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Zanele Muholi: Why are black lives so fascinating?
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Why are we here?
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Can I own my voice?
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Can I own me?
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Because my mother never had an opportunity
to own her own voice until she died.
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There are a lot of beautiful humans out there who get
to be in covers of magazines
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and they're loved dearly.
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Why are ordinary people only featured in any
magazine when there's tragedy?
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Why are there no images of queer people, especially
black people and yet people are told that
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you have a right to be?
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Yes, apartheid period has its own visuals.
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Those were photography of resistance.
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They known, they common, they bloody.
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I just wanted to produce images that spoke
to me as a person.
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That still speak to me now.
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I'm boiling inside.
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Like any other great men.
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I want to be counted in history.
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I want to produce that history.
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I want to basically say, this is me.
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[Singing in foreign language]
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....shines in the dark, so much darkness like you are alone. Little star, that shines in the dark
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[Singing fades softly into background]
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Zanele: I photograph myself to remind thyself
that you exist.
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I am born by Malawian father and Zulu mom.
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We were eight siblings in all and four of
my siblings died.
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Now we are four.
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I'm looking at this print, it’s supposed
to be sharper, but is not super sharp
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and there's floating hairs.
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My mother worked so hard.
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When my father died she had to take care of many of us.
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I guess most of what I do is shaped by her
life and a way of doing things.
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This is “Somnyama Ngonyama,” a series.
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What is important is the space that I occupy,
my being, my presence there,
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and then the objects that are found within
those settings.
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Then those objects need to
have a specific meaning.
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This is the tube of a bicycle is significant
to most South Africans who are fine-tuned
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with apartheid history.
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It speaks on necklacing.
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Your enemies would put on the tire
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and set you alight right there in that spot.
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This was specially dedicated to my sister
who then passed a few days after the image
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was taken.
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Most of the “Somnyama Ngonyama” images,
are Zulu titled because Zulu is my language.
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“Bona,” which means "See," was taken in an
old hotel in Charlottesville.
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This says you were at this place at this particular
time and you survived because nobody knows
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what might happen.
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Talking about like life and death,
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I had to go through a serious operation.
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And I never thought that I would be alive.
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I lost a lot of blood and the image that I
took is called “Julile”
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and I shot it with plastics which represented tumors.
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Giving thanks for being alive is very, very,
very important to me.
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Put Thembi here.
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I want to make an introduction in 30 seconds.
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Most of the time I go to locations where people live.
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I was born in the township.
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I liked the vibe of the townships of Johannesburg.
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People connect with their own spaces and they
become comfortable if it's safe to be in those spaces.
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[Speaker in Instagram video]
We are here to do a follow-up photo
shoot of “Faces and Phases.”
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Zanele Muholi: So you just do a short introduction
and I just want to roll it.
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You speak Zulu, or Sotho, or English, so we
do in three languages.
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But have some energy please.
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Yes, the energy you possess when you dance.
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- Up or down?
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Zanele Muholi:
Up. Up. Up. Up.
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- Right here?
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Zanele Muholi:
Yes. Yeah, cool.
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Ayanda:
Okay, hi.
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I am Ayanda Masina.
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This is me four years ago, and this is me now.
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Uh...
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Zanele Muholi:
Cut.
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[laughter]
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Zanele Muholi: The people of Johannesburg are here
to work, unlike in Cape Town and other cities,
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we are here to hustle.
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- You got it right. You were flowing nicely there.
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Remember, we want this to trend on Instagram!
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[laughter]
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♪ ♪
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I photograph different LGBTI individuals,
risking my life,
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challenging the myth that say,
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being gay, being trans is un-African.
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When I started “Faces and Phases”, I just
wanted to produce a project that will live
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beyond us.
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As people reach different stages in their
lives, they get to be documented and they
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share for the LGBTI community.
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It's a lifetime project.
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The book's supposed to come out in volumes.
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The next publication will be out next year,
which then marks another period in our lives.
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I am a member of the community.
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We hardly find images that speaks of love
and joys of LGBTI individuals,
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so then it becomes the issue of ownership.
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I told myself that I would do better than
any other outsider to project our lives.
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I always say to people, it's one thing to
have the constitution.
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It's something else to have the document that
speaks to that constitution.
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You can't say people have a right to exist
without visuals that are produced by us on us.
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A simple image of a queer being in space.
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That's political.
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“Faces and Phases” becomes one of those
important documents that comes out from Africa.
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One of the first individuals that I work with
happen to be a friend
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and her name is Busi Sigasa.
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She was a 25-year-old who was a curative rape survivor,
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and she succumbed to HIV complications
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and died in 2007 in March.
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I'm always reminded of her work and contributions
that she made,
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daring and speaking out on hate crimes, on
curative rapes,
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on all that was unjust.
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She'll always be remembered.
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- Don't frown, sir.
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The stripes have to be straight. Collen needs stripes.
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That’s his duvet!
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Every year I try to capture a nice picture of Collen.
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Collen has his own series documenting
himself and his community
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and also, he's teaching photography to
youth in this township.
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[laughter]
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- First of all, she couldn't even see they were her photos.
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- I was trying to remember.
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Collen Mfazwe: These are our new students from different township.
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Lerato Dumse: We always interested in training
black women who believe in black media diversity,
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media ownership,
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so that's really what's the driving force for me.
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Zanele Muholi: So please give us the
background, Monde.
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What's happening? What are we about to see?
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- Here I am at Sinaba Stadium in Daveyton.
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There was a challenge, between the township
boys, challenging each other in soccer.
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Zanele: Sharp, no problem.
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I appreciate the effort.
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Framing is good.
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I'm okay.
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There is somebody who almost got in.
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You see, on the left.
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Nonetheless, we will work on that,
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but I like the two and the two at the back.
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Do you see them?
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Yeah, very, very interesting.
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It's the crew that I work with.
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It's people that I pay for their education
or sponsor for their causes.
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And most of them, they are graduates from
Market Photo Workshop,
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which is a school I attended which
was started by David Goldblatt,
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who later became my mentor.
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And he becomes one of the most important human
beings in my life because he financed for my education,
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So I have learned from David to say sharing is caring.
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The person who has given you her time or his time
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so you can't waste it.
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♪ ♪
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So I'm doing a follow up with Kat on "Brave Beauties."
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“Brave Beauties” is a project that looks
specifically at trans women who are beauty queens.
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My history of documenting beauty pageants
is personal.
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Twenty years ago, exactly now, I entered a
contest and I won.
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I wanted to reminisce and go back to that
space and I produced portraits of myself on
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residency in Amsterdam.
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Beauty pageants and drag shows, they create
space that's safe for LGBTI individuals to
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express themselves,
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which is not what they usually do on daily basis.
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Miss Divine is one of the most important humans
in our lives,
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for people who like drag shows here.
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I recognize drag queens as cultural activists
because they educate with their performance.
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She's wearing red high heel shoes and a Zulu
beaded skirt,
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which is meant to be worn by a woman coming of age.
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The Africans, we're proud of our tribes, and
some of us still stick to the tradition.
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- Bathini, we need a brush, girl.
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I always stress to each and every person that
I photograph to look good,
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look good because you’ll be seen by many people.
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[laughter]
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Please make the girl comfortable.
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Time is against us.
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I work with people who are partaking in a
historical project, who are informing many
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individuals, including me about their lives.
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So it's very important for me that I respect
the fact that they've trusted me
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enough to be there.
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I work with participants.
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There are no subjects
in my photography.
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[cheers and applause]
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Odidi Odidiva Mfenyana: Well, um, hi everybody!
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I’m still recovering
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from the party yesterday.
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[laughter]
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Zanele is just absolutely the most craziest
person I’ve ever met.
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She has made me do more crazy things that
I have done in my life.
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But I have to say from the bottom of my heart
thank you so much.
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This is a great way to end both Women's Month.
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Crowd:
Yes!
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- Yes!
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[snapping]
- ♪ Whatever you want ♪
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Crowd:
Whoo!
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- ♪ Whatever you need ♪
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♪ Oh, anything you want done, baby ♪
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♪ I'll do it naturally ♪
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- Everybody sing!
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Crowd:
♪ I'm every woman ♪
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♪ It's all in me ♪
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Zanele Muholi:
History could easily be projected and produced
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by those who live it.
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[crowd singing]
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Zanele Muholi: We work speaking resistance, speaking existence.
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- That was beautiful.
That was beautiful.
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Zanele Muholi: We’re not done yet.
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To learn more about Art21 and our educational resources,
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please visit us online at PBS.org/art21