CONFLICT – CENSORSHIP

Africa, South Africa, Creativity, TIME4AFRICA, ZEN4AFRICA

C R E A T I V I T Y  in the  D R A M A T I C  A R T S

APARTHEID’S evil regime of 50 years locked down all political protest.

Because of this oppression there was an incredible flowering of the arts, by necessity, subtly subversive.

The theatre exploded with the Welcome Msomi  zulu production of Macbeth in the 60’s, which he told me would be understood by Zulus as being anti-Apartheid. It became nationally and then globally famous.

The play-writing and acting trio of Athol Fugard, Winston Ntshona and John Kani with The Island, Sizwe Banzi is Dead, (South Africa’s own Samuel Beckett), really pushed the envelope, but were never banned, because of the cerebral content that was lost on no-one but DID NOT break the law. John Kani also played an unforgettable Othello, even Apartheid couldn’t ban William Shakespeare.

C R E A T I V I T Y  in  M U S I C

Miriam Makeba on her first world tour had her passport torn up and was cruelly banned from returning to South Africa. We all knew by heart her songs of longing for freedom, as those of the torch singer Brenda Fasse who lived to embrace Madiba at the abolition of apartheid. There were many, many more musicians for freedom Julian Bahula of Black Malombo, Dollar Brand’s African Sketchbook and of course the white Zulu warrior Johnny Clegg who wrote and performed the global tear-jerker Asimbonanga.

C R E A T I V I T Y  in  L I T E R A T U R E

The pen is mightier than the sword – Nadine Gordimer, André Brink’s Looking on Darkness, Alan Paton with Cry the Beloved Country, Breyten Breytenbach and others mocked, ridiculed Apartheid and it’s vile racism. More, their words and emotions wormed their way into their readers’ hearts to plant the uncomfortable seeds of denial.

C R E A T I V I T Y  in  V I S U A L  A R T S

Walter Battiss, my professor of Art was the supreme jester. An early fan of graffiti he slashed the the racist rigidity with his superbly seditious, sometime inter-racial sexual, camel-hair paint brush.

SO WHAT IS OUR CONCLUSION? 

This volcanic outburst of creativity by women, men, black, white, brown was the ONLY non subvertly political expression possible. Television was banned, the Beatles were banned, an English cricket team with a black player was banned, Bobby Kennedy was banned outside the university precinct and on and on.

But you cannot ban people from thinking, from writing, drawing, singing, making music. And this is precisely what happened in the creative hothouse that Apartheid unintentionally produced and thereby imploded.

« By the delicate, invisible web they wove – the… mystery of freedom » T.S.Eliot.

A R T  over  A P A R T H E I D

CHILDREN OF APARTHEID

South Africa, TIME4AFRICA, ZEN4AFRICA

I AM AS I AM

I am 4 years old. When I grow up I want to be an airline pilot, heavyweight boxing champion of the world, president of my country. Why does the white man hold me back?

Feel me, touch me, see me. I am just like you.

My name is Tommy.
https://youtu.be/m7AHblQ3_oM

BLACK LIVES AND OPPORTUNITY MATTER!

THE WHITE ZULU WARRIOR

South Africa, Time4Music

 

Johnny-Clegg

JOHNNY CLEGG PHD – OBE

This jewish kid, born in Lancashire, England in 1953, emigrated to South Africa, first arrested at 15 in anti-Apartheid rally – prof of Social Anthropology at Wits University, author, songwriter – received the highest honors in South Africa, for his life-long fight against Apartheid, ranking 23rd of the greatest South Africans of all time.

And the music – 2 platinum and 5 gold records

JULUKA

JC&SMCH

Partners in « crime » – Johnny with Sipho Mchunu

Banned from playing in public in South Africa they played in restaurants, private homes and internationally where JULUKA became famous world-wide with Universal Men, Work for All. . .

SAVUKA

Savuka

Johnny teamed up with Dudu Zulu when Sipho went back to sheep farming.

More big, global hits followed: Third World Child, Heat, Dust, Dreams and then in 1987 the greatest of all – you guessed. . .

ASIMBONANGA

JC 46664

Every man, woman and child in the country sang this anthem for the release of Madiba from Robben Island.

Hear it once again.

Millions of people today are again suffering and need our support and succor in this dark night of terror and deadly disorder – where we are increasingly suffering from compassion fatigue.

But there is hope. . .

 

 ONE MAN’S FIGHT WITH MUSIC TO SHINE THE LIGHT OF FREEDOM