Australia based, Zambian singer Portia Clark has responded to B flow’s open letter to Taylor Swift.
Portia Clark, a Zambian pop sensation and inspiring International artist says she has been embarrassed and feel ashamed calling herself a Zambian musician upon learning that B Flow wrote an open letter to Taylor Swift.
“ I feel really ashamed calling myself a Zambian musician when there is a 'Zambian Musician' that has recently been
posted abroad representing Zambia and writing to one of the biggest and talented pop singers in the world criticizing her latest music video, as if she will even take the time to read the useless letter, I truly believe you learn from those doing it better than you and not criticize them, who in Africa let alone Zambia has been as successful like Taylor Swift,” she says.
She says, “I was just with Taylor’s manager Scott Borchetta the Director to one of the most successful labels and he will not even glance his eye over this stupid letter.”
Clark has since urged Brian Bwembya otherwise known as B Flow to concentrate on his business.
“Please don’t fool your fans to believe that you are actually doing anything sensible
and will make any impact, if you want to do something then get to work and make it in your own music career, by the way your letter was more racist than Taylor not having African people or as you put it Blacks in her video, By the way we are not Black. We are all One now stop criticizing the best in the business and go and
do something sensible with your time,” she charged.
Not long ago, B Flow, a Zambian
musician, gender rights and HIV/AIDS activist, founder of the music for change initiative and a fellow in President Obama’s Young African Leaders Initiative/Mandela Washington Fellowship wrote to Taylor Swift thanking her for her new video, “Wildest Dreams.”
A letter reads as follows:
The first time I saw it, I thought of my late grandma, and
how she would have reacted to it. Like me, I think she would
have loved it, because she was proudly African. I love that
you showed how beautiful our continent is, and that you
recognized that we have the kind of landscapes that you
can’t find anywhere else in the world. As a Zambian, I was so
proud to see my neighbors, Botswana and South Africa, in a
Taylor Swift video.
Grandma would have probably used your video to remind
me why I should continue shooting my videos here. A lot of
us artists in Zambia and elsewhere on the continent have
had this belief that shooting our videos in the same
locations as Beyoncé and Jay Z is a symbol of success, and
so we aspire to shoot our videos oversees. I’m a culprit
myself, having shot my last video in Oslo. I can imagine
Granny saying, “You see? Internationally acclaimed artist
Taylor Swift has just showed you that shooting a video in
Africa is success too. Appreciate what you have, Brian.”
Before I proceed, I should clarify that I can understand why
some people are seeing your video as glorifying colonialism.
After all, the characters in your video do not appear so
different from Cecil Rhodes and his British South Africa
Company (BASCo) counterparts, the colonial masters who
scrambled for our minerals and land and ruled my country
until 1964.
I think Grandma Matilda would have found it surprising that
there are no black people in a video that wishes to portray
the Africa of the 1950s. But perhaps if your video did include
black people, the criticisms surrounding it would have been
far greater. I say so because at that time, black people in
South Africa and Botswana were facing inequalities similar
to those faced in my country. Perhaps your reason for not
including black people was to avoid bringing attention to the
brutal past of colonialism — the forced segregation, the
servitude, the economic and social exclusion, the beatings,
and, sometimes, the disappearances of black Africans
altogether. My grandmother, if she were to have been
portrayed in your video, would at best have had to play the
role of a servant. Of course, we all have the right to choose
who we include in our videos, but we must also consider the
impact of leaving out some pieces.
May I suggest that what might have been a clever thing to do
is to include blacks, and portray us as the masters, so as to
position yourself as an ambassador of anti-racism?
That having been said, here is why I’m thanking you for your
video. In Zambia, we love to show the world the kind of
sights you exhibit in your video. It is important for us to do
so because these sights define our tourism, which is one of
our most promising sectors for economic growth. If your
video was mine, I think the Zambia National Tourism Board
(ZNTB) would have endorsed me as their brand ambassador
immediately. I could even see your opening lyrics, “drive out
of the city, away from the crowds,” becoming our next
tourism slogan. But while I appreciate that you show the
safari side of Africa, I also feel that you are missing out on a
whole other side.
For a long time, international media has portrayed our
continent as a place stricken by poverty or famine, or as a
playground for animals — like the ones in your video. I will
take your video as a wake-up call. It’s my job to show the
side of Africa that is missing in your video. Instead of flying
oversees to shoot my next video, what I should do is take up
the responsibility of showing that we too have cities with
streetlights, skyscrapers and shopping malls, like my favorite
chilling spot, Eastpark Mall in Lusaka, and that some
Africans too have swimming pools in their backyards, and
arenas like Johannesburg’s Ellis Park Arena, where the first
ever NBA game on the continent recently took place. The
other things that you didn’t show in your video — how
extraordinarily cool the different scenes are across the
continent, how we often party harder than anywhere in the
U.S. (at least in Zambia, where we say, “party till we drop,”
and that is past dawn!), with some of the most innovative
beats, like Zambia’s own Zed Beats, and the new dances the
kids are always coming up with.
I understand that you may not have experienced these
things firsthand. While I don’t want to pretend that many
countries in Africa don’t have serious economic problems,
poor infrastructure, and woefully inadequate health
services, as the media often portrays, I will be quick to
mention that we have at times recorded tremendous
progress in dealing with these challenges. In addition, plenty
of so-called developed countries also struggle under these
very same burdens. It’s therefore my duty to celebrate the
multi-fascetedness of our continent that is missing in your
video, so that the fullness of Africa is brought to light.
Perhaps the world will finally see the side of Africa that has
not been internationally promoted. No one will show the
fullness of Africa if I don’t do it myself.
Thank you for reminding me to continue being an
ambassador for my country and my continent so that I can
bring out the fuller picture.
If you want to help me promote African tourism, you are
welcome to collaborate with me and we can shoot a cool
video together, in Zambia this time.
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