
Is there football in heaven?
The author, a football fan and writer, wonders if there is football in heaven? And if there is, does God himself play? And if he does, what position does he plays?
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Marjorie Namara Rugunda is a writer, researcher, and PhD student at the University of British Columbia.

The author, a football fan and writer, wonders if there is football in heaven? And if there is, does God himself play? And if he does, what position does he plays?

The Ugandan photographer: “It gets even more complicated being a photojournalist in Africa feeding foreign channels with African events.”

Andrew Dosunmu’s new feature film, “Mother of George,” is set in Brooklyn, NY’s Bed-Stuy neighborhood, focusing on the complications of African immigrant life, especially love and family.

Kaizer Chiefs vs Orlando Pirates is South Africa’s fiercest football rivalry. It is increasingly less about the football and more about merchandise on offer to fans of both teams, especially Chiefs.

Did Goodluck Jonathan allegedly take US $1m from an anti-poverty fund to allegedly bring Beyonce and Jay-Z to Nigeria in 2006?

The shows play on the worst stereotypes associated with Afro-Peruvians and uncritically exhibits these for the whole Peruvian nation to watch.


No.17 in our regular update on new African films to watch.

Rewriting history from below in South Africa by utilizing the voices of workers and their survivors themselves.


That what a Dutch writer Adriaan Van Dis told an Italian newspaper when asked about what South Africa is like now.

Ramphele has never enjoyed widespread grassroots support as a political figure in South Africa and hasn’t been in active in any political movement for at least 30 years now.
We’ve seen CNN’s “Mozambique or Bust” documentary film before. It’s a staple of its genre.

Morocco appears stable, but high unemployment, economic reforms, increased repression and police brutality, could still impact the country’s politics.

Beware the bling of banner headlines announcing free speech victories.

Motsepe was named South Africa’s first black dollar billionaire by Forbes Magazine.