Post by Peter MoylanPost by Adam Funk(At that time, childhood smallpox vaccination was routine in the
USA; I'm surprised if it wasn't also in Australia.)
I was vaccinated for several things as a child, but smallpox wasn't one
of them. Australians only got a smallpox vaccination when travelling to
countries where it was still a problem.
In July 1964 South Africa started requiring passports for people
crossing the border of Lesotho (then a British Protectorate more
widely known as "Basutoland"). It also required smallpox vaccinations,
as there had been an outbreak of smallpox in Swaziland, now better
known as ESwatini.
I had never been vaccinated as a child (me father was a health nut and
didn't believe in it) but was planning to visit Lesotho, so I got a
vaccination and the necessary certificate, and for several days I was
sick as a dog, and had to write one of my university exams from the
sick room.
I arrived at the Lesotho border with several friends, and on the South
African side there was a little wooden hut in a sea of mud that had
been levelled to build an immigration post. Several of my friends had
neglected to get vaccination certificates, but he said they could go
through if they police on the Lesotho side let them, and they could
get vaccinated in the hospital in Maseru. So we went through and the
police and the Lesotho side let us through, and we called at the
hospital where the unvaccinated among us got their vaccinations and
certificates. They suffered no ill-effects afterwards as they had all
been vaccinated as children, whereas as a child I (well actually my
parents) had had to show an exception certificate at every government
school at which I was enrolled.
There was similar weirdness on the Swaziland border the following
year, but on that occasion the scare was not over smallpox but foot &
mouth disease.
--
Steve Hayes from Tshwane, South Africa
Web: http://www.khanya.org.za/stevesig.htm
Blog: http://khanya.wordpress.com
E-mail - see web page, or parse: shayes at dunelm full stop org full stop uk