343 Articles by:
Tom Devriendt
Tom Devriendt was an editorial board member of Africa is a Country before there was an editorial board.
Weekend Music Break N°32
Photographer Mário Macilau’s Portraits of the “Forgotten” Elderly
A number of studies indicate that the average life expectancy has increased in the last decades. The implementation of technology, agriculture, medicine and sanitation have contributed to this phenomenon. As a result, this significant part of the population is reaching an age that does not permit this population to participate in labour nor to contribute to the production of everyday activities and self-maintenance. The growth of the population over sixty-five years – the age of retirement – is only increasing to such an extent that the elderly population might constitute half of the entire European population in the coming twenty years. Could ageing thus be understood as a blessing?
In affluent societies, the demands of the high-performance labour that is paired with the increasing life expectancy, a culture of care homes has been put in place. Elderly members of the family are placed in these homes under care of professionals who are often strangers to these vulnerable groups. Care homes are part social club, dispensaries and hospices.
This culture of displacement stands in contrast with social values of the traditions of living together and growing old in one homestead, whereby senior members of the family were cared for by their offspring. Such cultures can still be found in rural areas and some parts of African countries.
* "Esquecidos" runs until 5 March 2013 at the Centro Cultural Franco-Moçambicano.My Favorite Photographs N°11: Jide Odukoya
Recently I was selected to be a part of the Invisible Borders Trans-African Photography Project, which involved photographers, visual artists and film makers. Every year this collective welcomes new participants who travel through five to six countries in Africa all together in a van with the aim of telling African stories (by Africans) and building inter-relationships amongst participating artists and artists in countries visited. This year we travelled from Nigeria through Cameroon and Gabon before heading back to Lagos, Nigeria. The image above is one of the photographs I took in the process of passing through the muddy border village of Ejumoyock. It shows local villagers trying to pull out our van at Ejumoyock on our first night in the rain forests of Cameroon. I particularly like this photograph because it reminds me of the first of four nights we spent here trying to pull our van across roughly ten kilometres of severely muddy forest pathways. It was a tough experience for me; we slept in the van for five days and engaged only with the nearby village boys and the forest ants who kept us company through the night in the cold forest. These boys had just found a new job of helping stuck vehicles out of the forest. Due to land issues between the Nigerian and Cameroonian governments, the road which connects the south of Nigeria to the west of Cameroon has been left unattended to for years. The contract had just been awarded to a Chinese construction company which just recently began working on the road. The scene is one I would never forget in a hurry.
The following image is one I really love from the series Nigerians in Libreville, a documentary I did in Gabon which explores the paradoxical stories of Africans living on African soil, but in countries other than their respective native countries. There have been reported incidents of xenophobic discrimination and socio-political nightmare. A number of Nigerians who fled Nigeria during the Biafran war are now resident in Gabon. There are also others who arrived travelling through a deadly sea in search of a promised greener pasture. Most would agree that the economy of Gabon is far better than Nigeria while some, entrapped in circumstances far beyond their control, feel there is no place like home. Their stories recount their experiences; the dangers of migrating through the sea, challenges of starting a new life in a francophone country, a frictional relationship with the authorities, and the threatening fear of returning back to their homeland as empty as when they came.
I met Daniel on the 4th day we got into Gabon while still doing a street walk round a nearby market close to where we stayed. He saw me with my camera and was happy. For the first time I met someone who understood English and I asked to take a shot. Libreville is a photophobic city and people would readily shy away at the sight of a camera. I got into conversation with Daniel and got to know he was also a Nigerian. He told me how he had been managing his small business as an ice cream seller and how he wished to return to Nigeria later in December. I later returned days after our first meeting to take this shot of him. Although content with his current work and status, he says it’s time for him to visit his homeland Nigeria since he left as a child 23 years ago.
As part of my daily work on the trip, I documented the daily lives of Gabonese on the country's coast line. I came across this French man playing with the kids on the beach. This brings to mind the long-time relationship between France and Gabon, as noted by a Gabonese who said it’s much more difficult for somebody from a neighbouring country to come into Gabon than a visitor from France. Interestingly, it had been rather tedious for our team to get Visas into the country.
Next is one of my favourites from the Invisible Borders trip. While coming back from the trip, travelling several kilometres during the night through hilly and mountainous landscapes of Cameroon, we got to a village called Tiben as the day broke. Tiben has a very beautiful scenery and was very chilly with the clouds at sea level. I quickly grabbed my camera and ran down towards the hill. As I tried to capture the awesome spectacle, this girl appeared on my viewfinder out of nowhere. I was astonished! I never thought any human being could be living in that region, let alone a little girl.
French language proved a painful barrier as I tried to ask the girl some questions and have some small talk. She didn’t understand English either, I thought. She walked away. I now focused on the beautiful scenery. I am proud to be an African, living in a place called Africa.
It is hard to reflect objectively on the proliferation of Churches in Nigeria. There are many reasons for this, the major one being the manner in which spirituality has formed a sensitive layer in the subconscious of Christians, especially in the country's southern parts. The proliferation touches on media, the economy, and social structure. Many have attributed this quest for a better life to underdevelopment and poverty, but it is difficult to assume this lies at the crux of the growth and prosperity of churches. When I began to photograph the evidences of Christian life in Port Harcourt (where I currently live), I wanted to discover the subtleties inherent in Port Harcourt’s Christianity. I was interested in the way invitations stood out, how church leaders (with varying titles) used their posters not simply as advertisement but as self-aggrandizement.
It bothered me to question how these churches, in their numbers, and with thousands of worshippers, struggled for space, credibility and relevance. Was it really a struggle? Was there some unity in the similarity of posters, of postures, of worship? I understood, immediately, that I was trying to capture a landscape that captures attention through words and images. Out of all the images, the one above particularly stands out as it appears to have been inspired by Prison Break, the popular American prison series.
* Jide Odukoya resides in Lagos, Nigeria. His website: http://www.jideodukoya.com.Friday Bonus Music Break, N°30
10 Albums You Might Have Missed in 2012
Janka Nabay, Ben Zabo, Sinkane, Jagwa Music, Kanyi, Youssoupha, Kyle Shepherd, Ebo Taylor, Karantamba and Francis Bebey.
Weekend Music Break, N°29
Friday Bonus Music Break, N°28
10 African films to watch out for, N°15
Le Maréchalat du Roi Dieu ("The Marshalcy of King-God") is a documentary by Nathalie Pontalier, who tells the story of André Ondao Mba from Libreville, Gabon. Mba shares a house with his two sons but he is ill, suffering from paranoid schizophrenia. He has been painting murals for over twenty years -- containing messages and mythologies that remain opaque to many.
And LUX is a film by French photographer Sébastien Coupy about rural Burkina Faso. It's a collage of his photos, with commentary and voice-overs by Burkinabés about the many meanings and the scarce availability of electricity, "lumière", light, LUX. A first fragment here, and a second below: http://vimeo.com/49025586
10 African films to watch out for, N°14
- Country: Mali
- Director: Dominique Philippe
- Production: Babel Films
- Cast: Chek Oumar Sidibé, Mama Koné, Fatoumata Coulibaly
A Lovers Call is a short film by Najma Nuriddin about Aasim, a young single Muslim man living in Washington DC who falls for a poet named Kala. The film is filed in the portfolio of Nsoroma Films, a US-based production house "of the African diaspora ... dedicated to telling organic stories." Here's a trailer: http://youtu.be/XtH6w5iR6lI Elelwani is a new film by South African director Ntshavheni wa Luruli (whose film The Wooden Camera was awarded the Crystal Bear for Best Youth Feature at the Berlinale in 2004). Selling-line: "the world's first Venda film": http://youtu.be/ZXCJR7MhvKg And six documentaries (made/in-the-making): The Engagement Party in Harare is a 35mins documentary film by British/Polish filmmaker Agnieszka Piotrowska "about post-colonial identities at the Harare International Festival of the Arts in Zimbabwe." The film features the HIFA organizers as well as Zimbabwean artists such as Raphael Chikukwa (photo left) and Tsitsi Dangaremba. No trailer yet.
Rwagasore: Life, Struggle, Hope is a film by directors Justine Bitagoye and Pascal Capitolin and producer Johan Deflander about Burundi's struggle hero Prince Louis Rwagasore who became the country's first Prime Minister, and was murdered a few days after the formation of his government, on October 13, 1961. According to the film's website "the film [was] shown during the [2012] cinquentenaire festivities on July 1st at the Burundi embassy in Moscow. This mainly for the Burundese diaspora in Russia." Here's a first trailer for I Sing the Desert Electric, a short film about electronic based musical phenomena occurring from Mauritania to Northern Nigeria. Cue sahelsounds: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=82Y3kpXgT6o Underground/On the Surface revolves around a new underground musical genre known as Mahraganat Shaabi which despite being rejected by the mainstream has become very popular with the youth in the streets of Cairo: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NE7oo9PLm20 (Related: don't miss Afropop Worldwide's recent feature on Cairo's musical "underground".) Mother of the Unborn is Nadine Salib's first feature length documentary and looks at the challenges faced by Egyptian women unable to conceive, and subsequently face rejection by their families and stigmatization by their communities. The film tells stories of several childless women who navigate their world of rural Egyptian myths, legends, habits and traditions surrounding childbearing and infertility: http://vimeo.com/45878733
And in 1962: De l'Algérie française à l'Algérie algérienne ("From French Algeria to Algerian Algeria") Malek Bensmaïl and Marie Colonna revisit French and Algerians' moods and expectations during the seven weeks that separated the official France-Algeria cease-fire on March 19, 1962 from the first elections for the National Algerian Assembly. The film's website has a trailer.
Friday Bonus Music Break, N°27
10 films to watch out for, N°13
The Shore Break by Ryley Grunenwald (director) and Odette Geldenhuys (producer) follows a young rural activist and her 79-year-old headman in their joint fight to defend their family’s land (located in Pondoland, South Africa) after a government decision to allow the construction of a highway through their ancestral lands, which gives an Australian mining company access to their titanium-rich and eco-sensitive coastline. Follow the production and funding process on their Facebook page; in the meantime, here's the trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHckNAVmRbo Also about mining, on the other tip of the continent, is Tunisian filmmaker Sami Tlili’s Cursed be the Phosphate, which tells the story of the 2008 revolts in the Gafsa mining basin, and more particularly in the town of Redayef. Tlili suggests these protests were an important precursor to the country's 2011 Revolution: http://vimeo.com/51321241
Mercy Mercy is the latest instalment in what seems to have become a business itself: documentaries on (Ethiopian) adoptions gone wrong. Somewhat grandiose production quote: "Inspired by tales of globalisation such as Iñárritu's Babel, [the film] also draws on the epic style of Fridthjof Film's Armadillo." Here's a video interview with Katrine Riis Kjær, the Danish maker of the film. Judging by the few comments on the film's website, it seems to have left first viewers perplexed. No trailer yet.
Kinshasa Mboka Te is a Congolese-Belgian "documentary road-movie" (directed by Douglas Ntimasiemi) set in the streets of Kinshasa, weaving together personal interviews, music and animation: http://vimeo.com/28147224
Sudanna al Habib ("Our Beloved Sudan"), by director Taghreed Elsanhouri, "takes the historical trajectory of a nation from birth in 1956 to its death or transmutation into two separate states in 2011 and within this structure it interlaces a public and a private story. Inviting key political figures to reflexively engage with the historical trajectory of the film while observing an ordinary mixed race family caught across the divides of a big historical moment as they try to make sense of it and live through it" (source: again, the film's Facebook page -- it's remarkable how many films on a smaller budget make good use of this platform). Here's a recent interview with the director. There are a few first reviews available online (here and here).
Maffé Tiga (Peanut Butter Stew) is a short fiction film by Senegalese-Guinean director Mohamed Dione: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZXT2ja_7Lxc (If you have some bandwidth to spare, you can watch the film in full here.) We Never Give Up II is the follow-up documentary to a first film by the same title, produced in 2002, which highlighted the exclusion of survivors by the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and the battle for final reparations by those included. Ten years later, the Khulumani Support Group continues its campaign for comprehensive and inclusive reparations from the South African Department of Justice and Constitutional Development, and from multinationals that aided apartheid. (If you're in Cape Town this month, the documentary will screen at the Baxter Theatre Concert Hall.)
And information about Ode In Blood is sparse for now, but with this kind of synopsis, and a trailer like the one below, it can hardly go wrong. Director is South African Rea Rangaka: http://vimeo.com/52419118
Friday Bonus Music Break, N°26
10 African films to watch out for, N°12
Friday Bonus Music Break, N°25
10 African films to watch out for, N°11
Next up, Les Mécréants ("The Infidels") is a Swiss-Moroccan production, directed by Mohcine Besri. The trailer is puzzling, and so is the synopsis: "On the order of their spiritual leader, three young Islamists kidnap a group of actors who are about to go on tour with their latest show. When the kidnappers arrive at the place of detention, they find themselves cut off from their base. A 7-day no exit situation [ensues], in which both sides are forced to live together, confront each other and challenge their mutual prejudices." We'll have to watch it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=34BKIrhGGiI There's a couple of interesting film events happening this week. One of them this weekend in Namibia. Details here. Among the films that will be screened is Try, a short directed by Joel Haikali. Synopsis: 8 hours in Windhoek: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lEIuxSGxRVk Showing at the Afrikamera festival in Berlin this week (which has a focus on 'African women on and behind the screen') is Ramata, the first feature film by Congolese director Léandre-Alain Baker. The film is set in Dakar (Senegal). No English trailer yet: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-6AhBdAkvM Ici on Noie les Algériens ("We drown Algerians here") -- also showing at Afrikamera -- revisits October 17, 1961, the day when thousands of Algerians marched through Paris against the curfew imposed on them; a demonstration that saw a brutal crackdown by the French police leaving many demonstrators killed. Combining narrative and unpublished archives, the film traces the different stages of events, revealing the strategies and methods implemented at the highest level of the State (manipulation of public opinion, the systematic challenging of all charges, etc). Here's a trailer (in French): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fj9ScGgb2GQ Remember François Hollande only recently became the first French president to recognize the State's involvement, 51 years after the facts. (More and longer fragments here and here.) Have You Heard From Johannesburg dates from 2010 but just last month won the Primetime Emmy Award for Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking. It is a series of seven documentaries, produced and directed by Connie Field, chronicling the history of the global anti-apartheid movement, that took on South Africa’s apartheid state and its international supporters who at the time considered South Africa an ally in the Cold War. The film's website has a wide-ranging gallery of photos, profiles and links. The trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IU48nQUEYtI The Dream of Shahrazad is a documentary film by South African director Francois Verster (remember his excellent 'Sea Point Days', which you can watch here if you haven't), "[locating] political expression before, during and after the Egyptian revolution – and also within recent times in Turkey and Lebanon – within a broader historical and cultural framework: that of storytelling and music." The film has recently been accepted for the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam’s co-production and co-financing Forum which hopefully means the production can be brought to a succesful end. There are more fragments on its website, but here's the trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEoiviVbTDk Clara di Sabura is a film directed by Guinean José Lopes, inspired by Mussá Baldé's famous poem with the same title -- a comment on the lives of youth in (the streets of) Bissau. The opening scenes: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkfUqgssiek There's no English subtitled version available yet, but if your Kriol (or Portuguese) is up to standard, you can watch the next parts of the film here. And finally, another documentary. L'horizon cassé ("The broken horizon") is a film by Anaïs Charles-Dominique and Laurent Médéa about the 1991 riots that broke out in the Cauldron, a neighbourhood of Saint Denis (La Réunion), after the popular TV channel Télé Freedom was shut down by the state and its founder, Camille Sudre, was taken to court. There's no trailer yet, but here's an interview with both the directors (in French), including some archival footage from the film: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zGLJSD9bqxU In other festival news, there are encouraging reports from Amsterdam, where the Africa in the Picture film festival gets to keep some of its subsidies. And kicking off today in Nairobi is the OUT Film Festival, with a screening of I Am Mary, a documentary film about Mary, a volunteer with one of the GALCK member groups, Minority Women in Action, and an active participant in the fight for human rights for LGBTI persons in Kenya.