POST
PRODUCTION
SCRIPT
FOREIGN
CORRESPONDENT
2016
Freedom
Riders
25 mins 05 secs
©2016
ABC
Ultimo Centre
700
Harris Street Ultimo
NSW
2007 Australia
GPO
Box 9994
Sydney
NSW
2001 Australia
Phone: 61 2 8333 4383
Fax: 61 2 8333 4859
e-mail thompson.haydn@abc.net.au
Précis
|
If you’re a child growing up in
South Africa’s Masiphumelele township, chances are you’ve seen the worst of
violence – shootings, stabbings, assaults – or have been a victim yourself. |
|
|
It kills them, it doesn’t give them
any hope – and when you’re traumatised you have a lot of anger issues, you
can’t control yourself - Noncedo, 19 |
|
|
But every afternoon a van rolls
into Masiphumelele, offering kids the chance to escape the traumas of
township life, if just for a few hours. Bodies and boards and wetsuits cram
inside as they head for the rolling surf of the Cape coast. |
|
|
Surfing is changing the lives of
township kids. Every wave is a challenge to mind and body, a teacher of
discipline and persistence and a potential spark to self esteem. |
|
|
For me this is freedom. It gives me
more hope than I ever had before – Noncedo |
|
|
It’s all part of Waves for Change,
brainchild of a travelling British surfer who first coaxed a few local kids
into the water five years ago. Now it’s running across three townships with
250 children and 20 coaches. |
|
|
Surfing has made me wise and made
me stick to my values and to have principles for myself – Apish Tshetsha,
first youngster to join Waves for Change, now one of its coaches |
|
|
Waves for Change works on dry land
too. Coaches are mentors, connecting with children and their schools, keeping
tabs on their emotional health. |
|
|
In this exquisitely filmed story,
reporter Sally Sara gets inside the lives of the Waves for Change kids and
follows them as they excitedly prepare for their first surfing tournament. |
|
|
They hit the water in sight of
Robben Island, Nelson Mandela’s old prison during the apartheid era, a time
of segregated beaches and “white feet for white sand”. |
|
|
I’m feeling I’m gonna win! - Likho,
11 |
|
|
This will be the first time that
Likho’s proud mum has seen him surf. She thinks he’ll win too, but she’s
worried about the sharks. |
|
|
Win
or wipe-out, kids like Likho and Noncedo are scoring their own triumphs by
the simple act of paddling out and catching a wave. |
|
Underwater/Surf
shots |
Music |
02:30 |
Aerial.
Kids surfing |
NONCEDO MABHUNU: It’s my favourite place.
Being in the water, it makes me feel free. If you’ve got stress, the water
can make you feel better. Catching wave, it gives you something strong, |
02:39 |
Noncedo
at home. Get up and grabs surfboard |
the next day something that big is going to
happen, your dreams are going to come true. |
02:58 |
Noncedo
walks carrying surfboard |
Music |
03:06 |
|
SALLY SARA: For 19 year old
Noncedo Mabhunu, every day is a mission to stay positive. NONCEDO MABHUNU: I’m a strong woman |
03:13 |
|
and I’m glad that I’m a strong woman ‘cause I don’t give up easy in a lot of things. |
03:22 |
|
SALLY SARA: Her love of surfing, helps to
guide her through. The township of Masiphumelele is full of dangers and
disappointments. |
03:27 |
Noncedo
100% |
NONCEDO MABHUNU: We’ve got gangsterism, drugs,
alcohol abuse, teenage pregnancy. |
03:37 |
Masiphumelele town |
SALLY SARA: This is one of the most violent
and impoverished districts in South Africa. That’s why for Noncedo surfing is
such a precious escape. |
03:41 |
Noncedo surfing |
NONCEDO MABHUNU: For me this is freedom. It
gives me more hope |
03:51 |
Noncedo
100% |
than I ever had before. |
03:57 |
Underwater/Surfing
shot |
Music |
03:58 |
Cape
Town GVs |
|
04:04 |
Aerial.
Surfer |
|
04:15 |
Muizenberg
train station. Super: |
SALLY SARA: This is where the ocean meets the
mountains of the Cape. |
04:20 |
Man
carrying surfboard across railway tracks/Surfers on beach |
Muizenberg is a magnet for surfers, young and
old. Here the face of South African surfing is being transformed. The waves
of change are rolling in. |
04:26 |
|
Music |
04:37 |
Sara
on beach to camera |
SALLY SARA:
These days, Muizenberg is a fantastic example of how the racial
divisions are disappearing on the beaches in South Africa. Everyone is
welcome here. |
04:42 |
Beach
shots |
Black South Africans, who have lived along the
coast for generations, are now taking to the water. Surfing is changing the
complexion of the beach and the lives of young people. NONCEDO MABHUNU: As a |
04:51 |
Noncedo
100% |
black person you want to do a lot of things.
When you see something great, you want to go and try it. |
05:07 |
Coastal
road. Waves for Change car |
Music |
05:13 |
Kids
in Waves for Change bus |
SALLY SARA: These kids are part of a
pioneering surfing program, called Waves for Change. Every afternoon they
leave the troubles of the township behind. They’re on their way to the beach
and a few hours of freedom. |
05:18 |
Sara
in car with Apish |
APISH TSHETSHA: [COACH, WAVES FOR CHANGE] When
I’m driving down with the kids singing, |
05:35 |
Apish. |
it feels great. Like you know, we’re happy; |
05:39 |
Kids
on bus |
we’re not worried about what’s happening in
our community. |
05:43 |
|
Music |
05:46 |
Bus
arrives at beach and put on wetsuits |
SALLY SARA: Waves for Change was established
in 2011. The program targets kids from the poorest parts of the Cape Flats.
It not only teaches them to surf, but how to deal with life. |
05:52 |
Kids arguing over surfboard |
|
06:09 |
|
APISH TSHETSHA: It needs patience from people
who |
06:24 |
Apish
100% |
are adults to work with them and to show them
that there are so many ways in life, not just going their own way. |
06:26 |
Apish
with kids on beach |
|
06:35 |
|
SALLY SARA: Apish Tshetsha is one of the surf
coaches. He was the first young person from the townships |
06:41 |
Apish
standing on beach with surfboard |
to become involved in Waves for Change. APISH TSHETSHA: Surfing has made me |
06:47 |
Apish
100% |
wise and stick to my values, and to have
principles for myself. |
06:51 |
Kids
carrying surfboards |
SALLY SARA: Without this program, few of these
kids could afford to surf. Everything is donated, from the bus, to the boards
and the wetsuits. |
06:57 |
Kids on the beach singing, and warming up for
surf school |
|
07:06 |
|
SALLY SARA: This is not just a surfing
program. It’s all about making a connection with the kids. APISH TSHETSHA: We are together. We are one.
We are together. |
07:26 |
Apish
100% |
APISH TSHETSHA: We call it a check-up, and
then just explore their feeling. |
07:35 |
Kids
at surf school check-up |
We just want to work with them, knowing how
they’re feeling at that moment. |
07:40 |
Surf
kid #1 |
SURF KID #1: Even when I am sick, I really
want to go to school. But then my parents say I must stay home. So I obey
them. |
07:46 |
Surf
kid #2 |
SURF KID #2: I’ve learnt that if I help my
friend, I know he will help me in return. |
07:58 |
Surf
kid #3 |
SURF KID #3: When my mum asks me to do
errands, I have a bath and do what I’m told. |
08:07 |
Apish
leads surf school |
SALLY SARA: After the check-up, the surfing
begins. It’s a big release for kids who have more energy than they know what
to do with, and for those who are carrying |
08:11 |
Boys
surfing |
worries and stress. |
02:21 |
|
Music |
08:24 |
|
SALLY SARA: Waves for Change was founded by a
visiting English surfer, |
08:39 |
Tim
standing on beach with surfboard/Apish in water |
Tim Conibear. He met Apish during a visit to
the township, and started introducing the local kids to surfing. |
08:43 |
Tim
100% |
TIM CONIBEAR :
[FOUNDER, WAVES FOR CHANGE] Yes, it grew from 2011 it was Apish and me and
five kids in a car, and now it’s, yeah, it’s big actually. It’s across three
townships in Cape Town. We reach about 250 kids a week and it employs, I
think we’ve got 20 coaches on the books at the moment. |
08:51 |
Kids
eating lunch |
It’s at the core of anything that we do, it’s
making sure the local community can run it. |
09:06 |
Tim
100% |
I can’t do anything to change, you know,
Masiphumelele or anything like that. But Noncedo, |
07:17 |
Coaches
smiling at camera |
Apish and the other guys that they work with,
they understand that they’ve got this kind of social capital with the kids,
they can navigate the community. |
09:22 |
Tim
100% |
They know where it’s going, they know where
it’s been. |
09:29 |
ARCHIVAL.
1960s Apartheid South Africa. Surf footage. |
Music |
09:31 |
|
SALLY SARA: This place has a long history of
haves and have-nots. Back in the 1960s, Muizenberg was the hub of South
Africa’s surf scene. But not everyone was welcome. |
09:37 |
‘Whites
Only’ sign on beach |
DR. GLEN THOMPSON: [SURF HISTORIAN] Most of
the white beaches -- |
09:51 |
Glen
100% |
or designated white beaches -- were where the
better waves were. So of course the lure of going to surf good waves was
there for many of the black surfers, specifically around here in the Western
Cape. |
09:52 |
Glen
on beach with surfboard |
SALLY SARA: Dr. Glen Thompson is a surf
historian. |
10:01 |
Glen
surfing |
He’s written extensively about the changing
tides of politics on South Africa’s beaches. DR. GLEN THOMPSON: Many black surfers, they
pushed that envelope |
10:06 |
Glen
100% |
the whole time, you know, they crossed the
line, they took the moments, they made it happen. |
10:19 |
Archival.
Apartheid South Africa surf and beach footage |
SALLY SARA: White sand was reserved for white
feet. The system known as Apartheid segregated almost every aspect of daily
life, by race. |
10:25 |
|
SALLY SARA: Black surfers could be beaten or
arrested for disobeying the law. Special police were deployed to round them up. |
10:36 |
|
Music |
10:44 |
Beach
GVs |
SALLY SARA: Apartheid is long gone. But
undoing its legacy is a gradual process. |
10:50 |
|
DR. GLEN THOMPSON: Waves for Change is part of
that groundswell of change at the beach. The fact that an NGO has taken on
surfing, |
10:57 |
|
as a means of doing social change and social
transformation for black youth, is an indication of how far surfing has
actually come. |
11:05 |
Aerial.
Surfers |
Music |
11:15 |
Tracking
along Cape Town street |
SALLY SARA: Cape Town is still one of the most
racially segregated cities in South Africa. Many of the wealthy live on one
side of the mountain, the poor on the other. |
11:19 |
Kids
on skateboards on road |
Music |
11:28 |
|
NONCEDO MABHUNU: I think there is freedom, but
in an economic way, |
11:56 |
Aerial.
Houses |
there is no freedom. We, as black people, are
still struggling with financial problems. |
11:59 |
Noncedo
100% |
Our parents can’t, well, they are working, but
they are earning small wages. They can’t take us to further education.
Because there is freedom now, we can play sport that white people can play.
We can do anything that white people can do, but then in economics we can’t. |
12:06 |
Sara
walks with Noncedo |
SALLY SARA: “Do the people get frustrated?” NONCEDO MABHUNU: “A lot, because without a
job, we have got kids, living in a shack.” SALLY SARA: “You go crazy, yeah?” NONCEDO MABHUNU: “Yeah, you go crazy! Yeah, so
you can’t do anything.” |
12:26 |
Masiphumelele township GVs |
Music |
12:40 |
|
SALLY SARA: More than 30,000 people live here
in the township of Masiphumelele. But there are few basic services, not even
a police station. That means that kids are growing up in an environment where
violence and trauma are widespread. |
12:46 |
Noncedo |
NONCEDO MABHUNU: It kills them. It doesn’t
give them any hope, nothing at all. When you are traumatised you have a lot
of anger issues, you can’t control yourself, you’ll be rude to other people,
you’re selfish. |
13:02 |
Noncedo
at beach |
SALLY SARA: Beneath the surface, Noncedo knows
just how painful trauma can be. Three years ago she was raped by a family
friend. |
13:17 |
Noncedo
100% |
NONCEDO MABHUNU: I was shocked,
I was out of my mind. I couldn’t concentrate at school. I wanted to tell
someone, but I couldn’t talk to anyone about it. I kept it for a long time,
and then I started telling my mum after a month that this had happened. |
13:34 |
Noncedo
at beach lying on surfboard |
SALLY SARA: Noncedo shut herself away. She
dropped out of the Waves for Change program and started failing at school. NONCEDO MABHUNU: I felt ashamed |
13:51 |
Noncedo
100% |
a lot. I felt like a dirty person, that I
can’t even wash myself any more. I felt like |
14:04 |
Noncedo
at beach |
there’s no moving forward, and I thought that
God has cursed my life, has cursed everything that’s happening to my family,
especially me. TIM CONIBEAR: [FOUNDER, WAVES FOR CHANGE] This
is the problem, |
14:12 |
Tim
100% |
like we were trying to refer her for support
and we didn’t really know where we could send her, |
14:21 |
Super: |
when something like this happens. And
Noncedo’s story is by no means unique, unfortunately; it is really difficult. |
14:26 |
Noncedo
surfing |
SALLY SARA: One of the first steps was to get
her back in the water and back in the program. It was a rough start, but it
worked. NONCEDO MABHUNU: When I went back to surfing
it was not the same. That’s what I told Tim, I was like catching waves, I
always get angry when I’m catching a wave and I’m not catching it nicely. |
14:32 |
Noncedo
100% |
I’ll beat the surfboard, like no, no, no, not
like this, do this. So it was not easy just to get through all of that. It
took time for me to get used to that I’m coming back now and everything is
like I’m starting over again. |
14:52 |
Noncedo
surfing |
TIM CONIBEAR: So you’re trying to think, you
know, |
15:08 |
Tim
100% |
what can we do? And it’s just a surfing
program, what’s the depth that we can go to? And you do, you get really
concerned. But obviously the presence of some caring adults at that really
difficult time, |
15:12 |
Surf
wave |
it’s a very small part in a much bigger
picture of what she went through, but I’m very happy that she has found
something through surfing and the rest of the community that’s helped her. |
15:24 |
Masiphumelele GV |
Music |
15:34 |
|
TIM CONIBEAR: You know, we’d experience
probably four really unfortunate events in our lifetime, so the death of a
loved one, |
15:40 |
Tim
100% |
or something like that. In the townships here
we have worked out it is anything from eight events to sixteen events every
year that these kids go through. |
15:45 |
School
kids eat lunch and in playground |
SALLY SARA: In some parts of the Cape Flats,
almost half of the children have witnessed a stabbing, a third have witnessed
a shooting, and many others have been threatened with a weapon. TIM CONIBEAR: And it puts them in a state of
hyper-vigilance and it really affects the way they behave. So they are
constantly alert to what’s going on, they’re very |
15:52 |
Tim
100% |
desensitised to violence and it’s very
difficult to regulate your emotions as well. So there’s all that anger |
16:13 |
Boys
standing in front of wall. ‘When I grow up’ painted on wall. |
that comes out, and the kids behave very
spontaneously. |
16:17 |
Apish
visits school |
SALLY SARA: That’s why the surf coaches visit
local schools every week. They work with the teachers to monitor the
behaviour of kids who might be struggling. |
16:22 |
|
APISH TSHETSHA: We talk to the teachers of
those kids who are involved in the program. We also go to school, give
feedback to the principal and the teachers. So it’s a great connection,
because we get |
16:36 |
Apish
100% |
to hear different stories from different
people about the kids. |
16:47 |
Apish
in classroom with Likho |
SALLY SARA: 11 year old
Likho has only been with the program for a few months, but he’s already full
of determination. |
16:50 |
|
APISH TSHETSHA: Even in the water he’s pushing
himself to be the best surfer that he can be, because he’s seen me surfing
and then he’ll be like, “I want to surf better than you!” |
16:59 |
Likho
walking home from school |
Music |
17:09 |
|
SALLY SARA: Likho is on his way home from
school with some exciting news. He’s been chosen to compete in a special
township surfing competition next weekend. |
17:15 |
|
Music |
17:25 |
|
APISH TSHETSHA: I chose him because he’s
committed, he has respect. I mean, he challenges himself. |
17:35 |
Apish
100% |
He’s just a nice kid though. He deserved a
chance. |
17:42 |
Likho |
Music |
17:45 |
|
SALLY SARA: Are you excited for Likho? |
17:49 |
Tim
100% |
TIM CONIBEAR: Yeah, massively. It’s awesome.
You know, if you think, if you just look at where he comes from, you look at
his environment and you think well, look, you’re going to be surfing in front
of some of the best surfers in South Africa, on a totally new coastline and,
you know, he probably didn’t even think he could ride a surfboard a few weeks
ago. So that’s... yeah, it’s awesome! |
17:51 |
Likho
at home with family |
SALLY SARA: The good news has arrived home
before Likho. His mum and the neighbours are excited he is going to represent
the township. |
18:08 |
|
SALLY SARA: “How proud are you of Likho?” |
18:17 |
Mum
and Likho |
LIKHO’S MUM: “Oh, I am very proud and I’m very
happy.” |
18:20 |
|
SALLY SARA: “Why is that?” |
18:23 |
|
LIKHO’S MUM: “Well, my son is a champ and I’ll
now celebrate.” SALLY SARA: Likho’s mum has never seen him
surf, and worries about him going in the water. SALLY SARA: “What did you think when Likho
said to you, Mama, I want to do surfing?” |
18:25 |
|
LIKHO’S MUM: “I was scared.” SALLY SARA: “You were scared?” LIKHO’S MUM: “Yes.” SALLY SARA: “Why was that?” LIKHO’S MUM: “Because he is surfing in the sea
and there is a shark there!” SALLY SARA: “There’s sharks,...
you were worried? |
18:42 |
|
So Likho is going to go in a competition on
the weekend. What do you think about that?” |
18:52 |
|
LIKHO’S MUM: “I’m going to be there!” SALLY SARA: “You’re going to be there?” LIKHO’S MUM: “Yes, I am proud.” SALLY SARA: “Fantastic. Do you think he can
win?” LIKHO’S MUM: “I am sure.” SALLY SARA: “You’re confident?” LIKHO’S MUM: “Mm.” [laughter] |
18:58 |
|
SALLY SARA: “Likho, what do you think about
going in the competition on the weekend? What are you thinking about?” |
19:09 |
|
LIKHO: “Gonna win!” SALLY SARA: “You’re gonna win?” LIKHO: “Yes!” |
19:13 |
|
SALLY SARA: “And how do you think you are
going to win this competition?” LIKHO: “Going to surf [demonstrating his
style] up.” |
19:16 |
Likho demonstrates his surf style |
SALLY SARA: “Up? More power, up?” … “Looking
good!” |
19:24 |
Kids
surfing |
Music |
19:33 |
|
SALLY SARA: The excitement is building. The
young surfers from Waves for Change can’t wait to take on competitors from
other townships around the Cape. A lot of these kids |
19:40 |
Sara
to camera |
live in tiny, one-room shacks in the township.
So coming out here to the surf is one of the |
19:50 |
Kids
surfing |
few chances they get to be alone, to have some
personal space. And that’s why surfing gives them such a strong sense of
freedom. |
19:55 |
Coach
and kid on beach encouraging surfer |
The coaches are encouraging the kids to be the
best they can be. Positive reinforcement is often lacking at home and school. APISH TSHETSHA: It’s very hard to achieve in |
20:04 |
Apish
100% |
other environments. So even in the ocean it’s
a new place for them, and then that person will take it back to the
community, apply it to his lifestyle. |
20:20 |
Apish
surfing |
NONCEDO MABHUNU: Apish as a coach is a great
man. |
20:31 |
Noncedo/Surfers |
He’s really motivated me a lot and someday I
want to be up there like him. I want to be the coach that will talk with the
kids. I want to become that coach that the kid can trust and can share
anything to me, so that I can help where I can help. |
20:35 |
Sunrise |
Music |
20:54 |
Waves
for Change bus on road |
SALLY SARA: This is the day the kids have been
waiting for. They’re on their way to the surfing contest on the other side of
Cape Town. |
21:01 |
Adult
surfers |
Music |
21:09 |
Kids
arrive at competition |
|
21:17 |
|
APISH TSHETSHA : [COACH, WAVES FOR CHANGE]
It’s their first, very, very first time |
21:30 |
Apish
100%. Super: |
entering a competition, and especially
representing the community that we are from, the township in Masi. It puts us
on the map, so that everyone can know, not only by bad stories, but by
knowing that there is surfers from there as well. |
21:32 |
Likho
dancing around on beach |
SALLY SARA: Likho hasn’t slept much; he’s so
excited. |
21:49 |
Likho’s
mum at competition |
His mum is here to see him in the water for
the first time. |
21:55 |
Likho
100% |
LIKHO: I’m feeling like I’m gonna win. This
wave, gonna catch. ‘Cause my culture is saying to me, ‘Gonna win this’. I can
feel it. |
21:59 |
Noncedo
at competition |
NONCEDO MABHUNU: We’ve got the white team,
that’s Waves for Change, for sure. And then we’ve got blue team, yellow and
pink. I think we’re going to win! GIRL: Yeah, we’re going to win! NONCEDO MABHUNU: Because I’m proud of our
youngsters there! |
22:09 |
Event
organiser with megaphone |
EVENT ORGANISER: In three, two, one! Let’s go! |
22:22 |
Likho
runs to water |
Music |
22:25 |
|
SALLY SARA: It’s time for Likho to take on the
surf at Big Bay. The kids all need to catch a wave, paddle back in and tag
their team mate. |
22:35 |
Girls
cheer Likho/ Surfers/Likho paddles |
Music |
22:48 |
|
SALLY SARA: He finds out, it’s harder than it
looks. |
23:03 |
Various
shots of competition/Likho |
Music |
23:07 |
Event
organiser with megaphone |
EVENT ORGANISER: Six minutes left! Check! |
23:37 |
Likho
runs up beach |
Music |
23:41 |
|
SALLY SARA: His team doesn’t make the final,
but there’s still lots to celebrate. APISH TSHETSHA: He did everything right, but
it’s just that |
23:46 |
Apish |
it’s not just a free surf, it’s a competition.
|
23:57 |
Kids
on beach after competition/Surfers with Robben Island in b/g |
SALLY SARA: This is the first time many of the
kids have been to this part of Cape Town. It’s a special place. Just beyond
the surf break, you can see Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela was
imprisoned. APISH TSHETSHA: I mean Nelson Mandela was
there, he gave us freedom. |
23:57 |
Apish |
Someone said surfing is freedom, and today we
just experienced that. |
24:12 |
Rabia
on beach eating orange |
SALLY SARA: But beneath the excitement,
reality is never far away. 13 year old Rabia is putting on a brave face. Last
night, a robber broke into her shack and put a knife to her throat, just so
he could steal a television. |
24:18 |
Rabia
100% |
RABIA: “Yeah, he had a long knife on him – a
weapon. And they said ... they told me and my ma, if we make a sound, he was
going to kill us. So, I was terrified.” SALLY SARA: “How scary was that for you?” RABIA: “Yeah. He was really, he was torturing
us. Like he was torturing us. I did feel like I was going to cry. It was
horrible.” |
24:32 |
[shot
continuous] |
SALLY SARA: “How do you feel today, now that
you are down at the beach?” RABIA: “I feel good. I feel excited.” |
25:03 |
Team
sings |
|
25:10 |
Apish |
APISH TSHETSHA: We just need as elders to look
after the young ones, and we need to look after the next generation to invest
positive change. Because who is going to look after them when we are gone? |
25:18 |
Kids
surfing |
SALLY SARA: The children are already learning
to find their own way. As the Cape Town weather closes in, the going gets
tougher. The kids are full of hope and determination. |
25:30 |
Tim
100% |
TIM CONIBEAR: It’s really important. I mean
one of the biggest indicators of mental health and mental wellbeing is
feelings of hope. So if you can ignite that and then you can support that,
that’s really important. |
25:49 |
Noncedo
walks up beach carrying surfboard |
SALLY SARA: Noncedo is leading by example.
She’s now one of the coaches at Waves for Change. She wants to repay the
encouragement and kindness she’s received from her surfing mentors. NONCEDO MABHUNU: I hope for the future to
become a social worker, to work with the kids, and |
26:00 |
Noncedo
100% |
also to become a pro surfer and travel! |
26:17 |
Surfer
spins on surfboard |
SALLY SARA: In the space of a generation,
young black South Africans have gone from being banned on many beaches, to
taking on the world. |
26:21 |
Noncedo
100% |
SALLY SARA: Do you think you can reach your
dreams? NONCEDO MABHUNU: Someday I think I can. I want
to. |
26:36 |
Noncedo
walking on beach to water carrying surfboard |
And I hope that one day I will reach my
dreams. |
26:44 |
|
Music |
26:48 |
Underwater
shot |
|
26:58 |
|
|
27:35 |
Credits:
Reporter:
Sally Sara
Producer: Matt Davis
Camera: Greg Nelson
Matt Davis
Ryan Janssens
Steven Michelsen
Editor: Matthew Walker
Digital content producer: Emma
Morris
Executive producer: Marianne Leitch
All music supplied by Cape Town
artists:
Sesingenile - Ruffest
Cadaques – Bilderberg Motel
Tha Tha - Zambezi Marimba Band
c by Zambezi Marimba Band
Pantsula Jive - Zambezi Marimba Band
All the Girls are the Same -
Bilderberg Motel
Faces in the Snow - Jett Screams
Hey Arnold, Dad’s Here - Christian
Tiger School
Nostalgia –
Camo
Mamma Gaia -
Josh Roxton
Ode to the Whales - Josh Roxton
Sick and Tired Dub – Pure Solid
Siyabenzela - Ruffest
Cries of Africa - Sivulkie
Freedom - Sannie Fox [Just Music,
South Africa]
I Miss Sleeping So Much - Medicine
Boy
abc.net.au/freedomriders