Tag Archives: human rights

Powerful Protest Songs From Kenya And South Africa

Music has been integral to Africa’s liberation and freedom struggles

โ€œAnti-apartheid protests in the early โ€™90sโ€ by Nagarjun is marked with CC BY 2.0.

This article was originally published by Global Voices on 21st of March 2022 and is republished here with permission of the authors, Richard Wanjohi and Nwachukwu Egbunike.


Just as artists in Uganda and Nigeria used their music to challenge governmental and military oppression, so did artists around the continent. This is part two of this two-part series story where we highlight musicians around the continent whose music encouraged activism and dissent. For part one, see here. In this article, we discuss protest music in Kenya and South Africa, and the vital role it played in people’s liberation.

Kenya

Kenyaโ€™s music scene has seen great changes since the colonial days, with many local singers finding fame through protest songs. One iconic example is the late Joseph Kamaru, a Kikuyu musician who is believed to have a catalog of over 1,000 songs. Born in central Kenya, he developed a unique blend of Kikuyu traditional melodies, mixed with the guitar, keyboard, and occasionally the accordion. He frequently sang songs relating to social issues, reflecting on the nationโ€™s independence and urbanization.  

However, by 1969 โ€” only six years into independence โ€” Kenya was plunged into political strife following the contentious elections, which pitted the then-ruling party KANU and the opposition KPU. This divided communities, particularly after a popular politician, Tom Mboya, was gunned down in broad daylight. 

In this instance, Joseph Kamaru composed a song, โ€œAromakaโ€ (โ€œMay he be scaredโ€), which sought to praise the ruling party but did not appeal to a larger population due to its perceived bias around the political assassination. 

JM Kariuki Memorial by Mpigapicha is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

In 1975, another popular politician this time from the Central part of Kenya, Josiah Mwangi Kariuki, also known as JM Kariuki, was killed a few months after another hotly contested election. The late JM Kariuki, initially pro-Government, had become one of the most prominent critics of the governmentโ€™s growing tribalism and corruption, coining a phrase, โ€œKenya was becoming a country of ten millionaires and ten million beggars.โ€ Due to his public criticism, he was prohibited from campaigning and was forced to resort to door-to-door or home visits. Upon Kariukiโ€™s death in 1975, Kamaru sang a song titled โ€œJ.M. Kariukiโ€ to mourn the death of the national hero, as well as give tribute to his personal friend.

This particular song was one of his best-selling hits, selling over 75,000 copies within the first week of release. He quickly became a target of the government, and the song was banned on national radio, the Voice of Kenya (now the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation), in June 1975.

Kamaru did not stop there and after the death of the first president of Kenya, Jomo Kenyatta, he sought out incoming President Daniel arap Moi, who invited him to a foreign trip to Japan. This led to the composition of โ€œSafari ya Japan.โ€ However, it did not take long for him to fall out with the powers-that-be, and he found himself once again voicing criticism. He composed another song laced with ambiguous language and Kikuyu idioms to warn the Moi government of the discontentment and disillusionment among the general populace and Kikuyu in particular. The song was titled โ€œNi Maitho Tuniteโ€ (โ€œWeโ€™ve only shifted our Gazeโ€). This was also banned from the national stations. 

Kamaruโ€™s alliance with the politics of the day did not end there. In 1988, while the country was preparing for another election, he made another song, โ€œMahoya ma Bururiโ€(Prayers for the Country), which, though initially with a Kikuyu version, attracted the attention of the state, specifically then-President Daniel Moi. Moi initially perceived the song as an indirect attack at him, with the mention of โ€œguikio irima ta Danielโ€ translated to โ€œbeing thrown in the hole/cave like Daniel.โ€

Kamaruโ€™s explanation suggested the name โ€œDanielโ€ was a reference to the Biblical Daniel, who was thrown into a cave with the lions for refusing to bow to the King. As a compromise, Moi requested for the song to be translated into the national language, Swahili. Though the song was released by Kamaru, it never enjoyed as much airplay as the Kikuyu version, much to Kamaruโ€™s dismay.

The on-and-off relations of Joseph Kamaruโ€™s songs and the politicians of the day meant that while many politicians attempted to dictate or ban songs, the intersection of creativity, socio-political issues, and common voice of the ills affecting the populace prevailed. The same issues are still resonant with the current state of affairs in Kenya.

South Africa

The Southernmost State of the African continent endured a period of apartheid when the White-minority Boers ruled the country over the Black majority. This was from 1948 to the 1990s. The period saw injustices meted on the latter and a number of their political leaders arrested and locked away for life.


Miriam Makeba 2011.jpg by Tom Beetz is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Seeking to become a voice for the voiceless, a number of South African musicians used their trade to draw both national and international attention to the issues of the day. Among them was Miriam Makeba. The musician famous for her different native songs in Xhosa and English had sung a song โ€œBeware, Verwoerd! (Ndodemnyama),โ€ referencing the then-Prime Minister of South Africa Hendrick Verwoerd, who had played a key role in implementing the apartheid regime. The song was banned on national radio due to its anti-apartheid stance.

Makeba had to go into exile in 1960 and was shortly banned from returning to South Africa. She went on to become a global icon in the US and continued to perform and write protest songs that spoke out against apartheid around the world.

Closely following Makebaโ€™s trial, Brenda Fassie drew controversy for the better part of her career. She sang the song โ€œBlack Presidentโ€ as a tribute to the then โ€œmost famous prisoner,โ€ Nelson Mandela. The song was written by Fassie and Chicco Thwala in 1990. This was at a time when the apartheid government was nearing its end, and Mandela was about to be released. The government had largely banned Fassie songs due to their controversial discussions of sexuality and social ills in South African city townships.

Johnny Clegg & Savuka Third World Child by vinylmeister is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0

Another South African song โ€œAsimbonangaโ€ sung by Johnny Clegg and the Savuka Band, was banned by the South African apartheid government. The song means โ€œawakeningโ€ in Zulu and was released in 1987 in Cleggโ€™s album, โ€œThird World Child.โ€ It invoked both Mandela and Steve Biko who were seen as symbols of the anti-apartheid movement that was seeking justice for native South African communities. Clegg who was born of Scottish-Zimbabwe and Jewish roots had assembled the first multi-racial band in Juluka and later Savuka. He had grown up in parts of Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia) before his parents immigrated to Johannesburg, South Africa. This brought him face-to-face with the suffering of the minorities in Joโ€™burg and other major cities. He also learned the local language of Zulu which would become among one of his signatures in his songs.

What most of these songs and musicians signify is the common currency of protest and speaking against societal ills and discrimination irrespective of socio-economic stature. These songs while temporarily off-air, were able to see the day of light and flood our airwaves, allowing audiences across the countries to listen and learn from the musical phenomena.

Find Global Voiceโ€™s Spotify playlist highlighting these and other banned songs from around the world here. For more information about banned music, see our special coverage, Striking the Wrong Notes.


Young Artists From Montenegro Release An Anti-War Song In Support Of Ukrainian Children (ENG Sub)

“Images of suffering brought back to me the suppressed memories of what all of us residents of the area of former Yugoslavia suffered during the 1990s when my own quiet and fairytale childhood ended due to horrors of war.”

Kadiฤ‡ Bojaniฤ‡ in interview with balkansmedia.org

Milica Radan and Komnen Vukoviฤ‡ are two young singers from Montenegro who, in collaboration with vocal group D-mol, have released an anti-war song devoted to the Ukrainian children currently suffering from Russian invasion of their country.

The lyrics of the song was written by Marijana Kadiฤ‡ Bojaniฤ‡, while the music was composed by Danijel Alibabiฤ‡.

“Stop the bombs, bring back our dreams,
Our sunflowers, that are scared of the dark.
We are the army of the Sun, we are the army of happiness,
It’s because of us that the planet of peace revolves.”

The music video, published by Montenegro media company Vijesti, has subtitles in English. Check it out below and share the song’s message all around. Spread the word of peace.


50 Years Later, This Protest Song Is Sadly Just As Relevant As Ever

In 1972, Gil Scott-Heron wrote a song with these lyrics:

No knocked on my brother Fred Hampton
Bullet holes all over the place
No knocked on my brother Michael Harris
And jammed a shotgun against his skull

Today, 50 years later, it is heartbreaking that his lyrics can have the names replaced without affecting the artist’s piece of written work. But that is the sad truth, at least for people in the United States of America. A few years before the release of the song, then State Attorney, John Mitchell, called for these no-knock raids to be enforced among many other terrible acts during his tenure in public office.

The before mentioned song, simply titled ‘No Knock’, can today have the names replaced by Breonna Taylor and Amir Locke, to name only two. Both were black citizens, both were murdered by the police who used this raid tactic to storm their homes. The families of both victims have yet to see justice be carried out.

According to this article (from 2015), a staggering 20,000 no knock raids are carried out on a yearly basis in the U.S.. Oregon is the only state in the country who has a total ban on these types of raids. All other states have no-knock raids enforced in one way or another.

Take action and support End All No Knocks, a campaign that works to end these horrible raids in the US. And share this and other articles about the subject – help to hold those in power accountable for their actions.