Film Festival Watch: The African Diaspora Film Festival

New York-based African Diaspora Film Festival, in its sixteenth year, is underway through Dec. 14. The following are highlights from the first week’s screenings. To learn more, please visit www.nyadff.com.
Film Festival Watch: The African Diaspora Film Festival
Promotional poster for 'As Old as My Tongue.' Courtesy of The African Diaspora Film Festival
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<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/AsOldAsTongue_medium.jpg"><img src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/AsOldAsTongue_medium.jpg" alt="Promotional poster for 'As Old as My Tongue.' (Courtesy of The African Diaspora Film Festival )" title="Promotional poster for 'As Old as My Tongue.' (Courtesy of The African Diaspora Film Festival )" width="320" class="size-medium wp-image-78945"/></a>
Promotional poster for 'As Old as My Tongue.' (Courtesy of The African Diaspora Film Festival )
New York-based African Diaspora Film Festival, in its sixteenth year, took place from late November through to Dec. 14. The following are highlights from the first week’s screenings. To learn more, visit www.nyadff.com.

‘As Old as My Tongue’


Mark Twain’s classic quote: “The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated,” may have become something of a cliché, but Zanzibari vocalist Bi Kidude is certainly entitled to use it. While touring Europe, spurious rumors of her death produced a genuine outpouring of emotion throughout the Tanzanian archipelago. It was yet another chapter in Kidude’s complicated relationship with Zanzibari society, which Andy Jones explores in a documentary profile of the singer entitled “As Old as My Tongue.”

Kidude is thought to have been born sometime around 1915, which would put her near the rather exclusive age of 93. She still enjoys a nice beer and a good smoke, which is frowned upon for women by many of Zanzibar’s Islamists. Kidude also performs without the veil, which is particularly significant. Her musical inspiration and role model Siti binti Saad did in fact perform veiled. For Saad, simply performing in public and recording in India were enough of a challenge to established tradition.

Kidude is generally considered the greatest living representative of Taarab music, a style derived from Eastern African and Middle Eastern musical forms. Its instrumentation includes violins, “ouds,” and traditional percussion instruments, like the “dumbek.” Kidude still interprets the classic songs of Saad, but she also has a repertoire peculiarly her own, like the drinking song we hear at one point.

While she is celebrated abroad, attitudes in Zanzibar seem much more ambivalent. Many come to sponge off Kidude when she returns flush from a world tour, but when the money runs out, so do they. Concerned her music was not better appreciated in her native land, one of Kidude’s most enthusiast fans, Yusuf Aley Chuchu, launched his Heartbeat Studio with a session designed to reintroduce her to Zanzibar. He also explains a certain attitude prevalent among older Zanzibaris, including his mother, that Kidude should retire from music and spend more time at the mosque.
Joe Bendel
Joe Bendel
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Joe Bendel writes about independent film and lives in New York City. To read his most recent articles, visit JBSpins.blogspot.com