As Upington disappeared behind me and miles and miles of nothing ahead welcomed me to a new life in Namibia, I thought of English poet Thom Gunn’s line “One is always nearer by not keeping still”.
That open road, into the literal and figurative unknown, had to be driven … the fear had to be conquered and life had to be tackled. Anything better than playing it safe, sitting where I was. That 2 000km drive from Joburg, across the vast empty heart of southern Africa, frightened and enticed me at the same time.
In the 30 years since then, road trips have become one of my favourite parts of living on this southern foot of Africa. An open road stretching out ahead of you signals adventure, or that there will be an oasis at the end where you can take your well-earned rest.
And, ironically, you will be nearer peace by not keeping still. As long as the road is good, of course. When it is potholed or disappears altogether – as happens in parts of provinces like the Free State (thanks Ace…) your wonder vanishes, to be replaced by tension and anger.
So, I must say I quite like the latest TV ad for the SA National Roads Agency (Sanral). Before you jump up to accuse me of double standards, I am still vehemently opposed to e-tolls and the unnecessary waste of money on the Gauteng Freeway Improvement Project’s roads, as well as the systems used to fund them.
But I do recognise the need for first-class roads – and Sanral is correct that we do have some world-class ones here in South Africa.
That is what the ad is all about – how the agency brings us the infrastructure which helps our daily lives and helps us live the dream of being nearer by not keeping still. So we see some of the best current and planned civil engineering roads projects across the country.
But – and this is what attracted me – we also see some of the beauty of our country and how it is accessible because of an excellent road.
In the past few years, Sanral has tried – and largely succeeded – in moving the debate about e-tolls away from it to where it really belongs – with the government itself. Sanral, after all, is only a government agency. This was not always apparent during the reign at Sanral of the arrogant Nazir Alli, who treated the organisation as if it were his fiefdom and taxpayers not as people to be served but as people to be treated like serfs.
The current TV ad reminds us that we need first-class roads if we are ever to become a firstclass country. And Sanral provides that. The debate about waste through programmes like the e-tolls does not diminish that fact. So, for putting across your case well and for reminding us about the beauty of the journey, you get an Orchid, Sanral.
– brendans@citizen.co.za
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