This year the
poetry collective based in Maun, Poetavango, will be celebrating the fifth
anniversary of their festival called The Maun International Arts Festival (MIAF). The
Festival will take place in various locations around Maun from the 23rd October
to the 1st November.
Part of this
year’s Festival was a short story contest. According to the press release, the
original plan was to publish an anthology of the winning stories as well as
some of the better submissions, and have the book ready at the Festival.
Unfortunately, the plans had to be changed. There were over forty submissions,
but the judges for the contest (Barolong Seboni, Wame Molefhe, and Cheryl
Ntumy) advised that the submissions (outside of the winners) were not up to
standard. They thought many were submitted as rough drafts which, of course, is
not acceptable.
Speaking for the
judges, Ntumy said: “Writing competitions are a wonderful way to nurture
talent, and to encourage future efforts. Stories should be worked on
extensively and edited before submission, perhaps during a series of workshops.
The contestants should be advised to read a lot of short stories in preparation
for writing their entries, and should ask others to read and edit their work.
Finally, contestants should make every effort to check their work before
submission to avoid making careless mistakes.”
I absolutely
respect this decision and I wish there were more instances of this sort. If we
intend to improve the writing and literature of this country, it is time we
stop accepting mediocrity (and sometimes much less than that) and awarding such
a low standard prizes that should only be reserved for excellence. Ten points
for the judges and Poetavango for fighting that difficult battle!
In the end there
were winners, and they are:
1st place: Wazha
Lopang for the story The Small Matter of the Jelly.
2nd place: Jimmy
Keletso for the story Welcome Home
3rd Place: Sharon
Tshipa for the story Reality for Sale
The prizes are
P3000, P2000, and P1000 and they will be awarded at the Festival during a
prize-giving ceremony at Nhabe Museum on Monday the 26th October at
5 pm.
As for the Festival
itself, there is a plethora of events taking place, something for everyone from
the look of it. There will be mural painting, a writing workshop, theatre,
storytelling for kids, an “Alfa of the Delta” hip hop battle, an art
exhibition, comedy night, poetry slams, contemporary dance, and a traditional
night, among much, much more. There’s even a football match on the programme.
It looks like the
final night has been changed a bit. In the past, the final event was primarily
performance poetry with a very small amount of music mixed in. According to the
Festival programme, this year the final event will include everything that went
on during the week including: dance, theatre, comedy, poetry and literature. My
only hope is that they have sorted out the timing, going home at 2 am+ is
becoming too much for this old lady.
“This will be an action-packed week,” says festival director Thato
Molosi. “We’ve called to Maun top-notch artists from across the world to help
us celebrate our fifth anniversary.”
There are artists participating from Zimbabwe, Canada, USA, Uganda,
South Africa and Malaysia. Local artists already booked for the event include:
Leshie Lovesong, Sereetsi and the Natives, Mophato Dance Troupe, Zeus, The
Contrabanditz, Christophe Durand, JahGene,
Maya Roze, Morongoa Mosetlhi, Mambo Ntema , Chief Kunta, Mawee, Mod,
Stoki, Mmakgosi Anita Tau, Poet Phopho, Psycho Freakers, and Ribcracker, among
others.
I’m especially looking forward to attending the writing workshop,
thankfully not being taught by me, but instead by a very accomplished American
writer and poet Dasha Kelly, author of the novels Almost Crimson and All Fall
Down. Besides being a novelist, she’s a well-established performance poet
and performed in the final season of HBO presents
Russell Simmons' Def Poetry Jam.
We’re
in for some serious fun, folks! Don’t miss it.
PS: I'll be running the event for kids at the library on Wednesday morning.
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