still from the surrounding areas. Before long the entire neighborhood was shimmying, shaking, partying—right in the middle of the worst, most debilitating and unbearable noontime heat. Partying? No, this was something different, something bigger, something loftier and more important. You had only to look at the faces of the dancers. They were attentive, listening intently to the loud rhythm the children beat on their tin cans, concentrating, so that the sliding of their feet, the swaying of their hips, the turns of their arms, and the bobbing of their heads corresponded to it. And they looked determined, decisive, alive to the significance of this moment in which they were able to express themselves, participate, prove their presence. Idle and superfluous all day long, all at once they had become visible, needed, and important. They existed. They created. "
― Ryszard Kapuściński , The Shadow of the Sun