Wednesday, 23 November 2011

Mama Africa - Miriam Makeba

She did not sing about politics, but their songs just tell the truth.
This motto of the great South African singer Miriam Makeba is Mika
Kaurismäki's documentary Mama Africa - Miriam Makeba repeated several
times and so much Makeba's artistic claim. That in the case of the
singer who was born in South Africa's apartheid government and spent a
large part of their lives in involuntary exile, and direct political
statements were relevant, because the moving documentary leaves no
doubt.

Makeba was born in 1932 in Prospect Township, near Johannesburg. Even
as a young woman she began to sing. She became well known in South
African bands like the Manhattan Brothers and The Skylarks. In
addition to her musical career, she also played roles in musicals and
films, for example on the side of her later husband Hugh Masekela in
the musical King Kong (1959). A film that was it, ultimately, which
caused one of the most significant events of her life and the film's
first section, the term refers to Makeba in South Africa ended. Makeba
took on a role in Lionel Rogosin anti-apartheid film Come Back, Africa
(1959). After they traveled together with Rogozin on the Venice Film
Festival to accept a prize, her South African passport was
confiscated. With the help of the singer Harry Belafonte, she could go
to the United States and quickly began a very successful career there.
So she became in 1967 the first black singer who was with the world
famous Pata Pata land a Top Ten hit. (Even if you can hear in the film
Makeba as she insists that she never has the song means a lot
especially since it is only just a dance)

But her political involvement was inspired by her international
career. In 1960 after they could not enter the funeral of her mother
to South Africa in 1963 she spoke before the United Nations and
denounced the apartheid regime. This subsequently withdrew their
citizenship and forbade their albums. In 1968 she married the civil
rights activist Stokely Carmichael, a former fellow, Dr. Martin Luther
King and the leaders gradually radicalized movement, which invented
the legend of the Black Power slogan. So she went into a crosshairs of
the FBI, which is the militant wing of the civil rights movement and
fought and was monitored in the United States persona non grata.
Makeba and Carmichael finally went to Guinea, where the latter adviser
of President Ahmed Sékou Touré was called Kwame Ture and from then on.

In Guinea, Makeba, who separated from Carmichael in the late 1970s
again, to the celebrated icon, and toured throughout the continent -
with the exception of their home. In her house in Guinea, she received
artists, intellectuals and others. They committed to continue against
apartheid. She spoke again before the UN General Assembly and served
as Guinea's ambassador to the United Nations. After private
misfortunes as her daughter's death in 1985 she moved to Brussels.
Finally, after three decades of exile, she could finally return to
their homeland in 1990, after Nelson Mandela was released from prison
after 27 years and invited her. The film devotes the last 20 years of
her life not very much time. After the end of apartheid in South
Africa, Makeba continued to put one against racism and for
humanitarian projects and continued her career as a successful
musician. On 10 November 2008, she died at the age of 76 after a
benefit concert for the Italian journalist Roberto Saviano.

Mika Kaurismäki, who had previously filmed documentaries about music,
yet the project began with Miriam Makeba and decided to realize the
film even after her death. For this he used the testimony of numerous
friends, relatives and colleagues of the singer to - largely
chronological - their experience as exiles Antin, her rise as a singer
and their significance for people around the world and to highlight
particularly on the African continent - the latter point in particular
is highlighted. African musicians who were influenced by their past or
of their occurring, make clear the importance of Miriam Makeba's music
for them and for many people in Africa was and is. Makeba was perhaps
the first, the songs on traditional African languages, and had thus
received international success. Even the so-called Afro look that
follows from it as is commented, "black women imitate my hairstyle.
But that's not a style. It leaves the hair easy to freedom. And it is
called Afro, "goes back to her. In the 1960s she represented
self-confident "their" culture and was able to find fans and admirers
around the world and are applicable as a model for many Africans whose
countries had partially liberated from the grip of the old colonial
powers, the fight still led . It is Kaurismäki's film to be expected
that this case by the memories of relatives and friends Makeba always
shows how much the singer was still hurt by the long-long exile, and
how the experience will be celebrated in large parts of the world, but
the home country and, for example the grave of the mother not being
able to attend, they influenced.

The documentary paints a moving portrait of the musician, that's
certainly interesting not only for fans. Just for the music
connoisseur Miriam Makeba, the film offers perhaps not too much news.
Although you get to see many shots Makeba - including impressive in
small cellars of South Africa, where she sings exclusively for black
audiences - but can not learn much about the music itself, the film is
not particularly long with 90 minutes, it So would definitely still
have time to include more information about Makeba's musical style.
One learns a lot about her life, but unfortunately less than that for
which they became famous. A former bandmate of Skylarks have reported
that they at that time - were still influenced by American jazz bands,
but how Makeba's style developed further, is not really discussed -
that is in the 50s. Rather, interesting facts about the social
backgrounds, for example by Makeba's former colleague, that the black
musicians played in clubs for whites and then to have been taken into
the homes in order to play whites and their friends - which in the
apartheid state of course, was illegal. If a neighbor informed the
police, the musicians had to quickly dress up as maids - in this role,
they were tolerated in the homes of whites. The anecdote tells more of
the hypocrisy and absurdity of the racist society, as of Makeba's
music itself, for what was probably the intention of the Kaurismäki
film. He says that he's in his music films "is not just about music,
but also social aspects," goes. He "wanted to show what a strong and
positive force can have music for the people and take as much
musicians can position on social issues." He manages to do actually.
Thus, we see, for example, recordings of Makeba's speech at the United
Nations, where the young woman while seemingly shy, but determined the
racism in their home country and the whole world condemns. If you do
not learn too much about the musician, Makeba, it is clear how
influential she was an activist and role model. The voices of her
companions, especially her grandchildren Nelson Lumumba Lee and Zenzi
Lee, tell of Makeba's life moving from the influence and importance,
which had the singer.

One must notice that the film offers nothing formally turns heads.
Mama Africa goes mostly archival footage with shots from the various
interviewees. This filmed interview Kaurismäki its various partners
and partners for example in a basement music in Johannesburg or at a
market in Guinea. The different sequences are not always necessarily
fit together harmoniously, and the film, especially visually acts, not
always of a piece. If you want to inform themselves about Makeba's
life, her painful experience with the racism of their homeland, but
also their significance for many people, Mama Africa is still highly
recommended. Kaurismäki uses the possibilities of the documentary, the
singer and her life story to portray, but also to go beyond, and the
public insight into the history of the second half of the 20th To give
th century. Although it is only partially torn (as in the case of the
U.S. civil rights movement and Black Power activists), the film shows
that the fight against racial oppression was not confined to single
continents. Miriam Makeba remains the case - and this is undeniably an
asset of the film - not only as musician but as a fighter and role
model in memory. At one point, the film also deals with the musical
heritage of Makeba. A musician reported that Makeba's songs are often
gecovert and of course we hear a band playing their version of Pata
Pata - the song which we have learned that it meant so little Makeba
(Kaurismäki himself is aware of the irony?). Mama Africa shows that
her life was marked by so much more important things.

Racist gaffes by Kazenambo dominate newspaper headlines

Minister outraged publisher

The publishing group Democratic Media Holdings (DMH) has shocked and
horrified reaction to the racist gaffes of the Minister of Youth,
National Service, Sport and Culture, Kazenambo Kazenambo, who has
threatened including white Namibians with a land occupation.

Having had the Minister of Youth, National Service, Sport and Culture,
Kazenambo Kazenambo during his speech lasting about 30 minutes talking
more and more enraged ....
Windhoek - releases his verbal circular envelope was a report in the
British newspaper "Namibian Sun" of 11 Of November. In it the chief
editor of the paper, Jan Poolman, a confidential Cabinet document was
discussed, whereby the cost of the trip to Germany a Namibian
delegation to the return of 20 skulls of Herero and Nama has increased
from original estimates of 1 million N $ to 1.7 million N $ ( AZ
reported).

At a press conference on Wednesday Kazenambo had not denied but the
cost increase, but it is outraged that a document classified as secret
was leaked to the public. For this fact made the authors of the
editorial contribution Kazenambo responsibility of the Cabinet
document was "stolen" and the contents of such a "distorted" was
reproduced, "as if he had an interview on the subject with me."

Through this type of "tendentious, provocative and intolerant" of the
reporting was "damn Boer" (Poolman) made it clear that he still had
"the mentality of a Koevoet" and "no remorse for the murder committed
by his ancestors thousands of Namibians" feel . Finally, the trip to
Germany was undertaken solely for the purpose posthumously restore
human dignity of victims who were murdered during the colonial rule in
Namibia.

By Poolman have moved but not this, but the costs associated with the
center of his reporting, he had made it clear that "he is more about
money than the murder of our ancestors" was concerned. Thus had not
only denounced Poolman as "sick mind" but also demonstrates that
"divide-apartheid mentality" the owner and publisher of 'Namibian Sun
"his.

... He tore the end of his opinion conspicuously a copy of the "Namibian Sun".
With reference to the "insensitive" reporting and "arrogance" by
Poolman, Kazenambo said: "The white people (in Namibia) should be the
policy of national reconciliation can not be regarded as self-evident.
Many of them still occupy the land that was stolen from our ancestors.
If they should continue to challenge us, we will get back to
confiscate their farms and what belongs to us. "

Kazenambo, who in the course of his speech lasting about 30 minutes
talking more and more enraged and demonstratively a copy of the
"Namibian sun" tore, was also "shocked" about the fact that the
newspaper "constantly quoted from confidential Cabinet documents."
This will make the newspaper not only guilty of theft, for which they
should be indicted, but had also abused the freedom of the press for
the purpose, "to insult others." Moreover, such a brochure 'unethical'
recovery of secret documents not only the mistrust within the
government and endangering national security, but also exposing the
"disturbed" informers as traitors who had leaked confidential
information to the newspaper.

Chrisna Greef, Executive Director and CEO of DMH, the addition of the
"Namibian Sun" and the "Republikein" and moved "AZ", appeared in a
written statement deeply troubled about Kazenambos general settlement
with alleged neo-colonialists. In it she points out, the Minister's
comments represented "represents a serious threat to peace and
stability in Namibia when they should represent the opinion of the
Cabinet, the Government, or the majority of Namibia's population" one.

Furthermore Greef stressed that the Cabinet documents based on the
report had been (with taxpayer funded) trip to Germany of the Namibian
delegation in the public interest. Furthermore, they suggested to the
minister or the government to take legal action against Poolman, or
the "Namibian Sun", if this actually a "criminal act" should have been
guilty.

Twice Around The World with Peter Scholl-Latour, a gleaning.

Peter Scholl-Latour's motto is "Rem oculos ponere ante" (put the
object in front of the eyes). That he remains in his essay collection
The way the new Cold War and the fear of the white people. A swan
song. faithfully. He immerses the reader in a mixture of plastic
descriptions of foreign lands and people, political sources of fire
and instructive anecdotes.

The Way of the West into a new Cold War documents Scholl-Latour on the
years 2001 to 2008, Nine Eleven until the election of Barack Hussein
Obama as new U.S. president in the White House. The fear in the white
people, he follows the fortunes of the world's regions, which are
solved for some time after their liberation from colonial tutelage
increasingly formal and material from the dominance of their former
masters.

Scholl-Latour does bring up a new Cold War

Scholl-Latour believes that the absolute U.S. hegemony, as it might
pose to political observers by the end of the Cold War in the 1990s,
is approaching its end, irrefutable. Within the framework of the world
movement to a multi-polar state to him three phenomena are of
particular relevance: Firstly generating the return of Russia on the
world political stage, secondly, the rapid economic and military rise
of China as the dominant power in Asia, and the rise of revolutionary
Islamic forces in the "Muslim belt" from Morocco to Indonesia, a
number of potential lines of conflict, which make a strategic
adjustment of the part of the hegemonic U.S. led "West" is necessary.

Russia, whose territory had been shifted to the end of the Soviet
Union around 1000 kilometers to the east looks to continue a policy of
encirclement by NATO and EU enlargement exposed. Under Putin's aegis
erected from the debris field, Yeltsin again, it is returned as a
result of its successful commodity exports in world politics and has
continues to have immense technological military explosive. Also, the
distress, the U.S. economist whether the Chinese economic growth must
feel while national control by an autocratic regime, of course
basically by itself

The lines of conflict today are multilateral

Scholl-Latour, but remains available in this analysis, but rather
embeds the Russian and Chinese influence in the global actions of NATO
in the fight against Islamic terrorism after the attacks on the World
Trade Center since the year 2001. The war in Afghanistan, the Iraq
war, however, tensions with Iran and Pakistan are inextricably
connected to the instability due to the necessary tactical military
presence in the U.S. and its allies in Central Asia in the spheres of
power of Russia and China. The growing influence of Islamic minorities
in Europe holds potential for future diplomatic upsets with their
countries of origin, as also among the NATO partners themselves, which
are in addition to its treaty obligations to the highly variable part
included in the international conflicts.

Based on various reports, commentaries and interviews by the author
from 2001 to 2008, relating to the key events in European and world
politics, the reader of this problem area is identified.

The world's dominant era of the white people comes to an end

The theme of the second book be presented is undoubtedly related to
the first. The gradual transformation of the international policy in a
multipolar events is closely related to the fact that the absolute
global dominance of the Europeans, who grew almost 500 years, has long
since passed its zenith. Not only in the former colonies in the core
European countries, "the whites" overgrown demographically. Even the
U.S. is experiencing a massive decline in proportional White
Anglo-Saxon Protestants in favor of blacks and mestizos advancing, the
hybrids of the Indians with the Spanish conquistadors. The consequence
of that fact, also accompanied by the loss of technological monopoly
of the Germanic peoples, created a political shift of power must feel,
Scholl-Latour skillfully. The election of Obama the first black U.S.
president it is only the most obvious signal of a world trend.

The fear of the white people is not irrational

In eight songs (cantos) decides to move from veteran journalist and
world traveler to East Timor, Bali, Java and Oceania to the
Philippines to China and Kazakhstan in Kyrgyzstan to end his journey.
In the world of roaming regions that were once the object of European
colonial policy, he can fall back on his lifelong experience and
compare his impressions of some decades ago with the freshly
collected. He demonstrates impressively how Asia with its own,
increasingly independent dynamics of Europeans changed again, without
missing a reference to countries that historically - such as Brazil,
with East Timor by the Portuguese colonial empire - are connected to
its destination.

At the end of the book he will then do a little sentimental. Does he
start in the fall of white power, a certain tragedy, he considers
Brazil as a possible starting point at the end of future social
evolution, because there seem to be missing among other racial
reservations about the country's history, despite completely. The
shining through in these concluding speculation equanimity of the old
gentleman towards a future that he will no longer belong to the book
on fundamentals but does not detract. Again and again one suspects it
clear that Scholl-Latour is not convinced of a peaceful end without a
break of that transformation.

Especially for newbies Scholl-Latour, a gain

Both books are equipped with numerous illustrations. The hardback
edition of The fear of the white people can also come up even with a
political map of Central Asia and Oceania, which facilitate the
geographic classification Intended States significantly.

Both collections of essays to work part time with already published
material of the author. This could interfere with the person who knows
the Scholl-Latour's analysis of previous publications already. Anyone
who has read little or nothing of him can acquire them untested,
however, and learn about the world.

Peter Scholl-Latour: The road to the new Cold War. Ullstein paperback
publisher. 352 pages, € 9,95

Peter Scholl-Latour: The fear of the white people. A swan song.
Propylaea publisher. 464 pages, € 8.99

Saturday, 12 November 2011

real, fun or racist joke

We all know "white people stole my car", but is it real, fun or racist joke? That's what we are going to investigate here