Butterflies
There was a time in life when beauty
meant something special to Ntando Nkosi. Who was about six or seven years old,
just several weeks or maybe a month before the orphanage turned him into an old
man.
He would get up every morning at the
orphanage, make his own bed just like the little soldier that he had become and
then he would get into one of the two straight lines and march to breakfast
with the other twenty or thirty boys who also lived in the same cottage with
him.
On one Saturday morning after breakfast
he returned to the cottage and saw the house parent chasing after the beautiful
monarch butterflies who lived by the hundreds in the lotus bushes strewn around
the orphanage.
He carefully watched as he caught these
beautiful creatures, one after the other, and then took them from the net and
then roughly stuck straight pins through their little heads and wings, pinning
them onto a heavy cardboard sheet.
Ntando picked up the torn wing and the poor
butterfly and then spat on its wing so that he could get it to stick back on so
it could fly away and be free before the house parent came back. But it would
not stay on him.
He had walked many times out into the bushes, all by himself, just
so the butterflies could land on his head, face and hands so he could look at
them up close.
Every year when the butterflies would
return to the orphanage and try to land on Ntando, he would seemingly try and
shoo them away because they did not know that the orphanage was a bad place to
live and a very bad place to die… How cruel it was to kill something of such beauty.
By: Mahlatse Masinamela