Celebrated National Geographic Explorer Tara Roberts to give Keynote Address at
NEWF Fellows' Summit in Durban
Durban, South Africa: Celebrated American National Geographic explorer Tara Roberts, will be in Durban this week (22 February) to present a keynote address at the inaugural Nature, Environment & Wildlife Filmmaking (NEWF) Fellows’ Summit.
At the invitation of NEWF directors Noel Kok and Pragna Parsotam-Kok, Tara Roberts will deliver her address to 80 young filmmakers, scientists and storytellers from 15 African countries who have participated in NEWF’s numerous labs or training workshops over the years. She will be referencing her ground-breaking National Geographic podcast series Into the Depths, of her personal journey following Black scuba divers from the organisation Diving with a Purpose, searching for slave shipwrecks around the world (of which there are reputed to be more than 1000).
Featuring on the cover of the March 2022 edition of the prestigious National Geographic magazine, Roberts reveals the insights of her journey explaining that “it is time for their (slave ancestors) stories to rise from the depths, to be told in their fullness, in their wonder—and with love, with honor, with respect.”
She also features in the National Geographic Documentary Special, Clotilda: Last American Slave Ship and a short documentary Diving with Purpose.
Over the 5 years of its existence, NEWF has grown into much more than its annual congress that connects filmmakers, storytellers, scientists, conservationists, and media distributors working in conservation through film. It has also played a major role in supporting emerging filmmakers by connecting them to funders as well as providing labs and capacity development, and this cohort is now known as NEWF “Fellows”.
“In the two-year absence of an in-person NEWF Congress, we thought we should focus on consolidating the skills and networking of the cohort of NEWF Fellows,” explains Noel Kok. “Our overall vision for this sector of the film industry is to tell the “Stories of Africa” that celebrate and advocate for the protection of her natural (and cultural) history that is told by a connected network of visual storytellers organically led by indigenous African voices. And there is no better way to do this, than by supporting the emergence of these stories through young filmmakers.”
“It is a true honour to have Tara here to give an address about her journey, as a journalist and storyteller, we hope she will shine a light for this cohort as a trailblazer, and role-model, motivating them to tell our African stories,” enthuses Pragna Parsotam-Kok. “Her story is so inspirational as she seeks out to uncover the lost history of Africans under the ocean.”
To listen to the Into the Depths podcasts : https://on.natgeo.com/3h6PV24
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