Kafir Stories: Seven Short Stories by W. C. Scully
W.C. Scully was a British colonial administrator in South Africa in the late 1800s. Unlike many of his contemporaries, he used his position to listen. Kafir Stories (using the period term for the Xhosa people) is his attempt to channel those voices. The seven stories aren't connected by plot, but by place and experience. They paint a picture of a society under immense pressure.
The Story
There isn't one plot. Instead, each story is a snapshot. One might follow a Xhosa man forced into a legal system he doesn't trust to defend land that's been taken from him. Another shows the spiritual conflict when Christian missionaries clash with ancestral beliefs. A third could be a tense standoff between a colonial farmer and the workers he relies on but doesn't see as fully human. The through-line is the experience of colonization from the ground level—the confusion, the anger, the cunning survival strategies, and the moments of unexpected humanity that sometimes break through.
Why You Should Read It
First, it's a fascinating historical document that doesn't read like one. Scully, for all his biases as a man of his time, tried for empathy. He doesn't paint the colonists as pure villains or the Xhosa as noble savages; he shows flawed people trapped in a brutal system. The real power is in the small details—a look exchanged, a tradition explained, a choice made under duress. It makes that era feel real and uncomfortably relevant. You see the roots of so many modern tensions. It also challenges you to think about who gets to tell a story and why.
Final Verdict
This is for the curious reader. Perfect for anyone interested in African history, colonialism, or just incredibly strong short fiction that carries weight. It's for people who liked the vibe of Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart but want to see a similar clash from multiple, ground-level angles. It's not a light, breezy read—some passages are tough—but it's short, impactful, and will give you a perspective you won't find in standard history books. A hidden gem that deserves more attention.
Richard Taylor
1 year agoHigh quality edition, very readable.