Six Feet Of The Country Summary !full! -

Petrus and his family are devastated and desperately want to exhume the body and rebury it on the narrator’s land — "six feet of the country" — so they can perform proper rituals and visit the grave. The narrator, reluctantly and with bureaucratic difficulty, helps them apply for the body’s release. However, the application is denied by the white authorities, who refuse to disturb the grave. The body is never returned.

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One day, one of their Black employees, Petrus (who works for the narrator), receives terrible news: his younger brother, who had been living and working illegally in the city, has died. The brother had come to visit Petrus secretly and fell ill, and despite being taken to a government clinic, he died. The authorities, following apartheid-era regulations, have already buried the body in a communal grave outside the town — without notifying the family or allowing them to claim the body. Petrus and his family are devastated and desperately

About the Author Nadine Gordimer (1923–2014) was a Nobel Prize-winning South African writer whose work often focused on the moral and psychological tensions of life under apartheid. Plot Summary The story is narrated by a white South African couple, the narrator and his wife, who run a small roadside trading store and a transport service for Black African migrant workers. They live on a piece of land they own, but the husband is more concerned with business profits than with the people around him. The body is never returned