Cairo
LIBERATION RADIO: DAR ES SALAAM – 12 AUGUST 2022 from 2pm
[The opening ceremony at the 6th Pan African Congress held in Dar es Salaam, 1974]
2pm – Liberation Dance: When Tarzan Met the African Freedom Fighter
An ongoing exploration of struggle music – literally, music produced by and through the movements and people involved in Africa’s liberation struggle, rather than about it. “Struggle Music” is also a misnomer, it designates collective expression which, although musical, refuses to be “music” – or the process of individuation that produces it. It helps us demarcate from what is customarily called “protest music” – which, at times, may be used to silence protest, or, as our comrade Harmony Holiday sweetly put it, “harmonise with the state”. Liberation Dance is unscripted and serves as both intro and outro to the day’s programming.
3pm – Radio USARF: Tanzania Publishing House and a tale of two Walter’s
In a rare interview with Walter Bgoya we discuss the life and afterlife of Walter Rodney’s How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (1972), a book that combines the fire and analytical power of Fanon’s Wretched, with the historical depth of Cheikh Anta Diop’s best writing.
Rodney’s masterwork was first published in Tanzania by Walter Bgoya, then director of Tanzanian Publishing House (TPH), and founder of Mkuki na Nyota.
5pm – Voice of the Distant Stars
This program reboots and expands on the work of Radio Cairo and Radio Free Africa, the sharpest end of Egypt’s anti-colonial and internationalist program, during the late 1950s and early 1960s, and the seldom-acknowledged model for the many broadcasting projects subsequently initiated by African liberation movements.
The second episode of “Voice of the Distant Stars” revolves around revolutionary cultural and political actions taking place in Cairo in 1961. It connects to the Voice of Free Africa station, visits the 2nd Afro-Asian Film Festival and listens to Pauline Lumumba telling the story of her husband’s assassination and her family’s escape to Cairo.
6pm – RBI-in-Exile: Ayi Kwei Armah in Dar and the Invention of a Pan African Language
This show reviews Ayi Kwei Armah’s time in Dar es Salaam in the 1970s. What impact did his engagement with radical intellectual circles including Walter Rodney, Jennifer Lawson and Nsa Kaisi have on his career as a writer and independent publisher? Novels like Osiris Rising and The Resolutionaries, give insight into his critique of the limitations of Nyerere’s Swahili project and his proposition of a newly designed Pan African lingua franca based on hieroglyphs.
7pm – We dreamt of Utopia
In conversation with Anoek De Smet. Architecte-Urbaniste, Dar es Salam resident and the architect who eventually brought to an end the utopian project of providing a house to all the liberation voices from the past. The discussion will evolve around the question of the audience or listenership, is there any chance for an emancipated listener to exist? Be it a live broadcast or a digitalised sound archive, do “we speak and nobody listens”?
LIBERATION RADIO: DAR ES SALAAM – 10 AUGUST 2022 from 2pm
t The scene outside the Afro-Asian Peoples’ Solidarity Conference opening ceremony at Cairo University Today we open our Liberation Radio: Dar es Salaam sessions: 2pm – Liberation Dance: When Tarzan Met the African Freedom Fighter An ongoing exploration of struggle music – literally, music produced by and through the movements and people involved in Africa’s liberation struggle, rather than about it. “Struggle Music” is also a misnomer, it designates collective expression which, although musical, refuses to be “music” – or …
PASS landing at CiC Library, Cairo
From 16 -19 February 2017, the Pan African Space Station landed at the library of Contemporary Image Collective (CiC) in downtown Cairo. Over the four days, PASS in Cairo became an improvisational platform for research and deeper explorations into imagined and imaginary borders, featuring live readings, performances and conversations with Chimurenga collaborators in the city. Thursday, 16 February: Filtered Conversations (remixed) Based on her project, Filtered Conversations, Remixed, Amanda KM had a conversation about previous conversations. She was joined by Shatha …
Hassan Khan reads ‘Twelve Clues’
Cairo-based artist and writer Hassan Khan will present a round table discussion interspersed with selections of music and some excerpts from his sci-fi novella, Twelve Clues, live on PASS at the Contemporary Image Collective (CiC) library on Friday 17 February from 3-5pm (EET). This short English-language novel, which features 12 clues, 12 chapters and 12 artworks, alludes to a colossal corporation, a ground-breaking science project, humanity, a movie, apes, robots and religion, but complicates the logic of these worlds when they collide with the entangled lives of the …
‘Filtered Conversations (Remixed)’ with Amanda KM
Based on her project Filtered Conversations (Remixed), which focuses on the evidence and residue of intimate conversations held between women in Cairo, Amanda KM will have a conversation about previous conversations. She invites Shatha Al Deghady and Ahmed Kubara to have an improvised jam session using loops of sound and voice. Amanda KM will join us in the PASS studio at the library of the Contemporary Image Collective for a live broadcast from 3-5pm (EET) on Thursday 16 February. Amanda KM is …
Amira Hanafi with ‘Language as Material’
Amira Hanafi joins us on PASS in Cairo in Sunday 19 February from 4-6pm with Language as Material. She will read selections from her books Forgery (2011) and Minced English (2010), and share recordings from her project, A Dictionary of the Revolution, that documented the amplification of public political speech following the 25 January 2011 uprising in Egypt, Amira Hanafi is a writer and artist living in Cairo. She works with language as a material, documenting multivocal histories that encompass the …
Amado Alfadni
Egyptian-born Sudanese artist Amado Alfadni will be joining us on PASS live from CiC Library in downtown Cairo on Saturday 18 February from 4-5pm. Alfadni will present and explore his ongoing research, which is focused on forgotten historical events and current state policies; the relationship between the included and the excluded; and issues of identity and politics.
Mohamed Abdelkarim
Mohamed Abdelkarim constructs a world of sound on PASS live from Contemporary Image Collective in Downtown Cairo on Friday 17 February from 5-6pm. Abdelkarim’s selections will include a collection of productions by Dirar Kalash, Kareem Lotfy, Jacqueline George, as well as his own works produced in Karachi, Beirut, Cairo. Mohamed Abdelkarim is a visual/performance artist, based in Cairo. Here is an extract from Episode #1 and #2 of his performance/essay-based project Dramatic Episodes on Locomotion.
Magdy El-Shafee
Graphic artist, cartoonist, illustrator Magdy El-Shafee joins us on PASS live from the CiC Library, Cairo from 3-4pm on Saturday 18 February. El-Shafee will be taking us through his illustrated works and will be selecting music from his personal collection. He will be joined in conversation with children’s book author, Rania Amin, and scriptwriter Muhammed Abdelaziz.