Wednesday, 5 February 2014

Sistaz Open Mic joins women across the globe in ‘One Billion Rising’

OPEN MIC Sat 8 Feb  |  EXHIBITION Tue 11 Feb  |  DISCUSSION Thu 13 Feb 2014
ONE BILLION RISING FOR JUSTICE is a global call to women survivors of violence to break the silence and release their stories – politically, spiritually, outrageously – through art, dance, marches, ritual, song, spoken word, testimonies and “whatever way feels right”.  For the first of a series of events at Harare’s Book Café, SISTAZ OPEN MIC on Saturday 8 February invites women artists of Zimbabwe to get involved by coming forward to “Claim your space and do your thing: Music, Poetry, Comedy, Dance, Theatre – Whatever!”    
‘One Billion Rising’ was the biggest mass action in human history.  The campaign began as a call to action based on the staggering UN statistic that 1 in 3 women on the planet will be beaten or raped during her lifetime. With the world population at 7 billion, this adds up to more than ONE BILLION WOMEN AND GIRLS.
Last year on 14 February, people across the world came together in over 10,000 events to strike, dance, and RISE in defiance of the injustices women suffer, demanding an end at last to violence against women.

In Harare this week, the FLAME gender project by Harare’s leading arts development organisation Pamberi Trust - which has seen the emergence and growth of hundreds of artists - partners with One Billion Rising Zimbabwe to extend the global call to people of Harare in a series of events dedicated to the cause, leading up to 14 February, its internationally recognized day:

Sat 08 Feb, 2-5pm, SISTAZ OPEN MIC – ‘SISTERS RISING FOR JUSTICE’
At Sistaz Open Mic on Saturday 8 February from 2-5pm, Harare women artists pave the way for the global campaign ONE BILLION RISING, a call to women survivors of violence to break the silence and release their stories – “politically, spiritually, outrageously – through art, dance, marches, ritual, song, spoken word, testimonies and whatever way feels right”.  Special guests include Selmor Mtukudzi from 5.30pm, swiftly rising singer-songwriter (who will also perform at Book Café on 14 February).  
 
The popular monthly platform at Book Café is a protected space for young women artists to participate in the arts in the safety of daytime, and regularly features around 30 artists, both emerging and established, who bring a diverse programme of entertainment to the table, spiced with themes around issues which affect their lives, including gender emancipation and empowerment.  Women artists have claimed the platform as their own, and several success stories have grown from it.  As advertised, “Sisters, this is your space, come and claim it:  Music, Dance, Poetry, Comedy – whatever!”- cc $1
 
Tue 11 Feb, EXHIBITION: ‘ONE BILLION RISING’ - 11-15 February 2014
‘EXTRACTS: FROM A TIME TO A PLACE’ features a photographic collection of different risings the world over, and artwork by CHRISTINE NDORO, NOMPILO NKOMO and CATHERINE MAKAYA.  Included are extracts from Christine’s exhibitions, ‘This Woman’s Work’ and ‘Memories of Peace’, and some pieces which have not yet been seen.  Christine rises by holding on to hope of a world where love just ‘is’.  The exhibition also features work from NOMPILO NKOMO, a happy, spirited young woman with malformed hands who paints with her feet, and who believes that ‘everything under the sun is possible if we believe.'  The third exhibitor is young, jubilant artist CATHERINE MAKAYA, who has something that needs to be said about the world she lives in, and the woman she is rising to be.  FREE, ALL WELCOME.
 
Thu 13 Feb, 5.30pm, Book Café Gender Forum discussion:
‘ONE BILLION RISING: The State of Female Justice in Zimbabwe: Reflections on justice issues for women in Zimbabwe’ – The free public discussion will be looking at gaps in the justice system and women’s access to justice in wake of abuse; and how communities can actively engage stakeholders in ensuring that survivors of violence can access justice timely.  Panelists are women’s rights activists Tendai Garwe, Tariro Tandi, and Nyasha Sengayi (OBR Zimbabwe Coordinator), chaired by Cleo Ndlovu.  Supported by OBR Zimbabwe.  FREE, ALL WELCOME.
 
These events are presented by One Billion Rising Zimbabwe in partnership with the FLAME gender project by Harare’s leading arts development organisation Pamberi Trust.  Each year FLAME presents exciting programmes for International Women’s Day and 16 Days of Activism against Gender Violence, with regular Gender Forum discussions and many artistic performances and workshops through the year. 
 
Pamberi Trust receives core programme support from Hivos, Africalia and the European Union, among other event-specific partner organisations who employ the arts for information dissemination and peace-building.

ABOUT ONE BILLION RISING

ONE BILLION RISING FOR JUSTICE is a global call to women survivors of violence and those who love them to gather safely in community outside places where they are entitled to justice – courthouses, police stations, government offices, school administration buildings, work places, sites of environmental injustice, military courts, embassies, places of worship, homes, or simply public gathering places where women deserve to feel safe but too often do not.  It is a call to survivors to break the silence and release their stories – politically, spiritually, outrageously – through art, dance, marches, ritual, song, spoken word, testimonies and whatever way feels right.

Our stories have been buried, denied, erased, altered, and minimized by patriarchal systems that allow impunity to reign. Justice begins when we speak, release, and acknowledge the truth in solidarity and community. ONE BILLION RISING FOR JUSTICE is an invitation to break free from confinement, obligation, shame, guilt, grief, pain, humiliation, rage, and bondage.

The campaign is a recognition that we cannot end violence against women without looking at the intersection of poverty, racism, war, the plunder of the environment, capitalism, imperialism, and patriarchy. Impunity lives at the heart of these interlocking forces.

One Billion Rising was the biggest mass action in human history.  The campaign began as a call to action based on the staggering UN statistic that 1 in 3 women on the planet will be beaten or raped during her lifetime. With the world population at 7 billion, this adds up to more than ONE BILLION WOMEN AND GIRLS.  On 14 February 2013, people across the world came together to strike, dance, and RISE in defiance of the injustices women suffer, demanding an end at last to violence against women.

Over 10,000 events took place on the ground and the campaign took over media and social media worldwide for 48 hours, trending in 7 countries – 4x in the US alone.  The wildly successful grassroots campaign was covered widely by media in all corners of world including The New York Times, The Guardian, NPR, and many more.
Find out more about the campaign at http://www.onebillionrising.org/about/campaign.
ENDS

Wednesday, 22 January 2014

SISTAZ OPEN MIC COMES OF AGE

It is with no doubt that Sistaz Open Mic, a performance platform for emerging women artists held every second Saturday of the month, has become the most popular space for women artists to grow their art in Harare.  This Saturday a host of established and emerging artists are expected to converge at the Book Café, 2-7pm as they celebrate seven years of mentorship, business arts workshops, performance opportunities and individual growth that has been witnessed from the platform over the years.

 

 Sistaz Open Mic owes it’s popularity to the fact that it is a guarded space, allowing women artists to even bring their children and that it is organised and run by a crew of women artists working with and associated with Pamberi Trust’s F.L.A.M.E(Female Literary, Arts & Music Enterprise) who are sensitive to the issues affecting their fellow sistaz.  Another encouraging thing is the continued support from established women artists such as Clare Nyakujara, DJ Naida, Patience Musa, Tariro NeGitare, Edith WeUtonga, Dudu Manhenga, Kessia Masona, Diana Samkange, Cynthia Mare, Tina Watyoka , Roxanne “Xapa” Mathazia, Cynthia “FlowChyld” Marangwanda, setting standards and mentoring the upcoming artists.
Rudo Chigudu performs at the16 Days Commemorations joined by daughter on stage:PAMBERI TRUST PHOTO
“Sistaz Open mic has had a strong impact on my music journey, and I value it as a performance platform.  People don’t realize that to improve as an artist, you just need to be able to perform in public, experiment with new music, meet and interact with other artists, professionals that you can learn from.  You don’t get that opportunity every day,”  said  Tariro NeGitare one of the many who have gone professional and is now mentoring  other young women artists.
Fatima Katiji with Tariro NeGitare
Started in 2007 by Pamberi Trust under the F.L.A.ME Project, Sistaz Open Mic has seen tremendous growth not only in attendance but great achievements by women artists who have used this platform to improve on their confidence, stage presence as well as branding themselves into formidable artists holding their own in a male-dominated industry.  The platform has since spread it’s wings across the country with performers coming from as far as Bulawayo, Chegutu, Zvishavane and Mutare.

Confirmed to perform is the 2013 Cross Music Roads Winners band Were,  Bulawayo-based poet Primrose Koketso Mpofu, Tracy “Pah Chihera” Mbirimi, Clare Nyakujara, Tariro NeGitare and two Jibilika Dance Crews.  Sistaz Open Mic welcomes Gary Tight, Munya Nyamarebvu – not new to the platform and Leonard Mapfumo for the first time ever, as brothers supporting sistaz.
Cindy Munyavi rocks the MIC at Sistaz Open Mic, Nov 2013: PAMBERI TRUST PHOTO
Cindy Munyavi popularly known as Cindy who has been working closely with the Open Mic the whole of 2012 will bring the curtain down on the birthday celebrations starting 530-7pm.

Prepared by Batsirai E Chigama
Gender Project Officer
Pamberi Trust

Monday, 20 January 2014

January Feature: Tariro NeGitare

Tariro "Wildfire" Chaniwa now affectionately known as Tariro NeGitare first came to Sistaz Open Mic platform on the occasion of its first birthday where, encouraged by a friend, she played for the first time publicly, a beautiful rendition of the famous Bob Marley classic ‘Redemption Song’, which brought her to the attention of the music world in Harare, and prompted afrojazz star Dudu Manhenga to introduce her to afropop bandleader Edith Katiji who happened to be looking for a guitarist at the time.  They played together on that same day, and by the following weekend Tari was performing her first show with Edith weUtonga in the city - and the rest is history.   Tari and Edith WeUtonga both participated at Sistaz Open Mic regularly and steadily for the first two years and have continued to support the platform since, joining in whenever available.
 
Tariro NeGitare: Photo Courtesy of Macpherson Photographers
She said “Sistaz Open Mic has had a strong impact on my music journey, and I value it as a performance platform.  People don’t realize that to improve as an artist, you just need to be able to perform in public, experiment with new music, meet and interact with other artists, professionals that you can learn from.  You don’t get that opportunity everyday.”  
 
She grew quickly while working with Edith weUtonga who was an all-round mentor, teaching her to sing (while playing), stage performance and band administration, and they performed regularly at the Book Café and other venues around the city. 
At Sistaz Open Mic: We are proud to have worked with these four phenomenal voices
She had been instrumental in the setup of the ‘Acoustic Night’ platform at the Zimbabwe-German Society, where she met many different musicians and eventually formed her own backing band from these interactions.  Her backing vocalists Vera and Rufaro also emerged from the Sistaz Open Mic platform. 

 
Welcoming the opportunity to play her own music compositions which she calls ‘afro-soul’, Tari stepped up to a solo career in 2012, and released her debut album ‘Tariro neGitare’ in April 2013.  The track ‘Uripi’ is doing well on the airwaves, and she will be releasing a single and video, which also features popular artist Jah Prayzah, on 31 January at Book Cafe.
 
Tari’s star has been rising swiftly, 2013 having been an exciting year with her first tour to Germany with German group Jamaram in March-April 2013, a May collaboration with The Noisettes (UK) at HIFA, sharing the stage in Harare with SA’s Zahara + Zimbabwe superstar Oliver Mtukudzi, and with acclaimed afrojazz singer Simpiwe Dhana in South Africa in December 2013. 

ENDS
PAMBERI TRUST
FLAME PROJECT