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10th Carnival of Positives

on November 13, 2007
Category: Carnival, Film, HIV/AIDS

The 10th Carnival of Positives is over on Slimconomy - the name refers to a wasting the wasting disease common with AIDS.

The categories are: Film, Health and Fitness, International, Personal Accounts, Politics, Spirituality, Support and 3 video shorts:

and Miss Empowe(RED) presents a documentary SistahGirl: Black Women and HIV/AIDS

project featuring the lives of HIV positive Black women from the US, with some traveling on an unprecedented journey to meet HIV positive African women activists to exchange ideas about prevention, treatment, physical, and spiritual healing.

Plan International - You Tube: Impact of HIV on children in Uganda

and Malak: Words and Silence

This film shows a woman who has HIV/AIDS interacting in her community and society without ever speaking a word. The film shows how she listens to other peole’s concerns and thoughts, meanwhile, all the time, we are faced with the reality of her own existence, taking medication, the different things she must live with, without ever getting a chance to speak to others about her own difficult life. Throughout the film she is silent but in the end she decides to speak

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Black lesbians in conversation

on November 7, 2007
Category: African Diaspora, Film, LGBTI

black.womyn.:conversations is a documentary that explores a range of Black lesbian experiences from activism, racism, gender roles, coming out, marriage, patriarchy.

Excellent

Links: black.womyn.:conversations blog

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Goodbye Uncle Tom

on October 26, 2007
Category: African Diaspora, Film, African History

Goodbye Uncle Tom - One of the most shocking aspects of this unashamedly racist film full of gratuitous violence and frankly disgusting, is that it was made not in the 1930s or 40s but in 1971 by Italian directors, Gualtiero Jacopetti Franco Prosperi. The directors claim the film’s stated aim was to expose the horrors of slavery and racism but it is crude and only succeeds in reinforcing racism and making a mockery of Blackness as the slaves are presented without voice or agency and are completely dehumanized.

This is part one and lasts only 40 minutes. For those living in London the whole film is to be shown on 3/11 followed by a discussion - venue: NFT as part of the London Film Festival.

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Thanks to African Writers for the link to SayItLoud

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More Joburg Rising & Nice Music for Week Ending

on July 28, 2007
Category: South Africa, Film, Music

Maveric ——– [listen to very cool musik for slow dancin on MP3]

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and Aura Msimang ——-[more musik here]

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provided the sound track to Joburg Rising

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Joburg Rising

on July 25, 2007
Category: South Africa, Film, Africa - Creative Arts, African Women

Joburg Rising has been sitting in my head for the past two weeks since the film’s opening on 13th July. The film is special because it was made by my dear sister friend Lindiwe Nkutha (writer, poet, photograher and film maker)

The film is a 48 minute documentary called Jo’burg Rising, and follows three men,a beggar, a vendor and a car guard, as they try to earn a living off of the streets of our beloved Jozi

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and because, of my little bit of participation with the making of the film especially exploring the streets of Bree and Jeppe looking for shots, asking for permission to film people and places and watching the clips from the first days shooting before I left.

Some props from Rista of Cool Breeze

The one poem I learnt in high school that continues to echo in my mind is ‘building the nation’ by henry barlow.

It resonated anew at a private viewing of the documentary “Jo’burg Rising” which premieres tomorrow (Friday) at NuMetro in Hyde Park.

Yep, we’re all building the nation, one dream at a time. And props to Sokari who contributed along the arduous path of the documentary conceptualization.

I am only sad that I wasnt able to be there through the whole process and especially for missing the film’s opening.

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Wally Serote’s poem “City Johannesburg” on the beauty, vibrancy and horror as he passes through the city that is his but not his, pass in hand.

This way I salute you:
My hand pulses to my back trousers pocket
Or into my inner jacket pocket
For my pass, my life,
Jo’burg City.
My hand like a starved snake rears my pockets
For my thin, ever lean wallet,
While my stomach groans a friendly smile to hunger,
Jo’burg City.
My stomach also devours coppers and papers
Don’t you know?
Jo’burg City, I salute you;
When I run out, or roar in a bus to you,
I leave behind me, my love,
My comic houses and people, my dongas and my ever whirling dust,
My death
That’s so related to me as a wink to the eye.
Jo’burg City
I travel on your black and white and roboted roads
Through your thick iron breath that you inhale
At six in the morning and exhale from five noon.
Jo’burg City
That is the time when I come to you,
When your neon flowers flaunt from your electrical wind,
That is the time when I leave you,
When your neon flowers flaunt their way through the falling darkness
On your cement trees.
And as I go back, to my love,
My dongas, my dust, my people, my death,
Where death lurks in the dark like a blade in the flesh,
I can feel your roots, anchoring your might, my feebleness
In my flesh, in my mind, in my blood, And everything about you says it,
That, that is all you need of me.
Jo’burg City, Johannesburg,
Listen when I tell you,
There is no fun, nothing, in it,
When you leave the women and men with such frozen expressions,
Expressions that have tears like furrows of soil erosion,
Jo’burg City, you are dry like death,
Jo’burg City, Johannesburg, Jo’burg City.

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