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Sea Point Days is a documentary about a neighbourhood of Cape Town. According to the director, Cape Town is still the most segregated place in South Africa, but Sea Point is one of the few places that has a degree of racial integration.

It's not an "explain the historical context to you" type of documentary. It's more a slice of life thing. We see a variety of people in the film opining about their neighbourhood. One guy, who looks like an Aryan poster child, runs the neighbourhood "Bother the Homeless" society. A couple of elderly women chat about getting older, and occasionally make painfully racist remarks ("There's no place for the white man in the country any more..."). There's a black Muslim man who, while possibly the most open and kind-hearted guy in the film, acknowledges that there's a lot of old hatred that will take a generation or two to get away from.

I did find the film a bit problematic in that the white folk in the film were all middle-class whereas a large number of the black folk were homeless. I suppose I'm glad I saw it, but it wasn't the greatest thing since sliced bread.

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Date: 2008-09-08 04:06 am (UTC)
ext_28673: (Default)
From: [identity profile] lisaquestions.livejournal.com
I've been reading a bit about post-Apartheid South Africa, and apparently they've still a long way to go to deal with their racist history...and racist present, for that matter.

I'm not surprised at the race/class breakdown you mention.

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BC Holmes

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