Grocott's Mail
  • NEWS
    • Courts & Crime
    • Features
    • Politics
    • People
    • Health & Well-being
  • SPORT
    • News
    • Results
    • Sports Diary
    • Club Contacts
    • Columns
    • Sport Galleries
    • Sport Videos
  • OPINION
    • Election Connection
    • Makana Voices
    • Deur ‘n Gekleurde Bril
    • Newtown… Old Eyes
    • Incisive View
    • Your Say
  • ARTSLIFE
    • Cue
    • Makana Sharp!
    • Visual Art
    • Literature
    • Food & Fun
    • Festivals
    • Community Arts
    • Going Places
  • OUR TOWN
    • What’s on
    • Spiritual
    • Emergency & Well-being
    • Safety
    • Civic
    • Municipality
    • Weather
    • Properties
      • Grahamstown Properties
    • Your Town, Our Town
  • OUTSIDE
    • Enviro News
    • Gardening
    • Farming
    • Science
    • Conservation
    • Motoring
    • Pets/Animals
  • ECONOMIX
    • Business News
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Personal Finance
  • EDUCATION
    • Education NEWS
    • Education OUR TOWN
    • Education INFO
  • Covid-19
  • EDITORIAL
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • After a turbulent period, South Africa’s oldest campus radio station, RMR 89.7 FM, celebrates radio licence renewal
  • As whistleblowers come forward, it’s our duty to protect them
  • Makhanda Fire Brigade praised by residents
  • Two deaths shock Makhanda
  • Makana Residents Association and Makhanda Business Forum to join forces
  • “It’s not like there are NO services” – Makana mayor
  • Makhanda mourns Eusebius McKaiser
  • Kivitts shines in a bonus point win for Brumbies
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Grocott's Mail
  • NEWS
    • Courts & Crime
    • Features
    • Politics
    • People
    • Health & Well-being
  • SPORT
    • News
    • Results
    • Sports Diary
    • Club Contacts
    • Columns
    • Sport Galleries
    • Sport Videos
  • OPINION
    • Election Connection
    • Makana Voices
    • Deur ‘n Gekleurde Bril
    • Newtown… Old Eyes
    • Incisive View
    • Your Say
  • ARTSLIFE
    • Cue
    • Makana Sharp!
    • Visual Art
    • Literature
    • Food & Fun
    • Festivals
    • Community Arts
    • Going Places
  • OUR TOWN
    • What’s on
    • Spiritual
    • Emergency & Well-being
    • Safety
    • Civic
    • Municipality
    • Weather
    • Properties
      • Grahamstown Properties
    • Your Town, Our Town
  • OUTSIDE
    • Enviro News
    • Gardening
    • Farming
    • Science
    • Conservation
    • Motoring
    • Pets/Animals
  • ECONOMIX
    • Business News
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Personal Finance
  • EDUCATION
    • Education NEWS
    • Education OUR TOWN
    • Education INFO
  • Covid-19
  • EDITORIAL
Grocott's Mail
You are at:Home»Uncategorized»Once-off Mendi performance at Puku
Uncategorized

Once-off Mendi performance at Puku

Grocott's MailBy Grocott's MailFebruary 23, 2017No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Grahamstown will tomorrow (Friday 24 February) become one of 10 venues around South Africa for an artistic event marking the deaths of more than 600 South African men when the SS Mendi sank in the English Channel on 21 February 2017.

Grahamstown will tomorrow (Friday 24 February) become one of 10 venues around South Africa for an artistic event marking the deaths of more than 600 South African men when the SS Mendi sank in the English Channel on 21 February 2017.

Conceptualised by UCT lecturer and writer, Mandla Mbothwe, Ndabamnye no SS Mendi: I became one with SS Mendi – a segment about the living monument and the young thirsty soul – will be performed twice during lunchtime tomorrow during the Puku isiXhosa Story Festival.

There will be two performances of the piece, which is around 15 minutes long, at 1pm at the National English Literary Museum (NELM) on Friday 24 February.

Historian Nomathamsanqa Tisani will introduce the work and its creators.

Ndabamnye no SS Mendi will be performed by Lulamile Bongo Nikani, who graduated in Fine Arts at the University of Fort hare in the mid-90s and has since built a career as a performer, director and arts educator.

Mbothwe describes the piece as the creative representation of a man who became one with the SS Mendi.

On 16 January 1917 the Mendi troopship sailed from Cape Town en route to Le Havre, France, carrying 805 black privates of the South African Native Labour Corps, five white officers, and 33 crew members.

On the morning of 21 February 2017, the SS Darro rammed into the SS Mendi, which sank in 20 minutes.

More than 600 men died, by far the majority of them black, members of the SANLC. When the ship went down, they sang and danced, led in “the Death Drill” by Reverend Isaac Wauchope.

In the performance, the text of SEK Mqhayi’s poem, Ukutshona kukaMendi, is used as the basis  for an argument with the Living Monument Character. 

“The segment performance is about the man, the spirited soul, on to whom the ship SS Mendi held – or he held on to her,” Mbothwe explains.

“He swallowed their war cries, his heartbeat came from their dance, and his belly was filled by their clan names.  

“He is the thirsty soul in salty waters. Their names are stuck in his throat, he wants to vomit them, but only the living can make him: only when they seek to recover the names of their loved ones, that he can place these names back home, back in the landscape, back in the memories of the living.  

“He is the man of water and land. He is mud of the past ready to be moulded into the future.”

The costume, conceptualised and curated by Mbothwe, is designed by Lea Bishop.

Mbothwe will also screen minutes of looping interpretation film of the Death Drill. 

The performance will be one of 10 live installations around the country. 

Nikani worked at the Steve Biko Centre directing the Abelusi, Izithole and Imbewu performing arts programmes, and has appeared in TV series including Ityala lama Wele and Tshatsha.

As a theatrical director Mbothwe has won numerous awards such as the Fleur du Cap award for most innovative and contributing theatre company in the country, together with Mark Fleishman, Jennie Reznek-under Magnet Theatre Educational Trust (2012 & 2010);  nominated of best Director in Mendi and Biko’s Quest, Best director award Stop Crime Festival Artscape for ‘9437 to Stadt’ (2002); a medal for Committed Community Educator (2002), just to name a few.

Between 2013 to 2014 he was a Creative Manager at the Artscape Theatre where he plans to advance training and development in theatre and engage in creative methods for the celebration of African stories. He developed and curated several programmes, festivals and productions. 

PUKU ISIXHOSA STORY FESTIVAL THIS WEEKEND
For the full programme please go to: bit.ly/GrocPSF17

To see what kind of thing is happening at Puku, go to: 

Previous ArticleOld Andrean starts for Southern Kings
Next Article Southern Kings late surge not enough against Los Jaguares
Grocott's Mail

Comments are closed.

Tweets by Grocotts
Newsletter



Listen

The Rhodes University Community Engagement Division has launched Engagement in Action, a new podcast which aims to bring to life some of the many ways in which the University interacts with communities around it. Check it out below.

Humans of Makhanda

Humans of Makhanda

Weather    |     About     |     Advertise     |     Subscribe     |     Contact     |     Support Grocott’s Mail

© 2023 Maintained by School of Journalism & Media Studies.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.