Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Peace on the Promenade


Mikhail Peppas



The Gandhi-Luthuli Salt March recognises solidarity with the principles of Ubuntu, nonviolence and environmental protection. The 2017 march with a purpose took place on Sunday 23 April from the Amphitheatre on the beachfront to Ushaka and back. The walk entails approximately 4.6 km.

The Salt March proceeds along the beachfront promenade. Photo Mikhail Peppas


Granddaughter of the Mahatma, Ela Gandhi on the Salt March. Photo Sanabelle Ebrahim


Gandhi lookalike T. L. Ramjee and Mikhail Peppas sprinkle coarse salt to purify the path along the Salt March. Photo Sanabelle Ebrahim



The Salt March is held in celebration of the values espoused by Mahatma Gandhi when he led the famous walk to Dandi in India in 1930 against tax on salt. The event equally honours Inkosi Albert Luthuli who was the first Black African recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1960 and the guiding spirit behind the Freedom Charter of 1955.

BunnyKats on the Run relax alongside a peace sign formed using coarse salt at the end of the march. Photo Sanabelle Ebrahim

Friday, March 3, 2017

City Attractions take the spotlight in ‘Things I Love About Durban’ Writing Challenge


Mikhail Peppas



Get those creative juices flowing and share your love for Durban through story.



The ‘One-Pager’ Writing Challenge themed ‘Things I Love About Durban / Izinto Engizithandayo NgeTheku’ runs until Saturday, 11 March. The competition is presented by Book & Design Fair Durban and Durban Central Community Tourism Organisation (DCTO).



Declare your love for the city’s attractions: climate, cuisine, beaches, parks, galleries, creative hubs, quaint coffee shops and favourite hotspots.

Durban BunnyChow. Photo Sanabelle Ebrahim


Writers are encouraged to submit one typed A4-page in Microsoft Word or PDF format with a maximum 400 words, excluding the story title (Times New Roman, 12 font size) describing what they love about the city.



Only one submission per person will be accepted, in either English or isiZulu. Include a title for your story but not your name on the printed submission.



Complete the entry form and sign the register on submission of your story at the Durban Central Community Tourism Organisation (DCTO) offices, Old Pavilion Site, North Beach, Durban between 9.30am and 12midday on Saturday, 11 March.



Prizes sponsored by the DCTO comprise a R1 000 book voucher each for the best English and isiZulu submissions. There also awaits the chance to have participants’ stories included in a publication.



For more information, contact memberships@durbancto.co.za or 031 321 5140. Entry is free.



Book & Design Fair is Durban’s first book fair. Launched in September 2015, the annual event features a Narrative Futures Conference, KZN Provincial Poetry Day, writing retreats, literary challenges and book launches. A key attraction is The Frameside Lounge offering conversational spaces for comic book artists, graphic novelists, and folk craft entrepreneurs. The project seeks to establish Durban as the Writing Capital of Africa.



The DCTO provides information about attractions in the City Centre, accommodation, travel services, conference venues, and historical/cultural centres.

New Beach Durban. Photo Sanabelle Ebrahim

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

City of Literature shines at Edinburgh International Book Festival

Mikhail Peppas

“The more that you read, the more things you will know. The more that you learn, the more places you'll go.” – Dr. Seuss

Charlotte Square Gardens in the heart of Edinburgh boasts a literary feast in the form of a specially created tented village for the Edinburgh International Book Festival. The event features talks, workshops, book launches and signings, literary soirĂ©es in the magical Moulin Rouge tent, and a bumper children’s programme.
The tranquil Charlotte Square Gardens. Photo Sanabelle Ebrahim

The festival welcomes more than 800 authors in over 700 events each year including novelists, poets, scientists, philosophers, sportsmen, illustrators, comic creators, historians, musicians, biographers, environmentalists, economists, Nobel and Booker prize-winners.

Taking in the launch of the Unbound sketchathon sessions in the theatrical Moulin Rouge Spiegeltent with Scotland's Phoenix team of comic artists. First up in the interactive spot is Sanabelle Ebrahim taking up the challenge through sketching the traditional BunnyKat and picking up a new thread of frames to the 'gleeful spy in rush hour' storyline. The audience strongly warms to the BunnyKat and the antics depicted in the continuing frames of carrots, turnips and explosions. Bravissimo! The folk dolls make it from the Valley of 1000 Hills to the international stage. Next stop London Screenwriters' Festival. Photo Mikhail Peppas


The 2016 event ran from 13 to 29 August. Amidst an explosion of festivals celebrating music, comedy, theatre, dance, opera, books and literature, the Edinburgh International Book Festival signifies an oasis of tranquillity sitting at the centre of the hustle and bustle that characterises August in the city.


A giant willow sculpture of Roald Dahl’s Big Friendly Giant (BFG). Photo Sanabelle Ebrahim

The Edinburgh International Book Festival began in 1983 and is now a key event in the August Festival season. The city’s literary attractions include the Writers’ Museum, Scottish Poetry Library, and Scottish Storytelling Centre. Edinburgh has been the birthplace, home and hangout to some of the world’s biggest and best loved writers such as Robert Louis Stevenson, Sir Walter Scott, Robert Burns, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, JK Rowling and Alexander McCall Smith. In 2004, Edinburgh was recognised as the world’s first designated UNESCO City of Literature. Plans are underway to have Durban considered as a UNESCO City of Literature, the 21st in the world and the first in Africa.


BunnyKat Wordish thrills to the Alexander McCall Smith book signing. Photo Sanabelle Ebrahim

Wednesday, June 22, 2016

‘King of Satire’ keeps the laughs alive at World Premiere



Mikhail Peppas and Sanabelle Ebrahim



The thrilling adventures of a legendary icon, from an extraordinary country and the phenomenal power of laughter took centre stage at the World Premiere of ‘Nobody’s Died Laughing’. The theatrical-action-documentary film celebrates the life and work of Pieter-Dirk Uys, a prolific writer, satirist and activist.



The Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre provided the backdrop for the screening on Sunday 19 June at the Durban International Film Festival. The audience witnessed the ups and downs of Uys’ personal and professional life through his performances, archival footage and interviews that include Desmond Tutu, Charlize Theron, Lizz Meiring, Anna-Mart van der Merwe, FW de Klerk, Dame Janet Suzman, Thoko Ntshinga, Zolani Mahola, Vincent Ebrahim, Professor David Gere, Eric Abraham, Jonathan Shapiro and Sophia Loren as well as footage of his sister Tessa Uys and Nelson Mandela.

Following the screening, a Q&A session with the cast and crew of ‘Nobody’s Died Laughing’ provides a wonderful opportunity to get behind the many masks of Evita. (L-R) Lizz Meiring, Thoko Ntshinga, Pieter-Dirk Uys and Willem Oelofsen (Director/Producer). Photo Mikhail Peppas


The film follows his journeys through South Africa and on to London, Berlin and his home in Darling. He has converted the old railway station in Darling into a cabaret venue called Evita se Perron, famous for its satirical garden, Boerassic Park, and the domain of Evita Bezuidenhout, the ‘most famous white woman in South Africa’.



Uys was born in Cape Town in 1945 and has graced theatres around the world since the mid-1960s. He was closely associated with the Space Theatre in Cape Town and Johannesburg’s Market Theatre during the 1970s and 1980s.



The film covers his many achievements, including his travels around South Africa, visiting more than 1.5 million school children, as well as prisons and reformatories, with a free AIDS-awareness entertainment programme.



Director/Producer Willem Oelofsen says: “Only now, looking back on all of this, I can truly appreciate the importance of making the definitive documentary feature film about one of South Africa’s most prolific and most loved personalities.”



Executive producer Herman Binge reflects that “for so many years he acted as our national conscience on stage and he did it with a smile.”



President Nelson Mandela remarked about Uys: “Remember this diverse and colourful nation of South Africa will always have one thing in common. We all choose to believe Evita Bezuidenhout is real.”



‘Nobody’s Died Laughing’ tells the story of theatre and satire as a platform to affect change, not only in the old South Africa, but also in the country’s new democratic dispensation.



The Green Heart Movement has a BunnyKat named Astro to present to Charlize Theron if she and Uys happen to pass through the Global Village at the International AIDS Conference. The citizen-based organisation, Green Heart Movement, aims to position Durban as Green Heart City. The reference to Durban as Green Heart City echoes the promotional branding of New York as the Big Apple and Paris as the City of Love. The BunnyKats are handmade from upcycled material by crafters in the Valley of 1000 Hills. The folk craft puppets are gaining momentum as cultural icons of Green Heart City Durban and KwaZulu-Natal.

BunnyKat Valley snuggles up to new friend Pieter-Dirk Uys and is thrilled to be travelling to Evita se Perron in Darling. Green Heart Movement presented a Durban BunnyKat to Uys at the world premiere of ‘Nobody’s Died Laughing’ at the Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre. Photo Mikhail Peppas


‘Nobody’s Died Laughing’ opens in cinemas nationwide on Friday 29 July. Uys will be in attendance at the first screening in Durban at 12midday at Gateway.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Satyagraha House – Spiritual Sanctuary



Situated in the residential neighbourhood of Orchards in Johannesburg, Satyagraha House was the home of Mohandas Gandhi from 1908 to 1909. Within these walls, the future Mahatma created and developed his philosophy of passive resistance: Satyagraha in sanskrit. A pacifist method of protest that he employed in India to lead the country to independence.



The house was built in 1907 by Gandhi’s close friend, the German architect Hermann Kallenbach, and today it begins a new life.



As Gandhi himself said, South Africa was essential to his personal achievement. It is during the 21 years he spent in South Africa, from 1893 to 1914, broken by a few visits to India and England, that this timid young man who had just passed the bar examination became the man who would lead India to its independence and instigate the world movement of decolonization.



Without intending to follow all the ascetic principals of Satyagraha, the house strives to respect a certain adherence to the spirit of the site. With this in mind, yoga and meditation classes are available upon reservation.



All of the produce used in the house is organic, and comes from the kitchen garden and sustainable sources in the region. Television, alcohol and cigarettes are not part of the Satyagraha diet (there is, however, a smoking area planned outside). The floor heating is geothermal, and the water for the garden and other non drinking purposes comes from a spring on the property. Energy-saving lighting is favoured throughout the house.


In celebration of the spirit of Ubuntu, Sanabelle Ebrahim presents exhibitor Ditheba Melato with a beaded green heart pin-on as a greenwill gesture at the Satyagraha House exhibition stand at Tourism Indaba 2013. The hearts will assist Durban in being affectionately known as Green Heart City. The plan is to establish an international Green Heart Movement originating from Durban. Woza Moya crafters of Hillcrest Aids Centre create the delightful green heart beaded pin-ons and green-hearted BunnyKats. Photo Mikhail Peppas


Satyagraha House

Contact Details

Tel: 011 485 5928 or 011 485 2471

Cell: 072 552 9267

Email: dbayeye@satyagrahahouse.co.za

Physical Address: 15 Pine Road

                              Orchards Johannesburg

                              Gauteng

                              South Africa

                              2192



PO Box 92583 Norwood


Friday, February 5, 2010

Empire at Ladysmith

What an adventure and awareness experience. More than 100 delegates gathered at Platrand Lodge outside Ladysmith at the end of January 2010 to celebrate the 110th anniversary of the Anglo-Boer War.