(Right: Natalia Molebatsi)
For the 24th consecutive year, the Poetry Africa festival, presented by the Centre for Creative Arts at the University of Kwazulu-Natal from October 12 to 17 2020, sets the stage for poetry from South Africa and around the world. It promises to be an enriching experience with the sound of poets performing live, their passionate, inspirational perspective on life and current events and the power and beauty of the spoken word.
The entire festival programme is presented on their social media platforms, namely Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.
The festival was officially opened yesterday (October 12), with a keynote address by Lebo Mashile after which the audience was treated to an audio-visual experience of the recently released audiobook Collective Amnesia by Putuma Koleka.
“It is even more important to hold and nurture poets in 2020, because only poets can make sense of 2020” said Mashile.
“Most arts centres are still closed as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic and many artists continue to be without an income. In its online format, The Poetry Africa festival has enabled the Centre for Creative Arts to create some work opportunities to support artists” said Siphindile Hlongwa, curator of the festival.
Programme highlights
“This year’s Poetry Africa festival
features a series of collaborations with various partners. Most notable amongst
these collaborations is a partnership with the French Institute of South Africa
(IFAS) supported by Total SA”, said Ismail Mahomed, Director of the Centre for
Creative Arts.
As part of this partnership, a poetry collection will be published in early 2021 with publishing house impepho press. The poets who will feature in the book were selected following a call for submissions looking for talented young South African poets. IFAS announced the selected poems on the opening day of Poetry Africa. Some of the selected poets will also be reading their poems, to give the audience an overview of their beautiful and inspiring work.
IFAS is organising more exciting events throughout Poetry Africa festival, including three professional development workshops with famous poets revolving around the theme “Living as a Poet”, these webinars are streamed live on October 13, 14 and 15 from 11h00 to 11h30.
(Nnane Ntube)
The French Institute of South Africa is also presenting special guest, Cameroonian poet Nnane Ntube. Ntube believes in the power of poetry to change mindsets and in quality education. She volunteers her services to mentor young girls, graduates and dropouts. Her dream is to have parents of her community believe in the creativity of their children and the power of literature. She is the coordinator of CLIJEC (Cercle Littéraire des Jeunes du Cameroun) and literary coordinator of Writers Space Africa, Cameroon chapter (WSA-C). Nnane equally serves as a reviewer of Writers Space Africa monthly magazine. In 2019, she was a panelist at the African Writers Conference in Nairobi, Kenya.
Lastly, IFAS presents Digging: The Fluidity of Language, which is a digital collaborative experience of choreo-poems advocating for social change. Award-winning choreographer and dancer Musa Hlatshwayo’s work has courageously explored the controversial and complex issues relating to identity, masculinity and patriarchy. He is passionate about developing critical voices for the cultural sector. In this programme, he gathers a group of dancers to team with giving physical expression to the poems of Natalia Molebatsi, Sibongile Fisher and Menzi Sibiya.
The 24th Poetry Africa Festival is streaming live on www.facebook.com/poetryafrica, www.twitter.com/poetryafrica and www.youtube.com/centrecreativearts.
For the full programme, visit poetryafrica.ukzn.ac.za
The festival is made possible by the support from US Embassy South Africa, French Institute of South Africa, Total South Africa, KwaZulu-Natal Department of Arts at Culture, Windybrow Theatre and Institut Ramon Llull.