Author Archives: Abahlali_3

Dara Kell – M&G 200 Young South Africans

http://ysa2013.mg.co.za/dara-kell/

Dara Kell: Documentary Film Maker

You can learn a lot from a filmmaker’s credits. Dara Kell give credit where credit is long overdue – gay rights, domestic violence and shack-dweller associations such as Abahlali baseMjondolo – the focus of her award-winning documentary, Dear Mandela. Based in New York, this Rhodes University graduate spent more than four years travelling, filming, editing, even risking her life, to capture the heart of the movement but also the democracy that drives its success and South Africa’s housing failures. Dear Mandela has been screened in 28 countries and translated into eight languages. It was named Best South African Documentary at the Durban International Film Festival and won the Grand Jury Prize at the Brooklyn Film Festival. Yet Kell cites winning the community’s trust as her proudest moment. Making the invisible visible is what she does so passionately, or, as one audience member puts it: “There is something we have that’s beautiful, even though we are shack-dwellers, even though people might not notice us.”

Cat Pritchard

AbM Youth League: Building Tomorrow’s Leaders Today

14 June 2013
Abahlali BaseMjondolo Movement Youth League Press Statement

AbM Youth League: Building Tomorrow's Leaders Today

On June 16 South Africa will be commemorating the youth of 1976 who lost their lives in Soweto struggling for Justice, Freedom and Democracy. Today's youth will be told to obey today's leaders in order that we should show proper respect to those who lost their lives in 1976. But the reality is that what the youth of 1976 struggled for has not not been implemented as they have wished.

The beauty of Freedom and Democracy was supposed to be everyone. Today it is for the rich. Rich people are getting the multi-racial education and the poor still have the third-rate education which back then was known as Bantu Education. Rich people get jobs. They have cars. They have nice houses. They can get married and move on with their lives. They are safe. This is Freedom to them. The poor have to survive as we can. We go in circles and not forward. We live in shacks. We live in shit and fire. We are evicted. We have no safe and easy transport. The police treat us as criminals. They beat us if we try to organise. If you are young and poor you are treated as a threat to society and not as the future of society. Hector Peterson, Chris Hani, Steve Biko and other comrades who died for our Freedom and Democracy did not die for this. We do not respect their sacrifice by accepting that this is Freedom.

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