Kubatana.net ~ an online community of Zimbabwean activists

Archive for September, 2011

Backstage at Zim Fashion Week

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Monday, September 5th, 2011 by Upenyu Makoni-Muchemwa

I had the unusual pleasure of masquerading as a designer on the closing night of Zimbabwe Fashion Week. The stress of not really knowing what was going on was overcome by the excitement of being part of a real fashion show. Well done to the organisers for being the first to bring the glamour of international fashion to Zimbabwe. Pictured above is the fabulous Denise Mutsamwira.

Life

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Monday, September 5th, 2011 by Bev Reeler

Life
September 2011

Already the temperatures have hit 30 degrees C
the days get longer as dusk and dawn stretch golden fingers into the dark

Spring

warm air wraps us in its silken cloak as we sit on the veranda at night

still two months before the rains…

but life is everywhere

full buds at the tips of dry branches
waiting for the day when the risk to remain
tight-wrapped
is more painful than the risk to blossom

with extraordinary individuality
each tree chooses its own time to face this new birthing
patient with their own calling

sifting through the  Rue flowers
a bee gathers pollen
grain by grain

Tasteless news package

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Monday, September 5th, 2011 by Amanda Atwood

I’ve noticed around Harare the billboard above advertising The Herald: News packaged to your taste. And I’ve been wondering if it is actually a terribly clever subversive undermining of the state media by whomever they hired to do their marketing. Because I don’t know about you but the image used – a crusty day-old bread roll, a bit of polony, some wilted lettuce and a few slices of that tasteless, processed, pre-sliced, plastic orange stuff that tries to pass as cheese – doesn’t exactly leave me salivating to by my latest copy of The Herald and tuck right in. But then again, I’ve always found The Herald pretty tasteless – in both senses of the word.

Hiphop ‘War Child’ Emmanuel Jal visits Zimbabwe

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Friday, September 2nd, 2011 by Bev Clark

The Book Café Carpark, Harare
Friday 9 September, 6-11.30pm

This week Sudanese hiphop star EMMANUEL JAL lands in Harare for a whirlwind hiphop collaboration with Zimbabwe.  A mega performance in the Book Café car park on Friday 9 September from 6pm will headline Jal and his 6-piece band, following a star line-up of some of Zimbabwe’s best – feisty mbira star Chiwoniso Maraire, ‘Comrade Fatso’ and Chabvondoka, and ‘Outspoken’ and The Essence.

Emerging from a vicious background of child-soldiering in Southern Sudan, and after escaping to Kenya, Jal fell in love with hiphop and felt it could provide the easiest and most effective vehicle to express his story.  Emmanuel Jal’s music grew in Kenya, reached the word through the airwaves, and he is now an internationally renowned hiphop artist, with a strong message of peace for the world.  “Jal set the hip-hop bar higher,” wrote the Washington Post in 2008.

Despite his accomplishments in music, Jal’s biggest passion is for Gua Africa, a charity that he founded. Besides building schools, the nonprofit provides scholarships for Sudanese war survivors in refugee camps, and sponsors education for children in the most deprived slum areas in Nairobi.

Jal, whose own childhood was robbed from him, aims to protect the childhood of others through music. “Music is powerful.  It is the only thing that can speak into your mind, your heart and your soul without your permission” he said.

Jal will be making powerful music on Friday 9 September, alongside Zimbabwean artists who also have a story to tell, gifted young musicians, songwriters and poets who have achieved some acclaim in the world, also gracing stages from New York to Berlin and Capetown to Zanzibar.  The open air concert kicks off with the Zimbabwean artists, followed by Emmanuel Jal at 10pm.

‘War Child’
A documentary film about Emmanuel Jal called ‘War Child’ was made in 2008 by C. Karim Chrobog.  It made its international debut at the Berlin Film Festival and its North American debut at the Tribeca Film Festival, where it won the Cadillac Audience Award, and an autobiography under the same name was released in 2009.

As part of the Emmanuel Jal programme, ‘War Child’ will be screened on Thursday 8 September, at the Mannenberg Film Club

Share your books

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Thursday, September 1st, 2011 by Bev Clark

A library outranks any other one thing a community can do to benefit its people. It is a never failing spring in the desert.
Andrew Carnegie

At Kubatana we use the corridor outside our office as a makeshift library. We put books or videos or pens or newspapers on the ground with a note saying take one if you like. Do something similar. Share your stuff.

Mobile phones in Africa

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Thursday, September 1st, 2011 by Upenyu Makoni-Muchemwa