“The Convert,”by Danai Gurira at Frank
Theater
This play
takes place in Rhodesia, now
Zimbabwe,
in 1896-97. It is a take on the
religious side of colonialism, which in this case has been adopted by a local
Shona man and woman, the latter the ‘convert.’
Christianity and Roman Catholicism were brought to Rhodesia as ideologies
of brutal, racist and extractive British rule. The play is set in the period of
the 2nd Matabele war, a failed rebellion against the British occupation by the
Matabele and later Shona peoples.
Saved by the Cross? |
It focuses
on what happens to locals who adopt the ideology of the new rulers and how they
become isolated from their own kin. In this play Christianity has an advantage in the treatment
of women, which is what originally attracts the convert. The convert Jekesai is saved from being sold for goats
by her uncle to an old man as a bride. The local African Catholic
teacher Chilford opposes the deal and saves her. Chilford has rejected
the ‘barbarism’ of his tribal relatives and is now estranged from forced
marriage, ancestor worship and their belief in healers, though he calls them ‘witch doctors.’ He renames Jekesai ‘Ester’ and teaches her to
speak, sing and read English through the Bible, following ‘the white man’s
way.’
Jekesai/Ester
becomes alienated from her working-class cousin in the process, who has been forced
to be a miner by the British. The intolerance of Chilford towards her aunt who
has not adopted Christianity wholesale also distresses Jekesai. Then she learns
that some of the kinder words of the Bible mean nothing to the colonial authorities
when her rebellious relative is killed by them ‘like a chicken.’ At the end she
rejects her conversion and bloodily rebels - and in a way so does
Chilford.
This play
will only run until Sunday, March 15, staged at the Gremlin Theater in St. Paul. The actors are excellent and had to master
British accents as well as the Shona dialect.
They take you back to this early rebellion against British
colonial rule, part of a long history in Africa.
Colonialism
in Africa was only defeated many years later in the 1960-1980s with help
from the U.S.S.R. and Cuba. Nearly every liberation movement was led by Marxist-nationalists. Angola, South-west Africa, Mozambique,
Rhodesia, South Africa, Botswana and others were all freed at various times, with Zimbabwe finally
becoming independent and free of white settler rule in 1980 after a 15-year guerilla struggle. This struggle
was led by ZANU and Robert Mugabe, who later became a dictatorial bourgeois strongman and was
only deposed in 2017.
Other prior
reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left:
Africa; “Last
Train to Zona Verde,” “Black Panther,” “Searching for Sugar Man,” “Mandela,
Obama, Castro & Kennedy,” “Monsters of the Market,” “FGM,” “Land Grabbing,”
“Girls at War,” “Famished Road.”
Frank Theater:
“Things of Dry Hours,” “Love and
Information,” “The Cradle Will Rock,” “Revolt.
She Said. Revolt Again.” “The
Good Person of Setzuan,” “The Visit.”
The Kulture
Kommissar
March 10,
2020
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