The war, WWII ended on 2 September 1945, and we returned to Durban. My first years at school in Port Shepstone were disastrous, but nothing like what was about to unfold. Initially, we lived in a residential hotel; we had no base or home awaiting our return. I returned to school at the nearest school available; there were not too many options.
It was a large school with many pupils and extensive sports fields. Many of the boys were coarse hungry orphans from a nearby orphanage. They were quick to deprive me of anything that resembled food. I was not accustomed to an environment of that nature. I was unpretentious and solitary. During breaks, another boy and I would retire to the extremities of the sports fields, hide and remain away until the bell rang.
The class teacher was not much less a tyrant; I think she reaped more fulfilment from her cane than bringing me to my senses. The more I dodged the descending cane on my hands; the more exaggerated the venom.
I returned to the hotel each day black and blue but did not receive much comfort there either. Finally, I awakened in a hospital bed with a pile of Bugs Bunny comics beside me. While I can clearly remember much of what went on, I have no recollection of the hospital circumstances or how long I remained there. As far as I can recall, it was not illness or injury.
Thankfully, my mother found a more refined school for me the following year. I was ten years old, but still, my fragile psyche was irrecoverably altered. My introverted, intuitive thinking intensified while teaching staff knew better than to urge participation.
I spent three years at the school before going on to a secondary school. There, I studied more scientifically inclined subjects.