‘The Book of Life’ Brings African Optimism to Athens Sept. 14


September 6, 2023

A woman in a blur and black dress wears a blue headdress and stretches her arm into the air.

“A sweet-tempered testament to the power of story.”—The Guardian

During the 1994 Rwandan genocide, one million people were killed in one hundred days. The Book of Life is an uplifting theatrical experience blending storytelling, shadow puppetry, and drumming, that dwells on resilience and recovery — not loss — as it explores how people contend with tragedy through a fierce and joyful assertion of life.

Featuring the true story of Rwandan writer/performer/women’s rights advocate Kiki Katese and her “Book of Life” — a collection of letters written by ordinary Rwandese to the victims of the genocide — this play sheds a hopeful light on the plight of women and girls in Rwanda and the possibility of improving lives through art. It appears at the UGA Fine Arts Theatre Thursday, Sept. 14 at 7:30 p.m.

Katese herself stars in the production, which includes the all-female drum troupe Ingoma Nshya (which translates as “New Drum” and “New Power”). She founded the eight-member ensemble in direct confrontation with Rwandan tradition that drummers are always men.

“In The Book of Life there’s an opportunity to re-invent things; to dream; to try to undo something; and to propose for a moment another point of view, another way of the revisiting the past,” Katese says. “It’s like a ceremonial way to just rehabilitate life.”

The Book of Life is a coproduction of Canada’s Volcano Theater and Rwanda’s The Woman Cultural Centre. “The wisdom of it, of Kiki, of the women drummers who have been so integral to the construction of this project —  this wisdom is a light, a beacon for the rest of the world, as we all peer ahead into an uncertain future,” says director Ross Manson, founding artistic director of Volcano Theater. “Kiki’s artmaking is, in fact, a valuable and agreeable thing.”

Kiki Katese will engage in a brief post-show question and answer session, the first installment in this season’s performance lecture series.

This performance is supported by the Christine and Thomas Pavlak Performing Arts Center Endowment.

The Book of Life is one of two African events on the UGA Presents calendar. On Feb. 29, 2024, Grammy-winning South African vocal group Ladysmith Black Mambazo will appear at Hodgson Concert Hall.

Three Ways to Order Tickets

  1. Purchase tickets online 24/7 online here.
  2. Call the Performing Arts Center Box Office at (706) 542-4400, Mon.-Fri., 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
  3. Visit the UGA Performing Arts Center Box Office, Mon.-Fri., 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. (5 minute parking is available in the drop off circle at the Performing Arts Center for purchasing or picking up tickets.)