The narrator, Mwana, is a young man from Bantuland, living in Geneva. A
graduate from a Swiss university, we first encounter Mwana waiting for a
bus in the hills of Lugano gazing at a poster calling for "black sheep"
to be sent home. Mwana's efforts to find work are fruitless until he
lands an internship in an NGO campaigning against racial discrimination.
The team is busy organising a demonstration against the black sheep
poster.
Mwana has one foot in each culture. He sees Swiss society through
African eyes, with all its contradictions: its moderation, stunning
landscapes and its eccentricities, but also its intolerance and
inflexibility. He also casts a critical eye on his native Africa, the
weight of its traditions and beliefs. Is belonging nowhere the price
Mwana has to pay for these insights?