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Meet the Mzansi Gay Choir
DW (English)
Follow
9/25/2024
Can singing in a choir help young gay people to find a sense of safety and belonging? Sia Mzizi believes it can. Let's find out how his Mzansi Gay Choir in Johannesburg celebrates human rights and self-expression.
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00:00
This choir is raising its voice for change as it not only serves as a home for talented
00:14
musicians but also provides a safe space and family for its members.
00:19
Why?
00:20
Because this is the Mzanzi Gay Choir in Johannesburg.
00:24
Being a musician or being an artist is a form of activism.
00:29
It's always about conscientizing people, it's always about change-making.
00:38
Choirs are a popular part of South African culture, but why have churches proven to be
00:43
challenging spaces for these singers?
00:50
It's sad that the only place of worship that we have is within ourselves as the queer community
00:54
because most churches are not very welcome to us as the queer community.
00:58
That's why I fell in love with the Mzanzi Gay Choir.
01:00
It's that there are people like me, that people that walk like me, that talk like me,
01:04
that are in the same space and we share these common sentiments.
01:07
We all loved music.
01:08
Being in that space made me feel like I was at home.
01:14
Before we find out how the Mzanzi Gay Choir manages to provide a safe space for the queer
01:19
community, let's ask CIM Zizi, its leader, how he managed to run the first all-gay choir
01:25
not only in the country, but on the continent.
01:29
The Mzanzi Gay Choir has been running for more than 10 years under the Tami Desh Foundation.
01:35
Our choir consists of 12 members.
01:37
We do everything.
01:38
Give us choral, give us pop, give us piano, give us R&B, soul music.
01:42
We do it.
01:46
But how do some of its other members perceive its value?
01:51
It's not the same one as the one.
01:53
The choir made me realise that I can be myself without even thinking what other people are
01:59
going to say about my sexuality or myself or how I act.
02:03
It's literally the blessing to be part of the choir.
02:07
We face challenges, we face judgement, and being part of the choir, we built this safe space.
02:21
I feel like this choir now expresses different types of masculinity within being gay and being queer.
02:40
As gay, we have so many categories.
02:42
We have feminine gay, we have masculine gay.
02:45
I'm supported for being who I am.
02:50
As the leader of the Mzanzi Gay Choir, Sia grew up in Kuatema, a township east of Johannesburg
02:56
where musicians found favour.
02:58
But what was Sia's family's response to his queer identity?
03:03
My love of singing started from a very young age.
03:05
I fell in love with music.
03:11
I'm grateful for my family.
03:13
They never made me feel inferior.
03:15
They were always very welcoming and accepting of who I was.
03:21
Despite South Africa's constitutional protection of sexual orientation,
03:26
hate crimes remain a harsh reality.
03:29
How did the tragic murder of lesbian footballer Yudi Simelane in 2008 affect Sia?
03:37
As a gay man or as a queer person, that story touched me.
03:41
It really triggered a lot of emotions inside of me and gave me a purpose also in a way
03:46
that the struggle continues, the fight continues.
03:50
So after Yudi Simelane passed away, the community had decided that this whole entire space
03:56
was going to be used as a memorial to Yudi, so it's a park.
04:01
So a lot of pride events have been hosted here.
04:09
From social upliftment to corporate culture,
04:12
how are Sia and the choir using their performances to celebrate diversity
04:17
and create queer positive narratives?
04:21
During Pride Month, we were invited by Google to perform.
04:27
One of the songs is called Fly Your Flag High.
04:30
This song is about self-acceptance and self-love.
04:38
When I sing our song titled Fly Your Flag High,
04:44
it makes me feel so proud of myself.
04:48
That song speaks to my heart, it really speaks to my heart.
04:52
Don't be afraid of who you are, cause of the world we live in.
04:58
Be who you are, don't be ashamed.
05:04
Be who you are, don't be ashamed.
05:10
Be who you are, don't be ashamed.
05:17
As a young, black, African, gay man, I am proud and I feel like I have a purpose.
05:23
It does not only end about me being gay,
05:26
but also making sure that the younger generation of gay young men,
05:30
or African men, also grows up and finds a world which is safe for them.
05:35
Fly your flag high, oh fly.
05:42
Fly your flag high.
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