If only Papa hadn't danced by Patricia McCormick 3
If only Papa hadn't danced by Patricia McCormick 3
If only Papa hadn't danced by Patricia McCormick 3
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The English-speaking world 1<br />
<strong>If</strong> <strong>only</strong> <strong>Papa</strong> hadn’t <strong>danced</strong> <strong>by</strong> <strong>Patricia</strong> <strong>McCormick</strong> 3<br />
1 Before you read<br />
Look at the picture. Think about where the people are, who they could be, what their relationship is and<br />
what will happen next. Make some notes. Then discuss your ideas in a group.<br />
5<br />
10<br />
15<br />
20<br />
25<br />
Now read the story. Some important new words are explained at the bottom of the page.<br />
But who could blame him? When the results<br />
of the presidential election were tacked up on<br />
the polling station 1 doors, a lot of people<br />
<strong>danced</strong> and sang in the streets – none of them<br />
more joyfully than <strong>Papa</strong>. Finally the Old Man<br />
had lost. The Old Man, who’d ruled 2 the country<br />
since <strong>Papa</strong> was a ba<strong>by</strong>, had been beaten fair<br />
and square. The man who robbed 3 from the<br />
poor to make himself rich was finished.<br />
But not everyone in the village <strong>danced</strong> that<br />
night. The rich men, the ones made fat <strong>by</strong> the<br />
Old Man, stood in the shadows and watched.<br />
The next day, when <strong>Papa</strong> and his friends<br />
gathered around the radio, they heard that the<br />
election results had been a mistake. There<br />
would have to be a recount 4 . <strong>Papa</strong> spat in the<br />
dust and said it was a lie. A week passed, then<br />
another – while the Old Man stayed in his<br />
grand house in the capital. While his men<br />
were supposedly counting the ballots 5 again.<br />
<strong>Papa</strong> and his friends grumbled among themselves,<br />
but not loud enough for anyone else to<br />
hear.<br />
Then one night we awoke to the hot breath 6<br />
of fire. The corn patch 7 just outside our hut<br />
was ablaze 8 . We jumped from our beds and<br />
ran to the field to beat down the flames with<br />
branches. But it was no good. Our entire crop 9<br />
was gone.<br />
At dawn <strong>Papa</strong> sought out 10 the police. They<br />
came to our home, looked at our field with<br />
eyes of stone and told us to empty the house of<br />
all we owned.<br />
‘Take what you can,’ one of the policemen<br />
said. ‘They will be back tonight. This time they<br />
will torch 11 your house.’<br />
‘They?’ I asked <strong>Papa</strong> when the policemen<br />
had left. ‘Who are they?’<br />
<strong>Papa</strong> sighed and shook his head. ‘Our neighbours<br />
and tribesmen,’ he said. ‘People we have<br />
known our whole lives. People whose bellies<br />
have been filled <strong>by</strong> the Old Man.’<br />
Mama clucked her tongue at <strong>Papa</strong>. ‘Everyone<br />
saw you celebrating,’ she said. ‘They know you<br />
voted against the Old Man and now we will<br />
pay for it.’ She looked out and saw the smouldering<br />
12 remains 13 of our neighbours’ fields.<br />
The crops of those who’d <strong>danced</strong> with <strong>Papa</strong><br />
were in ashes. The others were as lush and<br />
green as they’d been the day before.<br />
And so we packed our things – the few we<br />
had, the fewer we could carry – into a few<br />
bundles and an old cardboard suitcase. I put<br />
my bundle on my head, took one last look at<br />
© Silke Bachmann<br />
30<br />
35<br />
40<br />
45<br />
50<br />
1 polling station [1p48l9N ste9Sn] Wahllokal 2 (to) rule (be)herrschen 3 (to) rob (-bb-) [rqb] rauben 4 recount [1ri.ka8nt] Nachzählung<br />
5 ballot [1bäl4t] Stimme, Stimmzettel 6 breath [breT] Atem 7 patch [pätS] (kleines) Feld, Beet 8 ablaze [41ble9z] in Flammen 9 crop [krqp]<br />
Ernte 10 (to) seek sb. out, sought, sought [si.k, s0.t] an jn. herantreten 11 (to) torch [t0.tS] anzünden 12 smouldering [1sm48ld4r9N]<br />
schwelend 13 remains [r91me9nz] Überreste
2 The English-speaking world<br />
55<br />
60<br />
65<br />
70<br />
75<br />
80<br />
85<br />
90<br />
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100<br />
our home, then turned to face our future.<br />
‘Where will we go?’ I asked <strong>Papa</strong>.<br />
‘We will walk until we find a friendly place<br />
where we can stay,’ he said. ‘When it is safe,<br />
when the recount is finished, when the rightful<br />
president takes office 1 , then we will return<br />
home.’<br />
As we came to the centre of the village, we<br />
met up with other families like ours. The<br />
fathers hung their heads, the mothers looked<br />
<strong>only</strong> at the dirt beneath their feet and the<br />
children tugged 2 listlessly at their parents’<br />
hands. ‘Why?’ they asked. ‘Why must we leave<br />
home?’ The parents did not dare 3 to answer<br />
– in case 4 ‘they’ were listening.<br />
The world beyond the village was new and<br />
strange – a vast plain 5 of parched 6 grass and<br />
shimmering heat. We walked <strong>by</strong> night,<br />
through bushes alive with the sounds of<br />
frenzied insects, and slept <strong>by</strong> day under the<br />
scanty shade of the acacia tree. We walked and<br />
walked and walked.<br />
At last we came upon a settlement. From a<br />
distance it bloomed up from the earth like a<br />
flower. We saw, shimmering on the horizon,<br />
what we thought was our safe place, the place<br />
where we would rest until we could go home.<br />
But as we drew near, we saw that the village<br />
looked just like ours. One house was nothing<br />
but a smouldering heap 7 , the one next door<br />
untouched.<br />
And so we walked on and on, each village<br />
the same.<br />
We gathered news as we walked. ‘The Old<br />
Man is still in power,’ said people who joined<br />
our dusty procession. ‘He won’t give up without<br />
a fight,’ they added.<br />
I asked <strong>Papa</strong> about the man who had won<br />
the election. ‘He won’t give up without a fight<br />
either,’ <strong>Papa</strong> told me. The next day on the<br />
radio we heard that he had fled the country.<br />
That night, there was just one tiny strip 8 of<br />
dried meat left. Mama cut it three ways and<br />
handed each of us a piece. <strong>Papa</strong> shook his<br />
head.<br />
‘Give mine to the child,’ he said. ‘I’m a<br />
tough old bird. I can make do.’<br />
The next morning, when we awoke, we<br />
found corn to eat. Corn and biscuits and a bit<br />
of fruit. But <strong>Papa</strong> wouldn’t touch a thing. He<br />
turned away and whispered to Mama, ‘I was a<br />
fool to hope for change. And now I am a thief.<br />
Now I’m no better than the Old Man.’<br />
In the afternoon we came upon a great river.<br />
Wide and sluggish 9 , it looked as hot and<br />
steamy as we were. I knew from my studies<br />
that we had come to the edge of our country.<br />
On the other side of the river was a free country,<br />
a land of cities and farms, a nation where<br />
the people had voted for a president who had<br />
spent years in jail fighting for justice.<br />
Mama knelt in the shallows and splashed<br />
water on her face. But as I knelt down next to<br />
her, I saw that she was trying to cover her<br />
tears.<br />
‘This is our homeland,’ she said. ‘No one<br />
wants us over there.’ She gestured to the<br />
tawny hills across the river.<br />
It was then that I saw the long metal fence<br />
which uncoiled, like a snake, all along the<br />
riverbank 10 on the other side. The fence was<br />
tall and crowned with rings of wire 11 : wire<br />
with teeth that could slice 12 the clothes from<br />
your back, the skin from your bones. In the<br />
distance I saw a man in an orange jumpsuit<br />
patching 13 a hole at the bottom of the fence – a<br />
spot where some lucky person must have<br />
slipped through the night before. His tools<br />
were at his feet, a pistol in his belt 14 .<br />
<strong>Papa</strong> came over and said I was needed.<br />
There was a sign, he said, that he needed me<br />
to read. He brought me to a spot where<br />
someone had hand-painted a warning:<br />
beware 15 of crocodiles.<br />
That night, we hid in the bushes until the<br />
sky was black. We would wade across at midnight,<br />
when the man in the orange jumpsuit<br />
had gone home and when the crocodiles, we<br />
hoped, would be sound asleep.<br />
When it was time to go, I walked straight<br />
towards the river, knowing my nerve would fail<br />
if I faltered 16 for even a moment. But <strong>Papa</strong><br />
stopped me at the water’s edge.<br />
105<br />
110<br />
115<br />
120<br />
125<br />
130<br />
135<br />
140<br />
145<br />
1 (to) take office sein Amt antreten 2 (to) tug (-gg-) [tcg] ziehen 3 (to) dare (es) wagen, sich trauen 4 in case für den Fall, dass 5 plain [ple9n]<br />
Ebene 6 parched [p2.tSt] ausgetrocknet, verdorrt 7 heap [hi.p] Haufen 8 a tiny strip [1ta9ni] ein winziger Streifen 9 sluggish [1slcg9S] träge<br />
10 riverbank Flussufer 11 wire [1wa94] Draht 12 (to) slice [sla9s] schneiden 13 (to) patch [pätS] flicken 14 belt [belt] Gürtel 15 beware of …<br />
[b91we4] Vorsicht vor … 16 (to) falter [1f0.lt4] zögern, zaudern
The English-speaking world 3<br />
150<br />
155<br />
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‘Wait here,’ he said. And then he scooped<br />
Mama up into his arms and waded silently<br />
into the darkness.<br />
It seemed a lifetime until he returned. He<br />
didn’t say a word, just lifted me up onto his<br />
shoulders and strode into the water. Every stick<br />
I saw was a crocodile. Under every rock, every<br />
ripple 17 in the water, was a pair of ferocious<br />
jaws 18 . When we reached the other side, I leapt<br />
from his shoulders and kissed the sand.<br />
Once more <strong>Papa</strong> stepped into the river – this<br />
time to fetch our suitcase. Surely our luck<br />
wouldn’t hold again … I watched his back<br />
disappear into the dark and thought how<br />
much I loved that broad back; how it shouldered<br />
all our woes 19 , and now all our hopes.<br />
Finally <strong>Papa</strong> emerged 20 from the darkness<br />
with all our worldly possessions balanced on<br />
his head.<br />
Then we got down on our hands and knees<br />
and crawled along the base of the fence, like<br />
scorpions looking for a place to dig 21 . But the<br />
sand was unyielding and the fence invincible<br />
22 . Everywhere our fingers scrabbled 23 for<br />
a weakness, someone – the man in the orange<br />
jumpsuit, most likely – had mended it with<br />
links of chain held tight with wire.<br />
The sky overhead had begun to brighten and<br />
the horizon was edged with pink. Soon it<br />
would be light 24 and we’d be trapped between<br />
the waking crocodiles and the man with the<br />
gun in his belt.<br />
We came to a spot in the fence where a thorn<br />
bush grew on the other side. <strong>Papa</strong> said we<br />
would have to dig here: no time to keep looking.<br />
Perhaps the roots of the bush had loosened<br />
the sand, he said. <strong>If</strong> not, at least we could<br />
hide behind the bush, if <strong>only</strong> for a while.<br />
And so all three of us dug – Mama in the<br />
middle and <strong>Papa</strong> and I on either side – our<br />
hands clawing furiously at the earth. I’d <strong>only</strong><br />
made a few inches of progress when the sky<br />
turned red. It would be dawn in less than an<br />
hour. I redoubled my effort 25 , working the<br />
outer edge of the bush where the soil was a bit<br />
looser. Soon I’d dug a hole barely big enough<br />
for a man’s foot. I lifted my head to call out to<br />
<strong>Papa</strong> to come and see my work – and saw the<br />
man in the orange jumpsuit striding towards<br />
us.<br />
Mama wailed 26 piteously, then plucked at her<br />
hem where she’d hidden the tiny bit of money<br />
we had. She knelt in the sand, her arms outstretched,<br />
our few coins in her upturned<br />
palms 27 .<br />
But the man shook his head. He placed his<br />
hand on the belt that held his gun.<br />
‘Take me,’ <strong>Papa</strong> begged him. ‘Spare 28 the<br />
woman and the girl.’<br />
Again the man shook his head. Then he<br />
reached into his pocket and took out a giant<br />
cutting tool. With one mighty snap he<br />
severed 29 the links where the fence had been<br />
patched. He yanked 30 on the fence so hard it<br />
cried out in protest, and peeled it back as if it<br />
were made of cloth.<br />
‘Hurry,’ he said. ‘Once the light comes, I will<br />
have to go back to patrolling.’<br />
We didn’t fully comprehend 31 what he was<br />
saying, but we didn’t wait.<br />
‘You go first,’ <strong>Papa</strong> said to me. ‘I want you to<br />
be the first in our family to taste freedom.’<br />
I scrambled through the fence, stood next to<br />
the man in the orange jumpsuit and looked<br />
back at our homeland as the sun began to turn<br />
its fields to gold.<br />
‘You will miss it for a long time,’ the man<br />
said to me. ‘I still do.’<br />
I stared up at him.<br />
‘Yes,’ he said. ‘I outran 32 the Old Man long<br />
ago.’<br />
Mama crawled through and kissed the man’s<br />
boots. He simply helped her to her feet.<br />
‘Quickly now,’ he said, once <strong>Papa</strong> had made<br />
it through. ‘Walk, as fast as you can, until you<br />
see a house with white flowers out front. Go<br />
round to the back and tell them Robert sent<br />
you. They will feed you and hide you until<br />
night. Then they will send you to the next safe<br />
house, which will send you to the next, and the<br />
next – until finally you are in the city and can<br />
be swallowed up 33 <strong>by</strong> all the people there.’<br />
195<br />
200<br />
210<br />
215<br />
220<br />
225<br />
230<br />
235<br />
240<br />
17 ripple [1r9pl] Kräuseln, kleine Welle 18 ferocious jaws [f4!r48S4s 1d70.z] furchteinflößende Kiefer 19 woes (pl) [w48z] Sorgen 20 (to) emerge<br />
[i1m3.d7] auftauchen aus 21 (to) dig, dug, dug [d9g, dcg] graben 22 invincible [9n1v9ns4bl] unbesiegbar 23 (to) scrabble hier: wühlen 24 light<br />
hell 25 effort [1ef4t] Bemühungen 26 (to) wail [we9l] jammern, heulen 27 palm [p2.m] Handfläche 28 (to) spare [spe4] verschonen<br />
29 (to) sever [1sev4] durchtrennen 30 (to) yank [jäNk] reißen, ziehen 31 (to) comprehend [!kqmpr91hend] verstehen 32 (to) outrun sb. jm.<br />
davonlaufen/entkommen 33 (to) swallow up [1swql48 cp] verschlingen
4 The English-speaking world<br />
245<br />
250<br />
‘How do we know we can trust these<br />
people?’ Mama asked.<br />
‘They are our countrymen,’ he said. ‘You will<br />
find many of us here. Now go!’<br />
We did as he instructed, and found the<br />
house with the white flowers just as the morning<br />
sun broke through the clouds. A woman<br />
there brought us inside, gave us water and<br />
meat and led us to mats where we could rest.<br />
34 (to) hum (-mm-) [hcm] summen<br />
It had been so long since I’d slept on anything<br />
other than bare, open ground that I fell asleep<br />
at once.<br />
I awoke sometime later and saw that <strong>Papa</strong>’s<br />
mat was empty. I stood and wandered outside.<br />
The sun was setting, so all I could see was his<br />
silhouette against the deepening sky. He raised<br />
his arms to the heavens and started to hum 34 .<br />
And then I saw <strong>Papa</strong> dance.<br />
© 2009 <strong>by</strong> <strong>Patricia</strong> <strong>McCormick</strong>, published in: Free? Stories Celebrating Human<br />
Rights, Amnesty International, Walker Books, London, 2009<br />
255<br />
260<br />
Working with the text<br />
1 Your impressions<br />
Think back to your discussion on the picture on<br />
page 1. How close were your ideas to what<br />
happened in the story?<br />
2 The plot<br />
Use the key words in the boxes to write the plot of<br />
“<strong>If</strong> <strong>only</strong> <strong>Papa</strong> hadn’t <strong>danced</strong>”.<br />
The narrator’s father dances when he hears that<br />
the Old Man has lost the election. …<br />
election •<br />
father • dance<br />
Old Man • rule •<br />
long time<br />
election results •<br />
mistake • recount<br />
one night • family’s<br />
fields • burn<br />
walk across country •<br />
night • sleep • day<br />
family • pack up<br />
things • leave home<br />
same thing • happen<br />
• many people<br />
police come • house<br />
will burn • next night<br />
river • edge of country<br />
• other side • free<br />
metal fence •<br />
crocodiles • river<br />
cross • night • father •<br />
wife/daughter<br />
dig hole • fence •<br />
before light<br />
narrator • see father •<br />
dance again<br />
man from same<br />
country • safe house<br />
man • stop them? •<br />
but • cut fence<br />
man in jumpsuit •<br />
repair fence • pistol<br />
3 The atmosphere<br />
a) Without checking the text, finish this sentence:<br />
The atmosphere in the story is …<br />
b) Find examples of how the author creates<br />
atmosphere. Collect them in a table like this:<br />
How Example Source<br />
metaphor<br />
adjective<br />
the hot breath of fire.<br />
smouldering …<br />
lines 24-25<br />
…<br />
c) Compare and explain your charts.<br />
– ‘Hot breath’ makes you feel the fire is alive.<br />
– ‘Smouldering remains’ gives you the feeling<br />
the family has lost everything.<br />
– …<br />
Would you change your sentence from a)? Why?<br />
3 SF Reading literature (pp.141–143)
The English-speaking world 5<br />
4 The characters<br />
a) Make a network like the one on the right.<br />
Add notes to show the links between the<br />
characters.<br />
Narrator<br />
daughter of<br />
<strong>Papa</strong><br />
b) Choose a character from your network.<br />
Find parts of the text that tell you what kind of<br />
person he/she is. Collect information in a table<br />
like the one below.<br />
Name Characterization Source<br />
<strong>Papa</strong><br />
<strong>Papa</strong> spat in the dust and<br />
said it was a lie.<br />
…<br />
lines 16-17<br />
Man in jumpsuit<br />
escaped from<br />
Mama<br />
c) What conclusions can you draw from your<br />
table? Say how you see the character you chose.<br />
Old Man<br />
d) Use your table to write a characterization.<br />
STUDY SKILLS<br />
Characterization in fiction<br />
The author of a story can describe or portray a character directly or explicitly <strong>by</strong> giving information<br />
through the narrator or other characters. Characterization is indirect or implicit when we<br />
learn about the character <strong>by</strong> what they say or do or through the setting they are put in.<br />
5 Different points of view<br />
Write either lines 140–158 through the eyes of <strong>Papa</strong><br />
or lines 187–210 through the eyes of the man in the<br />
jumpsuit.<br />
3 SF Reading literature (pp. 141–143)<br />
6 Researching Zimbabwe on the internet K<br />
The inspiration for <strong>Patricia</strong> <strong>McCormick</strong>’s story comes from Zimbabwe, where the election for president<br />
took place on Saturday, 29 March 2008. The main candidates for the presidency were Robert<br />
Mugabe (of the ruling ZANU-PF party) and Morgan Tsvangirai * (the leader of the opposition party,<br />
MDC).<br />
*<br />
[1tSäNg9ra9]<br />
a) Before you watch the interviews with Mugabe<br />
and Tsvangirai from Sources 1 and 2 on page 6,<br />
make sure you understand the following words:<br />
(to) rig manipulieren<br />
corrupt korrupt<br />
(to) arrest verhaften<br />
dicey [1da9si]<br />
heikel (to) defy [d91fa9] trotzen<br />
polls Umfragen<br />
accountable [41ka8nt4bl] rechenschaftspflichtig<br />
(to) let <strong>by</strong>gones be <strong>by</strong>gones die Vergangenheit ruhen lassen<br />
vindictive rachsüchtig<br />
Tip<br />
To watch the films,<br />
type the shortened<br />
URLs (bit.ly/…)<br />
into your browser.
6 The English-speaking world<br />
1 bit.ly/edMZeO Al Jazeera (Qatar)<br />
Mugabe is ____________ years old and hopes to<br />
____________ ____________ as president for the sixth time. He says he<br />
will not rig the ____________ but will win them through majority voting.<br />
Mugabe says his friends in the east will help the country, such as<br />
____________, ____________, Indonesia and Iran. He says the West never<br />
gives investment to ____________ ____________ but just little charitable<br />
amounts. ____________ people are arrested when the government knows<br />
the facts. Mugabe is ____________ about winning this election.<br />
March<br />
25<br />
2008<br />
2 bit.ly/fDi6cO GuardianFilms (UK)<br />
Tsvangirai says everyone is ____________ and ____________ . He thinks<br />
that he will ____________ the election. But perhaps Mugabe will say that<br />
he is the ____________ . Tsvangirai says he will not become a new dictator<br />
because the people must make the leader ____________ . One important<br />
step would be to limit the time that the president can stay in office to two<br />
____________-____________ periods. <strong>If</strong> Mugabe admits that he has lost,<br />
Tsvangirai will not punish him for ____________ against his people.<br />
Tsvangirai feels ____________ about the future of the country.<br />
b) Use the information you find on the<br />
internet to complete the texts below<br />
and on pages 7–8.<br />
March<br />
29<br />
2008<br />
Tip<br />
Sources 3 to 12 are taken from websites<br />
around the English-speaking world.<br />
You don't need to read the whole article:<br />
just scan it for the information you need.<br />
© 2011 Cornelsen Verlag, Berlin · Alle Rechte vorbehalten<br />
3 SF Skimming and scanning (p.139)<br />
3 bit.ly/g1Mdm7 Independent Online (South Africa)<br />
It seems that Morgan Tsvangirai, ____________ years old, has won the<br />
presidential election in Zimbabwe. He is said to have over<br />
50 _____ _______ of the votes, an absolute majority. This makes a second<br />
round of voting unnecessary. The figures reported are: Tsvangirai<br />
____________ %, Mugabe ____________ %.<br />
April<br />
2<br />
2008
The English-speaking world 7<br />
© 2011 Cornelsen Verlag, Berlin · Alle Rechte vorbehalten<br />
4 bit.ly/dY4pxV CBC (Canada)<br />
Although the results of the presidential election are not yet official, the<br />
ZANU-PF party calls for a ____________. Tsvangirai calls this<br />
‘____________’ and ‘ridiculous’. The MDC is worried that violence might<br />
be used against members of the ____________.<br />
5 bit.ly/glAIUU Daily Mail (UK)<br />
The results are published: Tsvangirai has ____________ % of the votes,<br />
Mugabe ____________ %. This means that there will be a ____________<br />
round of voting for the president.<br />
Tsvangirai is out of the country, trying to get international support for his<br />
opposition MDC party (M ____________ for D ____________<br />
C ____________) and against the dictator Mugabe. The MDC says that<br />
____________ of its members have been ____________ since the election.<br />
6 bit.ly/eoz4Kc The Standard (Zimbabwe)<br />
____________ starts a camp for Zimbabwean refugees 1 escaping from<br />
the ____________ in their country and asking for political asylum 2 and<br />
____________ protection.<br />
7 bbc.in/glJFwe BBC News (UK) K<br />
Morgan Tsvangirai makes a speech in ____________, announcing,<br />
‘I intend to ____________ to Zimbabwe within the ____________ period<br />
of time’. He will take part in the second round although ____________<br />
MDC supporters have been killed since the first election and there are<br />
____________ people without homes.<br />
8 bit.ly/eFxBg0 Al Jazeera (Qatar)<br />
Tsvangirai decides not to take part in the second election because of the<br />
violence. He says ____________ supporters have been killed and<br />
____________ people are without homes. <strong>If</strong> it is a one-____________<br />
election, it will not be a real ____________ for Mugabe.<br />
April<br />
6<br />
2008<br />
May<br />
2<br />
2008<br />
May<br />
3<br />
2008<br />
May<br />
3<br />
2008<br />
June<br />
25<br />
2008<br />
1 refugee [!refju1d7i.] Flüchtling 2 asylum [41sa9l4m] Asyl
8 The English-speaking world<br />
9 thetim.es/dJI6fD The Times (UK)<br />
The second ____________ takes place. Voters’ fingers are coloured<br />
____________ to show that they have voted. Nyasha from Epworth says<br />
that people recorded his personal details to check how he ____________.<br />
He says your house will be ____________ if you vote for Tsvangirai, or if<br />
your finger isn’t red (because then they will see that you _______________).<br />
10 ind.pn/dHGPds The Independent (UK)<br />
Mugabe wins the second election with ____________ per cent of the vote.<br />
He start a new ________-________ term as president. The USA and other<br />
countries protest but they have no support from ____________,<br />
____________ and ____________.<br />
11 bit.ly/eCXZrn The Observer (UK)<br />
Many refugees try to cross the Limpopo River between Zimbabwe and<br />
South Africa – despite ____________ and wire fences. In South Africa<br />
there are new dangers: in May, ____________ people died because of<br />
____________ attacks. Refugees are treated as illegal immigrants: the<br />
number sent home from South Africa is ____________ per month.<br />
12 bit.ly/9AbNAA Christian Science Monitor (USA)<br />
Two years later, ____________ and asylum seekers from Zimbabwe are<br />
still getting very little ____________ from the South African government.<br />
Instead they are given ____________, drink, ____________ and sleeping<br />
bags from volunteer organizations. The ____________ Musati Project was<br />
founded <strong>by</strong> Zimbabweans living in South Africa, and helps refugees from<br />
Zimbabwe and ____________ ____________.<br />
June<br />
28<br />
2008<br />
June<br />
29<br />
2008<br />
July<br />
6<br />
2008<br />
April<br />
12<br />
2010<br />
© 2011 Cornelsen Verlag, Berlin · Alle Rechte vorbehalten<br />
7 Refugees in South Africa<br />
Watch the slideshow and write a description of one of the people in the photos.<br />
Use what you have learned during the webquest to explain the problems facing<br />
the refugees.<br />
13 mefeedia.com/watch/31160455 Médecins sans Frontières<br />
May<br />
12<br />
2010
The English-speaking world 9<br />
Teacher's Solutions to 6<br />
A Zimbabwean webquest<br />
1<br />
a) 84<br />
b) take office<br />
c) elections<br />
d) China<br />
e) India<br />
f) developing countries<br />
g) Corrupt<br />
h) confident<br />
2<br />
a) angry<br />
b) hungry<br />
c) win<br />
d) winner<br />
e) accountable<br />
f) five-year<br />
g) crimes<br />
h) optimistic<br />
3 56 – per cent– 50.3 – 42.9<br />
4 recount – absurd – party<br />
5 47.9 – 43.2 – second – Movement – Democratic – Change – 20 – killed<br />
6 Botswana – violence – international<br />
7 South Africa – return – shortest – 25 – 40,000<br />
8 80 – 200,000 – candidate – victory<br />
9 election – red – voted – destroyed – didn’t vote<br />
10 85.51 – five-year – China – Russia – South Africa<br />
11 crocodiles – 62 – xenophobic – 17,000<br />
12 refugees – help – food – clothes – Adonis – other countries