Fasten your seatbelts as OZY takes you Around the World with stunning stories on politics and culture, sports and spiritualism. This Sunday, we meet a German prankster politician tangling with neo-Nazis, uncover how Darfur's most brutal militia is now a force for hire and capture the artistic rise of India's trans community (pictured). Enjoy the ride!
| Refentse Morake is changing how South Africa looks at the music associated with colonization. After school one afternoon when he was 17, Morake was messing around with his guitar in the front yard of his parents’ home when a friendly tannie (‘auntie,’ a term of respect in Afrikaans) asked if she could take a video of him singing "De La Rey" in his now-characteristic treacly vibrato. The next afternoon the tannie returned bearing truly startling news: Refentse’s video had racked up 160,000 views in 24 hours. Now at almost 22, Refentse has established himself as one of the biggest music stars in South Africa — singing in perfect, unaccented Afrikaans, the language once associated with apartheid. His rise is all the more remarkable considering his breakout cover of "De La Rey" — a plea to a long-dead Boer War general to come back and lead his people — polarized the Afrikaans community with its nationalist undertones. | READ NOW |
| |
| | It was supposed to be the most valuable mineral of the future. Now its crashing price is giving businesses pause. In late 2018, Jean-Denis Caron sank most of his life savings into the shares of Nemaska Lithium, a Quebec City–based producer backed by Japan’s SoftBank that promised to “facilitate access to green energy, for the benefit of humanity.” Last month, Nemaska filed for protection from its creditors, following a collapse in the price of lithium hydroxide, a key component in batteries for electric vehicles (EV). The shares, down 93 percent from the peak, have stopped trading and the company is set to be kicked off the Toronto exchange. Nemaska’s failure highlights the difficulties of a market dominated by a small cadre of producers and vulnerable to sudden changes in outlook. | READ NOW |
| |
|
| | India’s trans community is finally taking center stage in the performing arts, through cultural events, radio shows and growing recognition by cultural bodies. |
| | Their list of global partners includes Saudi Arabia, the UAE and the EU. |
| | Max Aschenbach's proposal to declare neo-Nazis an emergency on par with climate change started as a joke. No more. |
| | With two world champions, Nigeria — and Africa — could be the future of the MMA. |
| | What do you do with a river full of dumped spiritual flowers? Make a product that gives back. |
|
| | |
|