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Ferlov Mancoba

Audio file 49-1

Henter lyd
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The Balmoral Castle, passage to England 1938

Ernest recalls White passengers on the boat from South Africa to the United Kingdom avoiding him, but that one offered him advice to perform as an exotic if he wanted to succeed in England

On 2 September 1938, Ernest boarded The Balmoral Castle sailing from Cape Town to Southampton, England

for Ernest's contemporaneous account of the voyage, refer to his diary 1938-1940.

for a fellow passenger's account, refer letter from T.C. Mehta (dated 1995-09-05)

passage to England 1938

[tape stopped and restarts] Wonga is surprised when Ernest tells him that his first boat trip was when he went to Cape Town; Wonga wants to speak about the trip to the United Kingdom and Ernest says Goolam Gool bade him goodbye but does not otherwise recall his emotional state

passage to England 1938

Wonga tries different questioning [tape stopped and restarts multiple times]; Ernest says he was disillusioned with South Africa and looked to leave, but that he was disappointed with the United Kingdom when he was met with racist chants by children

passage to England 1938

Wonga asks Ernest about seeing a passing German passenger ship and whether there was tension between them and the British passengers on his ship; Ernest comments about the legacy of World War I and Germany's loss of the colonies; [tape stopped and restarts] Wonga explains that he wants Ernest to speak of his emotional state at the time of his journey and to look back on symbollic events [mentions Artaud as example]

passage to England 1938

Wonga asks Ernest about his segregation despite the boat being English and whether he was surprised or not

for Ernest's contemporaneous observation of his treatment, refer to his diary 1938-1940

Wonga returns to the German passenger boat and Ernest takes exception to Wonga's assumption about the passengers, they argue

for Ernest's contemporaneous observation of the German boat, refer to his diary 1938-1940

[tape stopped and restarts] Ernest says that he only heard negative things about Germans when he was in South Africa (including by his Namibian friend Geoffrey Davids); that he only knew the passengers were workers because of Wonga; Wonga speaks of Nazis and policies for workers [in English and French], they argue

Namibia was a German colony from 1884 to 1915, then South African became her coloniser (until 1990)

[tape stopped and restarts] Wonga expands on Nazi policy that benefitted workers [speaks in French] [mentions Cuba and the Soviet Union]; [tape stopped and restarts] Wonga speculates on the German ship [speaks mostly in French]; [tape stopped and restarts] they argue about significance of their choice of topic

[recording ends]

[tape ends, continues 49-2]

Facts

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Audio clip
44:39
Ernest Mancoba
Wonga Mancoba
They speak of Ernest's passage from South Africa to England. The conversation continues on 49-2. (Also refer Ernest's diary 1938-40)

About the recordings: Ernest Mancoba's son, Marc also known as Wonga, recorded interviews with his father. The interviews seemed to serve different purposes and are not in chronological order.

Ca.1990-2002 (49-1)

The audio files are undated but is likely to have been recorded some time between 1990 and 2002
Time index and commentary prepared by W. Sze
Paris
Antonin Artaud
Bishop Smythe
Geoffrey Davids
Goolam Gool
Estate of Ferlov Mancoba