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The cardinal who couldn’t.

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REVIEW: AFRIKAANS RADIO DRAMA: DIE HEKS

FALLEN women in a society ruled by misogyny. Witch burnings comes under the loupe in Die Heks, a play by C Louis Leipoldt. Image courtesy Britannica.com

THE 15TH CENTURY and its misogyny in Europe is legend. Iconic Afrikaans writer C Louis Leipoldt takes on the mantle worn by Umberto Eco, John Whiting and Arthur Miller in their contemplation of the phenomenon of witch burning, in a magnificent piece drafted with succinct lines and an evocative plot. Die Heks draws from Radio Sonder Grense’s podcast archives and clocking in at just under 30 minutes, it’s a remarkably potent essay on doubt and madness, couched in the cocoon of blind faith.

Cast with mastery around two women – a mother and a daughter – accused of being witches and a cardinal in his red gown armed with harsh asceticism, cruel responsibilities and a murky past, this is a taut and evocative work which touches on the type of dizzying drama in Eco’s The Name of the Rose, as it evokes an understanding of a world caught up in the frenzy of its own illogical religious fervour.

The brevity of the piece necessitates much that is implied and it wins: with tight writing, an implied and developed sense of context, and an urgency that you will feel with your own blood pressure, this work has a denouement that will make you think of Charles Dickens’s A Tale of Two Cities. It’s a work of torment and regret that won’t leave you for a while.

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