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From England to Africa: Following the Family Footprints

Nomad Rose traces her family’s migration from England to Zambia and experiences their life-changing journey through their eyes.

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By Rose Munday

Travel Blogger

7 Apr 2017 - 1 Minute Read

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My stomach was in a knot, and my mind was buzzing with anticipation: we were finally reaching the small Zambian settlement of Chipata.

Despite never having set foot there, this dusty town, close to the Malawian border, means a lot to me. It was here, almost a century ago, that my great-granddad was sent to head up a branch of a major bank.

Using his handwritten diary as an itinerary, I had traced the steps of my great-granddad and great-grandma’s journey from England to this far-flung place. Though the words have faded with age and the pages are threadbare from fingers pouring over them, to me, the diaries bring back to life an eager, apprehensive young man. My great-granddad. My travel companion and guide.

For him, the journey was treacherous. After a ship across the Atlantic and various trains through South Africa, there was no transport available for the final leg of their journey. Instead, they embarked on a 26-day walk across Zambia with all of their belongings.

For me, that same stretch of land was taking our tour group just two days to complete on our overland vehicle. My journey was to take me from Nairobi, Kenya and traveled through Tanzania and Malawi before reaching Zambia. That same sense of apprehension my great-granddad felt hit me as I packed my belongings and hauled them onto the bus.

Locals Tribespeople in Africa.
Rose Munday
Locals Tribespeople in Africa.

From the moment I arrived, I fell in love with Africa. From the barefoot Maasai tribes who walked the warm earth to the towering Baobab trees, the landscape fascinated me.

Despite the differences between our journeys, there were plenty of similarities.

As I sat watching the plain of Africa roll by, I read excerpts of my great granddad’s diary and saw the same arid landscape reflected in his words. I saw his eyes flicker back and forth, trying to keep up as the desert flashed past the window.

As I passed through local villages, women, with precariously balanced buckets of water trembling on their heads, turned to stare at me. They seemed wary at first, but their faces creased into smiles as children ran to the roadside, whooping and clamoring for a few seconds of our attention.

The locals showed a similar interest in my ancestors, too. My great-granddad described an old man's face crinkling like parchment as he welcomed my great grandparents into his humble home for lunch.

At night, we camped under the milky way and were warned that large animals were at bay. The distinctive cackle of a hyena broke into my sleep on numerous occasions, setting my every sense on edge.

In 1920, the animals were no less at large. My pregnant great-grandma, Jessie, found herself in the path of a herd of stampeding buffalo. Luckily, they changed course at the last minute, and she ended up laughing with relief as the animals charged into the horizon.

The dairy tells of their visit to Victoria Falls, too: “Words cannot describe that sight because it is too terrible and majestic”, my great-granddad wrote. “Jessie just held on to me and went pale in the face.”

Having never previously left their hometown, they'd likely never seen a waterfall before, let alone the world's biggest.

As I stood on the banks, marveling at the same view, I too was mesmerized.

They say 550 million liters of water drops over the Falls every minute. I wonder how many liters had cascaded over the last century since they had visited.

Hippo in Africa
Rose Munday
Hippo in Africa

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Rose is a travel blogger from Oxford, the UK. Some of her favourite destinations to date include Tokyo, Vietnam, Italy and Africa.

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