Tuesday, December 23, 2008

HAMBA, JUBA! ( GO, DOVE!)


Sometimes I am serious. This is one of those rare times when prudence moves out of feeling's way, and anger chills my heart into stone, and briefly become deaf to God. And briefly I want to say that if I cannot amount to anything of worth in your eyes, it is neither my fault nor necessarily true; if my art negates my critical, intellectual and scientific faculties as far as you are concerned, fine; if calling you invites you to insult our callings, convictions and couth, you need not worry about any more unwanted invitations; if our laughter is a lack of dignity, we have nothing to apologise for; if my privateness be a curse and your judgement be friendship, then this love we had for you has just begun to keep a record of wrongs. If you're a dove, I beg you to take your thoughts to flight and leave us in peace. 

Yours,
Me and my friend.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

From bbc.co.uk

UK caused cholera, says Zimbabwe

President Robert Mugabe
Robert Mugabe has said the West was plotting to use cholera to invade

The cholera outbreak in Zimbabwe which has left hundreds dead was caused by the UK, an ally of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has said.

Information Minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu described the outbreak as a "genocidal onslaught on the people of Zimbabwe by the British".

On Thursday, Mr Mugabe said the spread of cholera had been halted.

But aid workers warned that the situation was worsening and the outbreak could last for months.

In his comments to media in Harare, Mr Ndlovu likened the appearance of cholera in Zimbabwe to a "serious biological chemical weapon" used by the British.

The Zimbabwean minister for information blames Britain for the cholera outbreak

He described it as "a calculated, racist, terrorist attack on Zimbabwe".

Mr Mugabe has already accused Western powers of plotting to use cholera as an excuse to invade and overthrow him.

Earlier on Friday a senior South African Anglican bishop said that Mr Mugabe should be seen as a "21st Century Hitler".

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Celebrating Sir SERETSE KHAMA
















I have been
performing a stage show on the controversial of Botswana's first president Seretse Khama's marriage to a British woman in the late 1940's. Some of the articles on the show are below. I will put up clips once the DVD is out. http://www.mmegi.bw/index.php?sid=6&aid=11&dir=2008/November/Tuesday25 http://www.berkshirereview.net/theater/dialogue_one_08.html http://www.advocateweekly.com/inberkshires/ci_11026128 http://62center.williams.edu/62center/event.cfm?eid=174

Cheers,

Donald.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Nervous About Response to Obama...but happy.




A few things make me nervous about Barack’s winning. Here is a few on my mind right now:

- The celebration and jubilation that is buzzing through Kenya is great but is its magnitude misplaced? If it is in fact appropriate then I hope that it does not give way to ridiculous expectations upon the Obama Administration vis-à-vis US-Kenya relations etc. That makes me nervous.

- The state of African-Americans – I hope that the African-American will not now walk around with extra padding on their shoulder because this is a step towards the process of leveling the field as opposed to tipping the scales in the opposite direction to the status quo.

- The White Americans – I hope they don’t feel too complacent by having voted for a Black president and actually start acting the way their vote suggests they are beginning to think about racial politics.

- The Foreign Black Student From Botswana: I hope everyone will stop trying to drag me into false solidarity based on color.

That said, CONGRATULATIONS PRESIDENT OBAMA!!!

RANTING: Barack's Glory Casts A Shadow on Me


No rain on Obama, but read on.

Barack Obama is on his way to becoming the first Black President of the US. As a political scientist and someone interested in world politics I see this as a miraculously good thing in many ways including symbolism of progressive thinking of the American people, the changing of America’s face to a world angry at and sometimes hateful towards the US etc.

That being said, I do not have an emotional response towards the outcome of Obama’s run. I do not even use such words as “victory” to describe it. Whose victory? I may love Obama as a leader but truth is though I may live in America but I am still a foreigner looking in on American politics. They do not make me react on a personal level as opposed to an intellectual one of a voyeur. And this distant reaction of mine has earned me a few odd looks from the Americans I speak with who expect the opposite.

WHY cannot they understand that I will not sing praises for Barack based on the fact that he is Black and so am I? Given the History Barack’s presidency will be making, will American people assess their understanding of a compartmentalized understanding of identity being the basis for phony solidarity? I respect the man as a leader, not for the fact that he is my color.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

B O R D E R S

I recently had an interesting talk with my friend Chenjerai about borders. He is from Zimbabwe and I am from Botswana and so naturally we spoke about borders' cultural impacts pertaining to Southern Africa. ''You see, my brother, look at the map of Zimbabwe - it is like a teapot and you know British people like their tea,'' he joked about why it was in the interests of the first world to keep the borders intact.


He opined that they needed to be erased because they were not drawn by the southern Africans and they divided ethnic groups and were designed to keep the people there under colonial control, and so borders weakened the region's voice in world politics. He called what we know as countries in that region today as ''constructed nation states''. It is the classic divide and rule argument.

This got me wondering about how borders have exclusified languages or dialects...I hope there is such a word as exclusify, but what I mean is if a Shona person spoke Kalanga with a Shona accent in Botswana they would probably get flak for it, and if I as a Kalanga speaker have taken flak for speaking Shona ''funny.'' Shona and Kalanga are in some respects like Texan English and the English one would find in Wales, so they are not completely dissimilar. Once upon a time, they were the same language but a border ran through it and now it lives between them.

Now everyone holds onto their version of the language and makes it an exclusive mode of communication that the speakers of the other versions have no right to. Would this have happened due to natural migration without set territorialism through borders? I don't know. And is exclusivity bad? Does it assert new notions of identity and embrace that new cultures form over time?

I am still ruminating on this subject and what my fascination means, so feel free to scribble your thoughts aboutr borders in Africa...

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

STILL HERE



been scared and battered.
My hopes the wind done scattered.
Snow has friz me,
Sun has baked me,

Looks like between 'em they done
Tried to make me

Stop laughin', stop lovin', stop livin'--
But I don't care!
I'm still here!

Langston Hughes