A poem written in Breyten Breytenbach's prison shows that her love to his wife and her had a profound impact on the survival of physical and emotional prisons under harsh conditions. His wife's thought was that Breyten Breytenbach had escaped the fear of the prison around him and gave him psychological freedom; the news from her put him in her letter for him It created peace and freedom. Memories with his wife brought him psychologically to another time and place of his freedom.
Breyten Breytenbach's wife is the source of his strength - her letter, the memories of happy days she spent together, and his thoughts about her love, he is his ugly, chaotic environment It made it possible to escape from. She can be seen and personally arrive, but still can bring him happiness, peace, and peace.
His wife's thought was that Breyten Breytenbach had escaped the fear of the prison around him and gave him psychological freedom; the news from her put him in her letter for him It created peace and freedom. Memories with his wife brought him psychologically to another time and place of his freedom. Breitenbach's poem, your signer is happy ... it shows that his wife plays an important role in his life. Even if the power of God becomes useless in the chaotic world around him, she is His "God" because she can bring him happiness and hope and release his thoughts. In this poem Breitenbach compares God with his wife using the suggestion of his Bible.
As you remember, Breytenbach remembers past free time (assuming that he and his wife start "You and I, the most loved one?" On the last line). Breytenbach has escaped reality, along the path of memories of "all tunnels and flood gates through the street", and it is still his time and place to enter another freedom. Breytenbach explains each scene, and every place has detailed facts that show he is completely away from the present and is completely escaping the past. He indicated that indulging in his days with his wife also helped him achieve psychological freedom.
Sembène lives alone in Dakar, the capital of Senegal. In a house overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, he is satisfied that he does not have a phone. He works in the office of downtown of his production company Domirev. According to South African writer Breiten Breitenbach living in Goree Island in Senegal, he is "unconditionally on the left side and is known to be irresponsible." He travels seamlessly, collects money, finds places, shoots, edits and shows in Tunisia or Morocco. Recently in Manhattan, he admired Moolaadé at Lincoln Center. In Harlem's "Little Senegal", the French client of his Les Ambassades tavern can identify his iconic hat, scarf, pipe. While drinking seafood and wine in a friend's apartment, he is eager to listen to the French radio alert in the presidential election of Togo.