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In
Northern Rhodesia in the early 1950's, most heavy household items
could only be purchased at designated "European" stores.
Africans were generally not permitted to shop at these stores but
when they did, they were served through a hatch at the back of the
shop.
As it happened,
Robinson Chisanga Puta Chekwe required a bed. He set off to buy
one at the Nchanga Co-operative Store. A white sales lady told him
to go to the hatch, outside the shop to make his order.
Robinson
obliged. He then told the lady that he wanted to buy the bed he
had seen inside the shop. After being told the price, he took his
money out of his pocket and gave it to the lady. Upon receiving
the money, the sales assistant asked him to go and enter the shop
so that he could collect the bed. Robinson declined the offer to
go inside the shop and insisted that the bed be given to him through
the hatch where the money had passed! Robinson's action demonstrated
the absurdity of serving Africans through the hatch and it did not
take long before the practice was abolished.
--Recollections
by Henry George Mumbi Shikopa
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