B.W. COOK -- The Crowd
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My personal summertime society travel expert Hazel Dyer of Costa Mesa
recently shared the adventures of Newport Mesa citizens in Cuba, which I
covered last month in my Daily Pilot column. Dyer stopped by my office to
share her plans for her next jaunt to South Africa, set for Oct. 11-22 of
this year.
Dyer and her husband, Charles, are both South African immigrants to
the United States, moving here less than a decade ago and leaving behind
a life that was very different from the world they experience here in
Orange County. Charles Dyer recalls: “As a young man I left my home in
England traveling to the former Rhodesia in search of my fortune.” The
fair-skinned, blue-eyed Englishman continued, sharing a bit of his life’s
story with his own brand of the famous dry English humor: “Instead of
finding my fortune, I lost one. Eventually I ended up in South Africa,
more than 30 years ago. I put down my roots in South Africa, we raised
our children there. It is a bit of a challenge to start over in a new
country at this stage of life.”
Hazel Dyer quickly added: “We came to America leaving almost
everything we owned, including the majority of our savings and
investments behind. South African law does not permit you to remove
substantial sums of money from the country.”
The family did not leave South Africa due to the change in power
following the end of apartheid, she said.
“We left before the fall of the apartheid system,” she recalled.
“Actually we left because of it, not because of growing pressure on white
society. Our children would not live in a discriminatory society, and did
not want to raise their children in such a world. So in their early 20s
they left South Africa and came to America to start their lives in a
democratic nation. We followed our children. We wanted to be near them.
If we had known that a peaceful transition of power would have taken
place in South Africa, I don’t think any of us would have ever left.”
Hazel Dyer spun philosophic, looking back at the major changes in her
recent lifetime. “Please don’t get me wrong. We love Orange County. What
better place could anyone live in the entire world? We love America. But
we do miss the life we had in South Africa. We miss the people. We miss
the scenery. We miss the parts of the life that we had built over three
decades.”
Charles Dyer added with a grin: “If you really want to know I miss my
house and yard. You don’t exactly get the same kind of space for the same
kind of money here in Orange County. But such is life.”
The Dyers, in association with African Travel Inc. and the Jewish
Community Center of Orange County, based in Costa Mesa, are planning a
journey back to the world and to the life they once shared. The 11-day
trip begins with a stop in Johannesburg, followed by a wildlife safari
that will include a visit to Kruger National Park, South Africa’s best
known reserve and prime wild life viewing area. Then it’s off to Sun City
for a stay in the world’s only six-star hotel. The adventure ends in Cape
Town as travelers tour South Africa’s mother city.
The journey will be a first-class excursion that includes most meals,
all accommodations, travel, sightseeing, porterage and special amenities.
Helen Dyer added: “We’ve made time for cultural sightseeing, wildlife
experiences, shopping, dining, sports, as well as quiet time to take in a
very different culture in a very different part of the world.”
Other highlights of the journey will include visits to the South
African Museum, the National Art Gallery, the Bo-Kaap Museum, which is
furnished as a 19th Century Muslim home, the Jewish Museum, built in 1863
by Cape Town’s pioneer Jewish settlers and the new Holocaust Museum,
considered one of the most important in the world.
If you care to join this world-class excursion from the Newport-Mesa
community, please contact Hazel Dyer at The Jewish Community Center,
(714) 755-0340 Ext. 135.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
CAPTIONS
crowd 1
Charles and Hazel Dyer of Costa Mesa with a young South African child.
crowd 2
Gloria Friedman of Newport Beach poses with Zulu tribal members
outside of Cape Town.
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