Connect with us

Entertainment

Oti Mabuse feels like ‘apartheid is still happening’ as she visits whites-only South African town in new documentary-Ruth Lawes-Entertainment – Metro

‘I just feel like this is 10 massive steps backwards,’ Oti says.

Oti Mabuse feels like ‘apartheid is still happening’ as she visits whites-only South African town in new documentary-Ruth Lawes-Entertainment – Metro

Oti says its ’10 massive steps backwards’ (Picture: BBC/Plimsoll Productions)

Oti Mabuse has said she feels like ‘apartheid is still happening’ as she visited a whites-only town in South Africa in a powerful new BBC documentary.

In Oti Mabuse: My South Africa the former Strictly Come Dancing star returns to her childhood home, to revisit the people and places that inspired her to be the dancer and woman she is today.

On her journey, she meets inspirational people, including musicians, farmers and dancers, contributing to the country’s culture and she delves back into her own family’s dark past under apartheid.

Apartheid was a system of racial segregation, causing the institutionalized oppression of the Black population, that existed in South Africa from 1948 and ended in 1994, thanks to activist Nelson Mandela.

The Masked Dancer judge takes a road trip towards Cape Town, where she used to travel with her family as a child.

As she drives, the Dancing on Ice judge says: ‘The landscape makes me so happy. It’s full of life. It’s taking me back to the long road trips we took as a family.

However, as she continues on her route, Oti remarks the area is becoming ‘less familiar’ as she approaches the heartland of white Afrikaans South Africa.

Oti reflects on South Africa’s dark history (Picture: BBC/Plimsoll Productions)

She remarks: ‘On our Dad’s travels, we often didn’t even get out of the car in this part of the country.

‘I’m going to places that we intentionally didn’t go [to], because they were just places where Black people were not welcome.

‘I don’t think my parents wanted us to be subjected to looks, to people calling us names. And I think my dad really just wanted to protect us.’

Oti returns to her childhood home (Picture: BBC/Plimsoll Productions)

As she reaches Orania, which is still a whites-only town, Oti says: ‘Many things have changed since we drove this road 20 years ago, but not everything.’

Oti explains the settlement consists of 2,500 people who are ‘exclusively Afrikaans’, adding: ‘It looks empty.’

The 32-year-old says: ‘This for me, takes me back. I feel like apartheid is still happening.

Oti’s parents were moved to a township under apartheid (Picture: BBC/Plimsoll Productions)

‘It’s not just South Africa that’s trying to move forward. It’s the whole world. And I just feel like this is 10 massive steps backwards. I just feel a long way from a township home.’

Later on in the documentary, Oti speaks about how apartheid affected her parents, who were forcibly relocated into townships in the 60s.

More: Trending

She says: ‘It is really a hard concept to take in. How terrible was the treatment that they got? My parents are my heroes.’

Oti Mabuse: My South Africa airs on BBC One tonight at 9pm.

Got a story?

If you’ve got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the Metro.co.uk entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@metro.co.uk, calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we’d love to hear from you.


MORE : Motsi Mabuse fights back tears as she gushes over Fleur East’s Strictly Come Dancing performance: ‘I am so proud of you’


MORE : Strictly Come Dancing judges Motsi Mabuse and Craig Revel Horwood aren’t embroiled in feud: ‘There’s no issue’

Entertainment – MetroRead More

Exit mobile version