Witchdoctors, A Day in the Other Africa. Directed by Boniface Wewe & Anthony Peartin-Thomas Running Time: 60 Min (ISBN: 0-9671238-6-0)
From Brooklyn, New York, Cameroon (West Central Africa), to Kwazulu-Natal (South Africa), African documentary filmmaker –Boniface Ndemping Wewe and his co-narrator- Barbara Temfack Wewe peruse some of the ills and stereotypes about contemporary Africa. The Other Africa features highlights indigenous professions from Palm Wine Tapping in Cameroon, Zulu Singing (Isicamiya) by the Hlahlindlela High School choir to the witchdoctor (Sangoma) profession.
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Reviewed by Jay C (Originally posted on The Documentary Blog)
A Mother goes to the airport to meet her daughter. The daughter steps off the plane with an eight foot tall Zulu warrior, with a bone through his nose. The Mother screams ‘You fool! I said a RITCH doctor!’. That joke pretty much sums up my collective knowledge of African witchdoctors. Luckily, Director Boniface Wewe has put together a great little film that gives idiots like myself a look at ‘The Other Africa’ and its many indigenous professions, including the aforementioned witchdoctor.
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From Brooklyn, New York, Cameroon (West Central Africa), to Kwazulu-Natal (South Africa), African documentary filmmaker, Boniface Ndemping Wewe, aka The Ngonyama "Lion" of Brooklyn, and his co-narrator Barbara Temfack Wewe peruse some of the ills (ritual murders and body part extraction for different macabre purposes, rape of little girls as an erroneous cure for AIDS) and stereotypes about contemporary Africa.
Continue reading "Documentary "Witchdoctors: A Day in the Other Africa" Examines Witchdoctors" »