The first story I read written by
Ugandan writer Jackee Budesta Batanda was her story Dora’s Turn which was highly commended
in the old Commonwealth Broadcasting Association Short Story Competition (CBA).
It’s about two girls, friends, who are child soldiers. I read it nearly ten
years ago and still I think of it often, such a powerful story written in under
600 words.
Jackee has gone on to win many writing awards since then. The most
prominent, at least for her fiction, would be winning the 2003 Commonwealth
Short Story Competition for African Region. She said winning that award was one
of the most exciting things to happen to her as a writer. “I was still an undergrad at the time
of winning. That was the affirmation I needed to keep on writing at a young
age. I believe all young writers need that kind of validation, if only to tell
them, that they are doing fine and they need to keep on.”
Jackee is a journalist, author, speaker and senior managing partner with
SuccessSpark Brand Limited, a communications and educational company specialising in media relations, content
creation, digital communications and educational programmes.
They are best known for their writing workshops and mentoring
programmes.
Jackee has had her writing published around the world in publications
such as The New York Times, Boston Globe,
Latitude News, The Global Post, The Star- Africa Edition, The Mail &
Guardian, The Sunday Times, The Sunday Independent, The Guardian, The Sunday Vision and The Sunday Monitor, as well as in
numerous anthologies. She’s a recipient of the Ugandan 2010 Young Achievers
Awards and was among 39 writers under 40 chosen as most likely to shape the
future of literature on the continent. Her story is included in Africa39
an anthology with short fiction from those 39 writers.
In 2012 she was featured in The
London Times alongside nineteen women shaping the future of Africa. That
same year she was a finalist in The 2012 Trust Women Journalism Awards hosted
by Thomson Reuters Foundation and International Herald Tribune. She holds an MA in Forced Migration Studies from the University of the
Witwatersrand in South Africa, a BA in Communication Studies from Makerere
University, and a Diploma in Education from Kyambogo University.
I asked her about her novel, A Lesson of Forgetting, that I’d
heard she was working on. She said, “It follows the life of a former spy chief in a dictatorial regime who is released after 25 years
in life imprisonment. His return reawakens a country’s amnesia of the past and
explores how nations and their people helplessly deal with the mechanisms set
up to handle past atrocities and heal wrongs. It also sees how he tries to
reconcile with his family. It is still a work in progress and has been on the
back burner as I focus on revising, Our Time of Sorrow, about an
apocalyptic cult murder based on a true incident in Uganda March 2000, where members
of cult were burnt to death as they waited for the end of the world.”
Writers living, writing, and publishing in Africa face many challenges.
I asked Jackee what she thinks the single biggest problem facing writers in
Uganda and on the continent is. “A vibrant publishing industry. Most of
the companies are small and lack funds to adequately market the works and
produce good quality works. Of course there are so few opportunities for new
writers, and the established outlets, suffer from cronyism, where only a small
circle of writers benefit.”
For us in Southern Africa, you find
that South Africa acts like a mecca to writers, as a place with more publishing
opportunities. I asked Jackee what the climate was like in East Africa, if they
had a mecca too. “In East Africa, Kenya
would be the mecca, with more publishing opportunities for writers. However,
there is a shift with more young writers opening up publishing houses. They are
in their nascent stages so we are yet to see their impact,” she said.
And what about integration and
cooperation between writers in East Africa? “There are a numbers of festivals and
initiatives coming up which offer an opportunity for writers to interact.
Examples are The StoryMoja Festival, Writivism Festival, Kahini Writers
Festival, Babishai Niwe Poetry Festival, FEMRITE writers’ annual residency and
the African Writers’ Trust Conference. ”
Jackee has accomplished so much,
but I asked her in a perfect world where would she want to be as a writer and
she said, “I would be published, preferably, by a group of African publishers,
and have my books read all over the continent.
I would be running more writing workshops around the continent. The two
things I am passionate about are writing and teaching about writing.”
No comments:
Post a Comment