Fespaco
by Anita Afonu
On our final day we were taken on an excursion to a place called Opera Village which was created by German theatre director Christoph Schlingensief. The Opera Village essentially is a place for artists to showcase their work which also has a school and hospital to cater for the surrounding villages. On our way I saw vast lands of deserts and dryness. The ground obviously had not seen water in such a long time and the air was dusty. I wondered how the trees managed to stand in defiance of the weather. At that point I began to appreciate my county for not being landlocked. The dryness seemed to eat into my soul and all I wanted was to just see water.
What stunned me about the Opera Village was the architecture. The buildings were made from brown bricks butt the roofing was done in such as way that the air that blew in the room had a cooling effect. We were showed around the classrooms, kitchen and the hospital which was still under construction. There were also a large number of stones, some of which had been carved into statues of rabbits. It reminded me of a place in Ghana called ‘Bongo’. Bongo is full of rocks and there is even a rock shrine there where people go to pray.
After about an hour and a half of touring we got back into the town where we had lunch. I ordered rice and fish and I was glad to have had my favourite fish (tilapia). The seasoning tasted different and the difference for me was in the quantity of pepper. In Ghana, great seasoning means a lot of pepper and spices. After lunch I went to the FESPACO market to buy a few souvenirs. The closing ceremony was just about to start and the weather was beginning to dehydrate me. The rest of us all felt the same and so we decided to watch it live on TV.
Blaise Campaore, the President of Burkina Faso gave the highest award; Etalon d’or to Alain Gomis from Senegal for his film Tey/Aujourd’hui. I was happy the highest award was taken by an African and it really inspired me to push my career as a filmmaker.
Later in the evening, all of us from Moving Africa gathered at the Institut Francais where there was a mini jazz concert; the ambiance was great. Personally it felt good to be amongst my colleagues for the last time. I was going to miss everyone most especially Matrid, Richard and Jorge de Palma. I never really realized how close I had gotten to all these people…sharing my interests and love of film and cinema with them. I was going to miss the funny mannerisms of Jorge de Palma, the Angolan guy who was always trying to catch up with the world and really didn’t care what anyone thought about his quirks, Richard, the calm, humble and intelligent young man from Rwanda and Matrid, the crazy fun loving lady from Kenya.
Lundi, 4. mars 2013
Strawberries from Burkina Faso and Ghana Man Time (GMT)
Fespaco
by Anita Afonu
I was upbeat on the second day and had breakfast at the hotel after which I headed to Cine Burkina to watch some films. I watched five short films, some of which were very good and some got me asking why they were selected for the festival. Cine Burkina is probably the main cinema hall in Ouagadougou and it had a recreation place where people can just spend time and wait for the screening of a film. After the screenings I got outside only to realize there was a mini party happening amongst the filmmakers. I tried to blend in but just couldn’t, probably because everyone had someone to talk to and I seemed not to. Not feeling up to the socialization I decided to walk to the hotel and rest and watch the next film in the evening.
As I walked around I made a few observations. Unlike Accra, Ouagadougou seemed to be sparsely populated. Most of the people transported themselves via scooters and bicycles. There were the vendors in the streets who were bent on giving me a hard time so I could buy their wares, but of course I am an Accra girl who has mastered the art of bargaining so I showed them the stuff I was made of. I was also stunned by the fact that strawberries were grown in Burkina Faso considering how hot the weather is. There are absolutely no strawberries in Ghana and so at that moment, I decided I was going to take some back to Ghana. At about 15:00hrs the rest of the Moving Africa Participants arrived and I met them for the first time. I met Didas from Uganda, a quiet and seemingly deep thinking young man, Richard from Rwanda who had an air of friendliness about him, Moses from Uganda, a very ‘serious’ journalist but also very intelligent and interesting man to chat with, Jorge de Palma from Angola who seemed to be trying to catch up with the whole world, Matrid a young fun loving lady from Kenya and Simon a very laid back and cool young man from Mozambique.
Later that evening I watched How to Steal two million by Charles Vundla Cine Neerwaya. Although I enjoyed the film, I felt that too much attention was paid to the main plot such that the subplot was not well treated. Much later my film Skin Canvas was screened at the Goethe Institut where the feedback was great. It was a totally new experience watching it again as I haven’t watched it in the past two years. I also watched some other short films from the other Moving Africa Participants and it was great to see other people’s work.
I have to say that the currency conversion in my head was very challenging because we were spending in the thousands unlike in Ghana where a thousand is a lot of money. We drove by a place called Kwame Nkrumah Avenue and at that point I couldn’t help but feel proud that someone from my home country had made so much impact that an avenue had been named after him. Another thing that got me stunned was the adherence to time. Film Screenings were on time and the people worked with time. I was stunned because Ghana is full of indiscipline and a lack of adherence to time is probably what we are most notorious for. We have gone as far as to even rename GMT as Ghana Man Time. When a Ghanaian tells you to see him at 2pm, he most probably means 4pm. So just imagine a wedding that is supposed to start at 12:00.
The Moving Africa participants and I decided to sit by the pool and get to know each other and it was a very interesting experience getting to know them.
by Anita Afonu
I was upbeat on the second day and had breakfast at the hotel after which I headed to Cine Burkina to watch some films. I watched five short films, some of which were very good and some got me asking why they were selected for the festival. Cine Burkina is probably the main cinema hall in Ouagadougou and it had a recreation place where people can just spend time and wait for the screening of a film. After the screenings I got outside only to realize there was a mini party happening amongst the filmmakers. I tried to blend in but just couldn’t, probably because everyone had someone to talk to and I seemed not to. Not feeling up to the socialization I decided to walk to the hotel and rest and watch the next film in the evening.
As I walked around I made a few observations. Unlike Accra, Ouagadougou seemed to be sparsely populated. Most of the people transported themselves via scooters and bicycles. There were the vendors in the streets who were bent on giving me a hard time so I could buy their wares, but of course I am an Accra girl who has mastered the art of bargaining so I showed them the stuff I was made of. I was also stunned by the fact that strawberries were grown in Burkina Faso considering how hot the weather is. There are absolutely no strawberries in Ghana and so at that moment, I decided I was going to take some back to Ghana. At about 15:00hrs the rest of the Moving Africa Participants arrived and I met them for the first time. I met Didas from Uganda, a quiet and seemingly deep thinking young man, Richard from Rwanda who had an air of friendliness about him, Moses from Uganda, a very ‘serious’ journalist but also very intelligent and interesting man to chat with, Jorge de Palma from Angola who seemed to be trying to catch up with the whole world, Matrid a young fun loving lady from Kenya and Simon a very laid back and cool young man from Mozambique.
Later that evening I watched How to Steal two million by Charles Vundla Cine Neerwaya. Although I enjoyed the film, I felt that too much attention was paid to the main plot such that the subplot was not well treated. Much later my film Skin Canvas was screened at the Goethe Institut where the feedback was great. It was a totally new experience watching it again as I haven’t watched it in the past two years. I also watched some other short films from the other Moving Africa Participants and it was great to see other people’s work.
I have to say that the currency conversion in my head was very challenging because we were spending in the thousands unlike in Ghana where a thousand is a lot of money. We drove by a place called Kwame Nkrumah Avenue and at that point I couldn’t help but feel proud that someone from my home country had made so much impact that an avenue had been named after him. Another thing that got me stunned was the adherence to time. Film Screenings were on time and the people worked with time. I was stunned because Ghana is full of indiscipline and a lack of adherence to time is probably what we are most notorious for. We have gone as far as to even rename GMT as Ghana Man Time. When a Ghanaian tells you to see him at 2pm, he most probably means 4pm. So just imagine a wedding that is supposed to start at 12:00.
The Moving Africa participants and I decided to sit by the pool and get to know each other and it was a very interesting experience getting to know them.
Brakina in Ouagadougou
Fespaco
by Anita Afonu
I arrived in Ouagadougou on February 25 at about 15:00. I was met by the director of the Goethe Institute in Burkina Faso. Since I was the only one that had arrived, I spent the rest of my day with her and she drove me around showing me the city of Ouagadougou.
I watched a film that evening by Gudrun Widlok titled Adopted at the Hall of residence of the University of Ouagadougou and then continued to Cine Burkina where I met other filmmakers from Germany, Sweden, France, USA, Senegal, Mali, Tunisia and Algeria. Being amongst a large number of Germans, it was a beer night. There was plenty of beer and kebab and I helped myself to a bottle of Brakina (Burkina Faso’s locally brewed beer) and I must say it wasn’t bad at all.
I was intrigued by how the people of Burkina Faso had so much appetite for film and cinema and I wished it was the same with my country. All over Ouagadougou there were film posters and it was just one film screening after the other.
I found the weather a bit harsh as it was so hot. The weather was fluctuating between 39-45 degrees and it was just painfully hot. The breeze was equally dry and hot which didn’t help much either. In Ghana, my home country, it is a bit better as we have the sea breeze and our temperatures were between 22-30 degrees and also if one felt hot, one could just walk to the beach and enjoy the cool breeze under the coconut trees and maybe have a cool coconut juice!
For dinner, I had fried plantain and fried potatoes which were a little bit different from how it is made in Ghana. In Ghana, the potatoes are cut into large sizes and also they are sweet potatoes. Plantains are salted unlike in Burkina where no or very little salt is added.
I could speak some French to get by so it wasn’t so difficult blending in. My Hotel room was quite big as I had a living room and a bedroom. I tried to watch some of the programmes on the TV and comprehend but they were speaking the French a bit too fast for me and it was difficult catching up so I retired to bed looking forward to the next day.
by Anita Afonu
I arrived in Ouagadougou on February 25 at about 15:00. I was met by the director of the Goethe Institute in Burkina Faso. Since I was the only one that had arrived, I spent the rest of my day with her and she drove me around showing me the city of Ouagadougou.
I watched a film that evening by Gudrun Widlok titled Adopted at the Hall of residence of the University of Ouagadougou and then continued to Cine Burkina where I met other filmmakers from Germany, Sweden, France, USA, Senegal, Mali, Tunisia and Algeria. Being amongst a large number of Germans, it was a beer night. There was plenty of beer and kebab and I helped myself to a bottle of Brakina (Burkina Faso’s locally brewed beer) and I must say it wasn’t bad at all.
I was intrigued by how the people of Burkina Faso had so much appetite for film and cinema and I wished it was the same with my country. All over Ouagadougou there were film posters and it was just one film screening after the other.
I found the weather a bit harsh as it was so hot. The weather was fluctuating between 39-45 degrees and it was just painfully hot. The breeze was equally dry and hot which didn’t help much either. In Ghana, my home country, it is a bit better as we have the sea breeze and our temperatures were between 22-30 degrees and also if one felt hot, one could just walk to the beach and enjoy the cool breeze under the coconut trees and maybe have a cool coconut juice!
For dinner, I had fried plantain and fried potatoes which were a little bit different from how it is made in Ghana. In Ghana, the potatoes are cut into large sizes and also they are sweet potatoes. Plantains are salted unlike in Burkina where no or very little salt is added.
I could speak some French to get by so it wasn’t so difficult blending in. My Hotel room was quite big as I had a living room and a bedroom. I tried to watch some of the programmes on the TV and comprehend but they were speaking the French a bit too fast for me and it was difficult catching up so I retired to bed looking forward to the next day.
Mardi, 26. février 2013
Countdown to Fespaco
Fespaco
by Anita Afonu
It´s another four days until I leave for Ouagadougou and I am quite excited. Attending FESPACO to me is almost like a pilgrimage for every African Filmmaker.
I have never been to FESPACO before because during the period that I could have gone, I was tied up with school work and so couldn’t make the time for it. Now, the opportunity has come for me and I am really looking forward to it. The Moving Africa platform essentially is a platform for artists such as myself to meet other artists from the continent, meet and share ideas.
I am looking forward to meeting other young filmmakers, watching some good films and most of all experiencing a different culture. I think that experiences of that nature broaden one’s general understanding and perception of life and also inspire new ideas for new films.
by Anita Afonu
It´s another four days until I leave for Ouagadougou and I am quite excited. Attending FESPACO to me is almost like a pilgrimage for every African Filmmaker.
I have never been to FESPACO before because during the period that I could have gone, I was tied up with school work and so couldn’t make the time for it. Now, the opportunity has come for me and I am really looking forward to it. The Moving Africa platform essentially is a platform for artists such as myself to meet other artists from the continent, meet and share ideas.
I am looking forward to meeting other young filmmakers, watching some good films and most of all experiencing a different culture. I think that experiences of that nature broaden one’s general understanding and perception of life and also inspire new ideas for new films.
Jeudi, 31. janvier 2013
One Day I will Write About this Place
Kwani Litfest
by Dzekashu MacViban
I haven’t totally recovered from Nairobi—in a way, I don’t think I ever will. How does one recover from such a nice town and such awesome people? How can I ever forget the friendly and funny Moving Africa participants? When will I see them again? They are still as lively in my memory as they were in Nairobi— Kojo Laing’s famous talks about mutation and later religion; Feling Capela, constantly behind his camera; Ntone Edjabe, always philosophizing; Chuma passionately talking about his goal of reading his work in as many cities as possible, Sylvia and her interesting alternative fiction and humor; Kivu, with his love for Tusker and good movies; Joseph, who is highly concerned with the growth of south Sudan and wants art to shape the nation.
Kwani is undoubtedly the most influential journal to have emerged from sub-Saharan Africa, and if anybody doubts this fact, the biennial Kwani literary festival is enough to shut them up. The 2012 Kwani literary festival was full of people from all walks of life and the venues were usually full (at the premier screening of Nairobi Half Life, the Goethe-Institut in Nairobi was full and had our (the Moving Africa participants and I) space not been reserved, we’d have had to stand up — this is how we measure a culture-conscious country.

The literary festival was full of writers, journalists, photographers, students, tourists, bloggers, fashion designers, literary enthusiasts, and disc jockeys, just to name a few. Talking about DJ’s, I met so many talented DJ’s in Nairobi — DJ Zelalem, Raphael & Sharon (from the World’s Loudest Library) and Ntone Edjabe, whom I consider to be an iconoclastic icon, one of a kind.
The theme of the festival, Conversations with the Horn, is a laudable choice cognizant of the tribulations of the region and the growth of new nations, and it attests to the fact that Kwani is concerned with the evolution of the region and the role culture can play in bridging divides and borders (the Chimurenga Chronicle’s editorial bemoans the fact that everyone who can is building a wall [border]).
The social media does not seem to have any secrets for Kwani. Kwani did not fail to make sure that those who couldn’t make it to the festival could follow it on the internet. The whole festival was streamed on Kwani’s website and highlights were posted on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. But it was on Twitter that Kwani had a mammoth presence during the festival. The hash tag #kwanilitfest was all over Twitter, and it wasn’t only @kwanitrust that was tweeting, because their numerous followers were sharing their thoughts on Tweeter and it was as if there was a mini festival on Tweeter given people kept tweeting late into the night, long after the events of the day were over.
Networking was the order of the day during the festival and I didn’t miss an opportunity to promote Bakwa Magazine (a magazine of art culture and photography which I started about a year ago).
We had an amazing tour of the Goethe-Institut and the Kwani Trust venues. The folks at the Goethe-Institut and Kwani are fabulously friendly and kind— thank you. I had the most awesome time in Nairobi (no close encounters with Nairobbery) and there is so much about this city that I fell in love with. These days, my muse has been in Nairobi mode, and there is some fiction and poetry in the pipeline.
by Dzekashu MacViban
I haven’t totally recovered from Nairobi—in a way, I don’t think I ever will. How does one recover from such a nice town and such awesome people? How can I ever forget the friendly and funny Moving Africa participants? When will I see them again? They are still as lively in my memory as they were in Nairobi— Kojo Laing’s famous talks about mutation and later religion; Feling Capela, constantly behind his camera; Ntone Edjabe, always philosophizing; Chuma passionately talking about his goal of reading his work in as many cities as possible, Sylvia and her interesting alternative fiction and humor; Kivu, with his love for Tusker and good movies; Joseph, who is highly concerned with the growth of south Sudan and wants art to shape the nation.
Kwani is undoubtedly the most influential journal to have emerged from sub-Saharan Africa, and if anybody doubts this fact, the biennial Kwani literary festival is enough to shut them up. The 2012 Kwani literary festival was full of people from all walks of life and the venues were usually full (at the premier screening of Nairobi Half Life, the Goethe-Institut in Nairobi was full and had our (the Moving Africa participants and I) space not been reserved, we’d have had to stand up — this is how we measure a culture-conscious country.

The literary festival was full of writers, journalists, photographers, students, tourists, bloggers, fashion designers, literary enthusiasts, and disc jockeys, just to name a few. Talking about DJ’s, I met so many talented DJ’s in Nairobi — DJ Zelalem, Raphael & Sharon (from the World’s Loudest Library) and Ntone Edjabe, whom I consider to be an iconoclastic icon, one of a kind.
The theme of the festival, Conversations with the Horn, is a laudable choice cognizant of the tribulations of the region and the growth of new nations, and it attests to the fact that Kwani is concerned with the evolution of the region and the role culture can play in bridging divides and borders (the Chimurenga Chronicle’s editorial bemoans the fact that everyone who can is building a wall [border]).
The social media does not seem to have any secrets for Kwani. Kwani did not fail to make sure that those who couldn’t make it to the festival could follow it on the internet. The whole festival was streamed on Kwani’s website and highlights were posted on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. But it was on Twitter that Kwani had a mammoth presence during the festival. The hash tag #kwanilitfest was all over Twitter, and it wasn’t only @kwanitrust that was tweeting, because their numerous followers were sharing their thoughts on Tweeter and it was as if there was a mini festival on Tweeter given people kept tweeting late into the night, long after the events of the day were over.
Networking was the order of the day during the festival and I didn’t miss an opportunity to promote Bakwa Magazine (a magazine of art culture and photography which I started about a year ago).
We had an amazing tour of the Goethe-Institut and the Kwani Trust venues. The folks at the Goethe-Institut and Kwani are fabulously friendly and kind— thank you. I had the most awesome time in Nairobi (no close encounters with Nairobbery) and there is so much about this city that I fell in love with. These days, my muse has been in Nairobi mode, and there is some fiction and poetry in the pipeline.
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