Roots – why the story is still relevant today

Roots

Malachi Kirby plays Kunta Kinte in the 2016 remake of Roots on the History Channel.

When the History Channel first announced it was remaking Roots, the news received mixed reviews. Was it really necessary to redo this beloved cultural work that broke television records when it first aired in 1977?

“They just want to keep showing the abuse that we took hundreds of years ago,” Snoop Dogg vented as he took to social media.

However, the four-part series which premieres in South Africa on DStv Channel 186 on Wednesday, June 15 at 8.30 pm has been widely praised by critics and audiences alike, even being screened at the White House. Continue reading

Ramsgate Literary Festival: Review of Tales of the Old East Coast by Ron Lock

Ron Lock, author of Tales of the Old East Coast

Ron Lock, author of Tales of the Old East Coast

Review: Tales of the Old East Coast by Ron Lock (published by I-Go-Books)

TALES of the old East Coast is exactly what its title implies, a number of stories spanning from Cape Town to KwaZulu-Natal and beyond.

It begins with the hazards of sailing up the East Coast and the ships which foundered off into, including Sao Joao, which was wrecked off Port Edward in 1552. The survivors trekked over one thousand kilometres to Lourenco Marques.

There are also tales of white children being taken in by local tribes, like the amaPondo, including a young girl called Bessie, who legend has it, gave birth to Senzangkona, father of King Shaka.

Other stories tell of slavers, the colonisation of South Africa by European nations, the 1820 settlers in the Eastern Cape, the Bushmen, and Robben Island’s first white convicts.

The book contains close on a hundred illustrations and spans a period of over 400 years. All the stories are told with the expertise of a true raconteur, so if enjoyed Lock’s previous offerings – Hill of Squandered Valour, Spionkop 1900 and Blood on the Painted Mountain – then this will definitely appeal.

Estelle Sinkins

Contact Ramsgate Stationers & Booksellers, 4 South Coast Mall, Beach Road, Shelly Beach, 4265 or phone 039 315 0213 for more information.