Rian Malan

Rian Malan is a South African author, journalist, documentarist and songwriter of Afrikaner descent. He first rose to prominence as the author of the memoir My Traitor's Heart (1990), which, like the bulk of his work, deals with South African society in a historical and contemporary perspective and focuses on racial relations. As a journalist, he has written for major newspapers in South Africa, Britain and the United States.

Rian Malan
BornJohannesburg, South Africa
OccupationAuthor, journalist, documentarist, musician, songwriter
GenreMemoirs, investigative journalism
Notable worksMy Traitor's Heart, In the Jungle

Personal background

Malan grew up in a middle-class and pro-apartheid Afrikaner family in a white suburb of Johannesburg. He attended Blairgowrie Primary School in Randburg where one of his contemporaries was the columnist, Jani Allan. He then attended Woodmead School, South Africa's first non-racially based high school. He has described how, as a teenager, he formed a rock band that associated with black artists and wanted to rebel against the apartheid system, at a time when he in fact had virtually no interaction with black people. He attended the then Witwatersrand University for a year. To avoid conscription, which was compulsory for all white males, he moved to Los Angeles in 1977 and worked as a journalist.[1][2]

As a memoirist: My Traitor's Heart

Returning to South Africa in the 1980s, he wrote My Traitor's Heart,[3] his memoir of growing up in Apartheid-era South Africa in which he explores race relations through prominent murder cases.[4] In addition, he reflects on the history of his family, a prominent Afrikaner clan that migrated to the Cape in the 17th century and included Daniel François Malan, the South African Prime Minister who was a principal ideological force behind Apartheid doctrine.[3] The book, which became a best-seller, was translated into 11 languages.[1]

Journalism

Malan began his journalistic career in 1975, as a reporter for The Star. During his stay in the US, he served as managing editor for Music Connection (1978), as news editor for LA Weekly (1979), as staff writer for New West Magazine (California) (1981), as senior writer for Los Angeles Herald-Examiner (1984) and as senior editor for Manhattan Magazine (1984). Since then, he has been a freelance writer for various magazines, mainly in the US (e.g. Esquire, Rolling Stone, The Wall Street Journal), Britain (e.g. The Spectator and The Sunday Times) and South Africa (e.g. The Star, Time and Noseweek).[1] A number of his essays are collected in the volume The Lion Sleeps Tonight and other stories of South Africa (New York: Grove Press, 2012), ISBN 9780802119902.

The Lion Sleeps Tonight

In 2000, he wrote a widely disseminated piece in Rolling Stone about the origin of the song "The Lion Sleeps Tonight", tracing its history from its first recording by Solomon Linda, a penniless Zulu singer, through its adoption by The Weavers, The Tokens and many of the folksingers of the 1960s, and its appropriation by The Walt Disney Company in the movie The Lion King.[5] Malan reveals that Linda never received any royalties for the song; however, an ensuing court case established that 25 percent of the song's past and future royalties should go to Linda's three daughters.[6]

AIDS controversy

Malan has generated controversy by repeatedly questioning the seriousness and scope of AIDS in Africa. In articles in Rolling Stone, The Spectator and Noseweek, a controversial South African monthly, he proposed that AIDS statistics are greatly exaggerated by researchers and health professionals who are trying to obtain more funding.[7][8][9] His hypothesis was roundly criticised by national and international AIDS organisations, and Malan was accused of endangering lives in Africa. In an interview in the Afrikaans magazine, Insig, Malan said, 'I get a kick out of it when the Treatment Action Campaign attacks me; it's like sport.'[10] In 2007, he said, 'In truth, I never claimed that Aids was not a problem – on the contrary, I described it as a terrible affliction that was claiming countless lives. At the same time however, it was clear that Aids numbers were being exaggerated and good news suppressed. I stand by that story.'[11]

As a television documentarist

In 1990, Malan appeared as the presenter of an episode of BBC Television's Omnibus, titled Tales of Ordinary Murder: Rian Malan in South Africa.[12]

In 1994, he appeared as the presenter of BBC Television's travel documentary, Great Railway Journeys (series 2, episode 2). The episode was titled Cape Town to the Lost City. [13]

In 2004, he appeared in an episode of Channel 4's Without Walls, titled The Last Afrikaner. A Search with Rian Malan, written by Malan and directed by Don Boyd.[14]

In 2005, his struggle for justice for the heirs of Solomon Linda (see above) was documented in A Lion's Trail, directed by François Verster.[15]

In 2009, Malan, together with Lloyd Ross, produced the documentary The Splintering Rainbow for Al Jazeera. The film documents a journey through South Africa, investigating unfolding political dramas and taking the pulse of the Rainbow Nation.[16]

Musical career

Alien Inboorling
Studio album by
Rian Malan
Released2005-10-28
GenreAfrikaans, folk, world, country
Length58:05
LanguageAfrikaans
LabelShifty Music/Sony BMG
ProducerLloyd Ross

He has released a CD of his own songs, titled Alien Inboorling.[17] The title translates as "Alien native"; the songs were described by one journalist as "parables of contemporary South Africa told in the voices of Afrikaners who have stayed and those who have left. The songs are dusty, weary, a stream of consciousness for the Afrikaans 'tribe'."[4]
The CD was listed as number 23 on Afrikaans newspaper Beeld's list of 'Albums van die dekade'.[18]

He also performs with Hot Club d'Afrique, a gypsy jazz band.[19]

Malan contributed lyrics to Stoomradio and Opgestook, the first two albums by Afrikaans roots music/boeremusiek band Radio Kalahari Orkes and appears on guitar on their second CD, Die Nagloper[20] He also contributed lyrics to Say Africa by Vusi Mahlasela.[21]

References

  1. de Vries, Fred (2008), The Fred de Vries Interviews – From Abdullah to Zille, Wits University Press, p. 325, ISBN 978-1-86814-469-3
  2. Hubbard, Kim (26 March 1990), "Rian Malan Follows His Troubled Heart Home to South Africa", People, retrieved 6 September 2009
  3. Malan, Rian (March 2000), My traitor's heart: A South African exile returns to face his country, his tribe and his conscience, New York: Grove Press, ISBN 0-8021-3684-2
  4. Adams, Tim (25 March 2007), "The dark heart of the new South Africa", The Observer, retrieved 5 September 2009
  5. Malan, Rian (25 May 2000), "In the jungle" (PDF), Rolling Stone, retrieved 5 September 2009
  6. Contreras, Felix (24 April 2006), "Family of 'Lion Sleeps Tonight' writer to get millions", National Public Radio, retrieved 5 September 2009
  7. Malan, Rian (22 November 2001), "Aids in Africa – in search of the truth", Rolling Stone, retrieved 5 September 2009
  8. Malan, Rian (14 December 2004), "Africa isn't dying of Aids" (PDF), The Spectator, retrieved 5 September 2009
  9. Malan, Rian (December 2003), "Apocalypse when?", Noseweek, retrieved 5 September 2009
  10. Barnett, Tony (25 September 2004), "Aids denial costs lives", The Spectator, retrieved 10 September 2018
  11. Malan, Rian (February 2007), "Rian Malan's last ever Aids piece (Or so he says)", Noseweek, retrieved 5 September 2009
  12. "British Film Institute. Film & TV Database. Omnibus: Tales of Ordinary Murder: Rian Malan in South Africa". Archived from the original on 5 June 2008. Retrieved 20 September 2009.
  13. "British Film Institute. Film & TV Database. Great Railway Journeys: Cape Town to the Lost City". Archived from the original on 29 January 2009. Retrieved 20 September 2009.
  14. "British Film Institute. Film & TV Database. Without walls: the last Afrikaner. A search with Rian Malan". Archived from the original on 26 January 2009. Retrieved 20 September 2009.
  15. "British Film Institute. Film & TV Database. A Lion's Trail". Archived from the original on 17 October 2012. Retrieved 20 September 2009.
  16. May, Jacke (21 April 2009), "The Splintering Rainbow – South Africa, Jacob Zuma and the election", The Times, retrieved 6 September 2009
  17. Alien Inboorling Shifty Music/Sony BMG, 2005
  18. "Albums van die dekade". Beeld. 13 January 2010. Archived from the original on 13 August 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
  19. Gert Vlok Nel and Rian Malan tour to Netherlands and UK, Media Update, 13 Jan 2009
  20. Die Nagloper, Radio Kalahari Orkes Terraplane Entertainment/Sony BMG, 2007
  21. Gedye, Lloyd (7 November 2010). "Return of The Voice". Mail & Guardian.
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