Dzimbanhete advocates for participation and investment in culture and heritage  

Status

Press Release: 14 June 2022

Dzimbanhete Arts & Culture Interactions Trust advocates for cultural investment in its mandate to promote the arts, culture, and heritage. Through prioritising heritage preservation and enabling the promotion of indigenous knowledge practices, Dzimbanhete supports the spirit of Pan Africanism and Ubuntu. Aspiration 5 of Agenda 2063 of the African Union envisions “An Africa with a strong cultural identity, common heritage and shared values and ethics” which is at the core of Dzimbanhete as a cultural resources centre. 

It is the mandate of the organisation to contribute to the development and exhibition of cultural activities that encourage participation and interpretation by artists and audiences. 

The institution is tapping into Africa’s rich cultural heritage through creating cultural productions on heritage and art education, packed with indigenous traditional practices and material culture to stimulate the growth and transformation of the creative sector. These activities offset the institution’s greater idea, which is to advocate for investment in indigenous cultural heritage.  

Dzimbanhete is laying the foundation for preserving culture and heritage through a monthly Dare conversation titled “Chivanhu, Chinyakare neMatare”, which kicked off on 25 May in celebration of Africa Day. The idea is to get people to share knowledge about indigenous knowledge systems and practices and how they relate to contemporary life and society. What is essential is to ensure that an accessible, welcoming and responsive cultural and heritage ecosystem exists that enables full participation by diverse members of society. 

The launch of the Dare conversation, which took place at the All Africa Village, emphasized the importance of infrastructure in fostering a vibrant culture and heritage ecosystem. Audiences experience a tour of the All Afrika Village, which currently consists of indigenous architecture from Nigeria, Zimbabwe, South Africa, and Botswana. In the same context, audiences participate in conversation, collective research, and guidance through Matare a traditional court that the resource centre is now utilising for meaningful engagement. The participants are also treated to a taste of traditional beer and mbira music. 

The event challenges audiences to think about the meaning of indigenous culture and heritage and how it can be part of everyday living within communities. The underlying outcome is enabling and activating public education on culture and heritage and building relevant relationships between individuals. 

Dzimbanhete recognises that investment in cultural heritage enforces social cohesion and contributes to strong economic growth. Therefore, the organisation is setting out a five-year plan advocating for a USD 2 million investment centralised around activating the mobilisation of indigenous cultural heritage at the All Africa Village. The aim is to promote and celebrate Africa’s material culture and indigenous knowledge systems in an architectural environment representative of the continent’s rich and diverse heritage. 

As a critical player in the cultural and creative sector in Zimbabwe, Dzimbanhete foresees increased participation of investors in cultural production to ensure that the Cultural and Creative Industries in Zimbabwe (CCIs) achieve the objectives of Agenda 2063, National Arts and Culture Policy, as well as the National Development Strategy (NDS1).

Cultural Talk : THE KAVANGO PEOPLE

Ms. Lahiya Musimani takes us through this cultural talk of the Kuvango People of Namibia exploring knowledge systems, traditions and cultural practices.

She joins Dzimbanhete for a week long residency as the technical support for the building of the Namibian indigenous shelters within the All Afrika Village thematic park.

DZIMBANHETE HOSTS SEMBENE ACROSS AFRICA FOURTH EDITION,OCTOBER 21-23 2020

African Cinema for Africa

Running under the banner of the Sounds of the Scared Web Festival (SOSAWEF) Dzimbanhete Arts and Culture Interactions in collaboration with the Sembene Across Africa (4th edition) will host a 3 day film screening from the 21st to the 23rd of October 2020. The screenings which are a celebration of the life and work of Ousmane Sembene will start at 6pm every evening and are part of the ground-breaking program bringing African cinema to communities throughout Africa and the Diaspora, free of charge for one weekend a year.

Sembene Across Africa, an annual program launched in 2017, returns with a week of online and in-person screenings and seminars, produced in conjunction with more than 100 African institutions.

The 2020 program includes two of Sembene’s films and a documentary about him.•

  • Sembene’s classic tragicomedy MANDABI (1968), which documents the plight of a Senegalese man who tries to cash a money order from a relative in France.
  • XALA (1975), a biting satire about corruption in the independence era.
  • SEMBENE! (2015), an award-winning documentary celebrating the life of this great man.

Ousmane Sembene, the father of African cinema, dedicated 50 years to telling stories to lift up his brothers and sisters. But, for Africans, his films have remained nearly impossible to find. The collaborative program Sembene Across Africa unifies hundreds of organizations, schools, universities and individuals, all with a single goal: to connect Sembene’s timeless, urgent works with Africans.

Sembene was a self-taught filmmaker who became a giant of world culture, and his films and fiction remain among the most inspiring works the continent has seen.

Mandabi, Xala and Sembene! will be available to stream for free in Africa from October 19 through October 25.

Sembene Across Africa will also include seminars, broadcast live on YouTube. Seminars include:

• Sembene’s Senegal: Understanding His Home Through His Books and Movies (Wolof), moderated by Boris Boubacar Diop: October 23 

• Fight the Power: Sembene and Black Power, Then and Now (English), moderator TBD: October 24 

• Rewriting History: Sembene’s Afrocentric Storytelling (French), moderated by Samba Gadjigo, participants TBD: October 25

About Ousmane Sembene

Ousmane Sembene, perhaps Africa’s most influential storyteller, is a truly inspirational figure for our times. Against impossible odds, he spent 50 years creating brilliant, timeless, progress-focused films and novels. Though well known to cinema lovers around the globe, Sembene had been largely forgotten in his native country and throughout Africa at the time of his death in 2007.

Ousmane Sembene


The son of a fisherman and a lifelong laborer, Sembene overcame a limited education and learned how to write while in his 30s. In his 40s, he taught himself to make movies. During the last 50 years of his life, Sembene dedicated every moment to galvanizing and inspiring his people, creating visionary, profound and subversive stories. His 1960 novel God’s Bits of Woods remains in the canon of world literature, and his timeless films include Borom Sarret (1963), Black Girl (1966), Mandabi (1968), Emitai (1971), Xala (1975), Ceddo (1976), Camp de Thiaroye (1986), Guelwaar (1992), Faat Kine (2000) and the Cannes-winning Moolaade (2004). Sembene intended for his stories to serve as an “evening school” for African workers and to inspire visions of a just, prosperous and free Africa.

About Sembene Across Africa

Each year, the Sembene Across Africa project—a continent-wide collaboration—shares works by the father of African cinema. Through its first three events, held in 2017, 2018 and 2019, the project reached millions of viewers through in-person screenings, held in 48 of Africa’s 55 nations, through broadcast and through the internet. For many, it was the first chance to experience movies made by Africans, about Africans and for Africans.

About MANDABI

“A true African pic, mirroring everyday problems in the witty guise of a folksy tale … it marks points with graceful insights, inventive scenes and technical excellence.” –Variety

After Ibrahima Dieng, an Illiterate, unemployed Senegalese man, suddenly gets a windfall—a money order from his street-sweeper nephew in France for $100—his “friends,” family and debtors swarm, and he finds himself dealing with a Kafkaesque bureaucracy designed to rob him of both money and dignity. The first African film shot in an African language, MANDABI is a winner of numerous international awards.

About SEMBENE!

“Endlessly fascinating … an enormously moving portrait of the profound way that art can transform those who come in contact with it.” –New York Magazine

In 1952, Ousmane Sembene, a Senegalese dockworker and fifth-grade dropout, began dreaming an impossible dream: to become the storyteller for a new Africa. SEMBENE! tells the unbelievable true story of the self-taught “father of African cinema,” who fought enormous odds to return African stories to Africa. SEMBENE! uses rare archival footage and more than 100 hours of exclusive materials to craft a true-life epic, as an ordinary man transforms himself into a fearless spokesperson for the marginalized.

About XALA

“Cutting, radiant and hilarious … It is part fable and part satire, but it is much more: with the greatest fineness and delicacy, Mr. Sembene has set out a portrait of the complex and conflicting mesh of traditions, aspirations and frustrations of a culture knocked askew by colonialism and distorting itself anew while climbing out.” –New York Times

Shot in 1975, amidst the increasingly audacious corruption of post-independence West Africa, XALA follows a group of Senegalese businessmen who, having seized power from the French, fall into the same greed and self-serving policies that they pledged to eradicate. Among them, El Hadj Abou Kader finds himself dealing with a curse that leaves him temporarily impotent with his new young bride, his third wife. He traces the curse back to a surprising source.

“Whether it’s DeMille, Hitchcock, the Senegalese filmmaker Sembéne … we’re all walking in their footsteps every day…” — Martin Scorsese

APPLICATION DEADLINE EXTENDED

SOUNDS OF THE SACRED WEB PRESENTS

A CALL FOR PARTICIPATORY RESIDENCY IN AFRICA INDIGENOUS ARCHITECTURE

WHERE?

This is an initiative by Dzimbanhete Arts and Culture Interactions Trust, an art and culture hub located on Plot 1, Stonehurst farm in Harare, Zimbabwe.

About the Project:

All Afrika Village (AAV) is one of DACI’s projects, the first of its kind, a unique project aimed at presenting 54 African countries’ various indigenous architectural structures in one culturally rich place. Emphasis is on indigenous construction methods, architecture, design and the respective traditions as they have been passed on from generation to generation. Each model, with properties that are based on local narrations, needs and purpose; intricately entwined with the local culture, beliefs and traditions of each respective community.

During the residency, expert builders from the selected communities of the respective countries will be leading participants in architectural discourse, construction and narrations on accessories and overriding aspects of their village structures. It is a unique opportunity to explore, challenge and resuscitate the influences of indigenous architecture on contemporary and modern designs.

Residency slots:

Slots will be per specific country. Each slot will be three weeks long.

Currently the residency is developing two African villages, notably Zimbabwe and Nigeria. This is to rehabilitate festival space in Support of Sounds of the Sacred Web Festival (SoSaWeF) co-funded by the Culture at Work Africa and the European Union.

Participants are welcome to state their country of interest.

A nominal fee will be charged to cover residency costs.

Purpose: WHY?

  • To bring together local, international, diaspora, professionals from the built, design, interior design, architecture, anthropology, art and culture and related fields to share, discover and learn more about the African indigenous construction models as a source of inspiration.
  • To revive and share the skilled craftsmanship and knowledge found within African indigenous architecture.
  • To investigate the relevance of indigenous architectural styles in today’s society and identify opportunities for new design processes that are changeable and inventive.

This is a unique opportunity to immense one’s self in an experientially explorative environment of African indigenous architecture, related knowledge systems, construction methods and the cultural nuances that inform these “form and pattern languages”. Further the human value of indigenous architecture goes way beyond what is normal perceived of it, while the design and construction methodology may render it “outsider” to the architectural establishment and academia, this architecture is fundamentally fractal, thus highly mathematical. A lot can be learnt from it.

Who can apply?

Architects, students, architecture enthusiasts, engineers, designers, urban planners, interior designers, cultural experts and enthusiasts, artists and other professions in the built, design, arts and culture and related environment are invited to take part in this remarkable project.

How to apply:

Send application together with

For further general inquiries with regards to the project do not hesitate to contact us.

Deadline for applications: September 30, 2019

This Project is           In partnership

Open call for indigenous architectural residency in Zimbabwe

Featured

A CALL FOR PARTICIPATORY RESIDENCY IN AFRICA

WHERE?

This is an initiative by Dzimbanhete Arts and Culture Interactions Trust, an art and culture hub located on Plot 1, Stonehurst farm in Harare, Zimbabwe.

About the Project:

All Afrika Village (AAV) is one of DACI’s projects, the first of its kind, a unique project aimed at presenting 54 African countries’ various indigenous architectural structures in one culturally rich place. Emphasis is on indigenous construction methods, architecture, design and the respective traditions as they have been passed on from generation to generation. Each model, with properties that are based on local narrations, needs and purpose; intricately entwined with the local culture, beliefs and traditions of each respective community.

During the residency, expert builders from the selected communities of the respective countries will be leading participants in architectural discourse, construction and narrations on accessories and overriding aspects of their village structures. It is a unique opportunity to explore, challenge and resuscitate the influences of indigenous architecture on contemporary and modern designs.

Residency slots:

Slots will be per specific country. Each slot will be three weeks long.

A nominal fee will be charged to cover residency costs.

Purpose:   WHY?

  • To bring together local, international, diaspora, professionals from the built, design, interior design, architecture, anthropology, art and culture and related fields to share, discover and learn more about the African indigenous construction models as a source of inspiration.  
  • To revive and share the skilled craftsmanship and knowledge found within African indigenous architecture.
  • To investigate the relevance of indigenous architecturalstyles in today’s society and identify opportunities for new design processes that are changeable and inventive.

This is a unique opportunity to immense one’s self in an experientially explorative environment of African indigenous architecture, related knowledge systems, construction methods and the cultural nuances that inform these “form and pattern languages”. Further the human value of indigenous architecture goes way beyond what is normal perceived of it, while the design and construction methodology may render it “outsider” to the architectural establishment and academia, this architecture is fundamentally fractal, thus highly mathematical. A lot can be learnt from it.

Who can apply?

Architects, students, architecture enthusiasts, engineers, designers, urban planners, interior designers, cultural experts and enthusiasts, artists and other professions in the built, design, arts and culture and related environment are invited to take part in this remarkable project.

How to apply:

Send application together with

– Motivational statement stating your interests in the project

– Short bio

– Preferred country slot (this will depend on the availability of the slot) to the Creative Director Chikonzero Chazunguza on chikonzero@gmail.com.

Deadline for applications: August 30, 2019

 For further general inquiries with regards to the project do not hesitate to contact us.

chikonzero@gmail.com, +263 783 499 954, +263 717 762788.

About DACI

Dzimbanhete Arts and Culture Interactions is an arts and culture resource centre, that priorities heritage preservation by promoting, enabling and giving space to endeavours, which strongly articulate traditional oral and material culture. DACI is situated along Bulawayo road, some 25km outside Harare, Zimbabwe’s capital, almost hidden away from the highway, amidst massive rocks, away from all urban and city disturbances rendering it an ideal venue for artistic and cultural endeavours.

Since our inception in 2008, DACI, has offered such services as creative skills training, cultural residency programs, cultural exchanges, consultancy services in the field of culture, provided artists with showcasing space including workshops for professional, aspiring visual artists and the local community through outreach programs. We have hosted theatre workshops and performances and provided filmmakers with filming sites. Dzimbanhete Arts and Culture Interactions boasts of having mentored 4 artists who have become internationally renowned in the art world. We also engage in humanities projects supporting the local Somerby Farm community. We do work with schools, in the region -assisting them in approaching and dealing with arts and culture.