NIGHT TALK

Social conversations: Our Heritage (The Khoisan people)


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Myburgh has released a book of his travels called The Bushman Winter Has Come, of which he signed copies for his followers at the event hosted by Fourways-based life coaching practice Inner Coaching. The obvious strain on the power grid was welcomed for a change, as the candlelit auditorium created the perfect ambiance for Myburgh to break the silence with a raspy voice, which spoke of journeys through sub-Saharan Africa in search of ancient cultures. nHis journey to becoming world-renowned for his anthropology studies and documentary filmmaking, began when he travelled to the Kalahari Desert in Botswana to find the nomadic tribe of the /Gwikwe people, with whom he eventually spent seven years with. Known to the general world as bushmen – although this classification is not historically correct according to Myburgh – the /Gwikwe people were the last remaining Bantu tribe in Southern Africa left truly untouched by modern civilisation. In his introductory talk, Myburgh told of learning to speak in their native tongue, of their family and traditional values, and their belief in the interconnection between life and death. “It’s important to understand that these people whom we call Bushmen, or are anthropologically referred to as Khoisan, are incorrectly labelled,” Myburgh said. “We, in a modern society never had the inclination to ask what they, the first natives of Southern Africa, call themselves. In more than 300 years we still haven’t gotten their names right. “It’s quite something when you consider that our ancestors were all first people at one time somewhere in the world.”

Guest 1 on the line: Paul Myburgh -author, anthropologist and accomplished documentary filmmaker

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NIGHT TALKBy SAfm