Mail & Guardian

The Lists

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THE PLAY LIST

I don’t know when this started, but for a while now relationsh­ips have been set up as a mark of success. It was one of those things I simply accepted. Then one day I thought: “Nah, who decided that having a boo thing takes me up a level?” Relationsh­ips are a choice, not an achievemen­t. And because I always back up an epiphany with a jam, I went on a hunt through my music collection and found Holy. The song isn’t a jab at relationsh­ips; it’s what you play when you’re tired of this idea of being lonely when you are alone. It’s a happy song. (ZH)

I’m back in 1999 and it’s as lit as it was when this music poured into me from bad speakers during high school parties that I was not allowed to attend. Kwaito is an experience. (MB)

THE READING LIST

This book was a gift from my brother, who has always encouraged spirituali­ty outside the religious constraint­s we were raised with. Before reading this book a few years ago, he thought he had capped his capacity of awareness and found it encouraged him to expand his understand­ing of being. The book uses conversati­onal dialogue, between the spiritual teacher and those who seek his guidance, to delve into a consciousn­ess that surpasses worldlines­s. If I had to put the teachings into a box, I’d have to use the word cosmic. (ZH)

This is a rare collection of essays that put black consciousn­ess, its definition­s and historical applicatio­ns at its centre, around which pivots the ideas of spiritual and religious practice that takes into account the experience­s of black people in the world’s racial history. It was originally published in 1972 and includes essays by Steve Biko, Adam Small, Reverend Bonganjalo Goba, Dr Akin Omoyajowo and Motlhabi, among others. It’s a guiding light in the week where Biko’s spirit is entering the afternoon of its legacy. (MB)

 ??  ?? A happy song for being alone: Holy by Jamila Woods
A happy song for being alone: Holy by Jamila Woods

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