Hey Sisa,
Great interview!
Je hebt de juiste vragen gesteld waardoor we een goed beeld van hem krijgen.
Hij is sympathiek, leeft bewust en heeft oog voor zijn omgeving.
Met smart kijk ik uit naar part 2.
Proficiat!
Brasa,
Jeff
Yannick Noah
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About his locs So, we went to the wedding but then I didn’t realize that it takes such a long time to remove braids. The next day I had to play the semi-final of the Davis Cup. So, I thought okay, we’ll see when I get there. When I got there I had to practice. So there was no time to take out the braids.
The next thing you know, two days later, people wrote, “Oh, Yannick is like trying to get back to his African roots.” So, I’m like, that’s cool. You know, all of the sudden, this whole thing about my hair. I found that quite interesting. So, I went to a shop to get a Rasta head band and a Bob Marley wrist band, you know because I thought it was funny. Of course, I was listening to Bob Marley.
When we won the game people said, “Yeah, yeah, Yannick is into his roots, his African roots”. It wasn’t really true, but I went with it. I thought, now I need to grow the real thing. MIREILLE: So, that’s how it started? YANNICK NOAH: Yeah, I removed the braids, and underneath I just started to let it grow. This is what happened. And actually when I won the French Open, it was not real hair. I had braids.
New York or Paris?
Do you like New York better than Paris?
Of course, you are a hero. The last French man to win Roland Garros, the French Open after 37 years and winning the Davis Cup. That's incredible Many people were named after you, too, you know.
About his Music
He took his motorcycle with his friend to check out life. He, Che Guevara was from a wealthy family in Santiago, goes to school, in a wealthy neighborhood to become a doctor. So, he takes off with his best friend. This is a true story. He goes with his best friend on this old motorcycle. They just go and get out of Santiago. They end up, like, in this place up north in Chili where all of a sudden, he finds himself thorn between following the path that was laid out for him or actually breaking that and going to help poor people. More like laborers. People warn him that it’s dangerous. So, what do you do?
So, anyway, something happened during that trip, where he realized that basically, he doesn't want to follow that path that was laid out for him. I like that. Sure that is an inspiration for me. There’s a movie made based on his trip "the Motorcycle diaries. It's a beautiful movie. They show all the places that Che went to and we actually went to. His story is so inspirational to me because he was trying to help, you know. Trying to help the poor people. That is inspiring. That is great.
There’s a connection there that is so natural. It just happens right there right ten. If you want to be spiritual here in the city, it is an effort. You have work on something within. You have to work for it. …but, when you you see nature like Atacama Dessert, that's where it was, spirituality just happens to you. That is what the place is like. There are volcanoes. So it can be like minus 15 Celsius, and then all of the sudden after the sun rises within 10 minutes, its 20 degrees. So, if I have the opportunity to take people on some kind of trip with my music, I like there to be an experience within the music within the story. A deeper connection. An experience that I can relate to, for real.
The connection, out of Love I had to find myself when it came to religion. I was raised Catholic but my mom the most generous person I know, wasn't a believer. So I had to create my own thing, and my own thing was pretty much inspired by Buddhism, which basically mixes everything. You know, you can do your own thing. It’s very tolerant.
More spiritual than a religion?
You met the Dalai Lama?
How was that?
What did you feel?
President Barack Obama Such a fantastic time to be in America. It was such a fantastic… experience to follow this unfolding of history, and be here, hear it, live it.
You mean the 2008 election? Did you believe that the candidate Obama could win from the start? He seemed like a perfect candidate, everything about him was so natural, so real. It seemed like it was meant to be. So the disappointment would have been too much that I just didn't want to believe it. I didn’t even want to discuss it.
So when did you start believing he could win? You mean when voters tend to tell pollsters that they are likely to vote for a black candidate, and yet, on election day, they vote for the white opponent?YANNICK NOAH: Yeah.
So what did the election of President Barack Obama meant to you? It mattered a lot to you if you couldn’t talk about it.
And cried?
Then this news, that Barack Obama wins. So as human beings we can hope. And that’s what it was. It is not the guy who bribed. It’s the best one, and the world could see it because he was like so…For me, it was not even a race, you know. For me, I was even insulted that they were actually like thinking about it, because it was like so obvious. It was like a big champion against someone who was just there.
How do you think the President is doing? Do you think he deserved the Nobel peace prize in November? There are things that you cannot even explain to a certain degree. Like you know, when you give pride, he gave pride to people outside of this country just because of who he is. People that he will never meet in his life. People that on that very day that he was elected walked with a different swag. This is huge. This is just huge. I trust the guy. I know I trust him. And I’m not someone who trusts very easily. But I trust him. YANNICK NOAH: Because he’s trying, he’s trying. And, he’s trying for me. I know he’s trying for me. And I’m glad that there is someone out there trying for me, and for us, and for little people. Because I consider myself a little person, and I know that there is someone out there who is trying for us. That is enough. And he’s not going to succeed in everything, but I mean look at his healthcare. This is the first thing he did for the little people. And it doesn’t happen like that. It is easier to say, “Well, let's do that tomorrow we got the war. Let’s go kill people.” That you can do in 2 minutes. But like to organize health care is a long process, and people were very patient with him because the degree of hope was so high.
So, Obama really a big inspiration for you?
You mean divide and conquer?
Did you read his biography? Did you connect with him when you read that? I went to school in Calhoun, Cameroun. I’m, like, called café au latte, coffee with milk. So, I’m not part of it. I’m part of them, but not really. I’m not really black enough. I go to France, and oh I’m too black.
MIREILLE: You’re not black enough. I hated that phrase. And then you go, oh you know what, people say he is not that black and people say he’s not that white. So, you know, he tried to tell them, “Listen, maybe it doesn’t really matter.” So, I’m not going to talk about it, but I’m going to just act like…with my head up, and show you that this is me.
And, now, in France, I became like some symbol. I never like really pushed the black and white issue because it doesn’t really matter. I think my actions should
Interesting, but still, what’s interesting to me is that you are obviously both, and why do you have to choose? I feel nobody should have to choose between his mother’s or his father’s race. But, obviously, when you’re in 2 worlds, you do feel a connection with the black players, even when they’re not from Africa, you know. There always seems to be this connection.
Oh, really, yeah? I was used to this soccer world which is all black people, wherever it is. Then, when I awas going to go to tennis world and I am the only black player. One, only one player. And actually, the reason I was there was because some other black guy, Arthur Ashe, who happened to come to Cameroon and helped me to live my dream. If it wasn’t for him, I wouldn’t be here today. So, there are all of these connections. Yeah, definitely. And sometimes, instead of choosing, people choose for you, that’s my answer really.
Yes, that’s true. They try to at least. And you are probably going to get some kind of attention. Same thing when I travel. And I travel a lot, obviously. Whether it's Asia, Jackson Hole, Wyoming or Johannesburg in 1975 – there's always the way people look at you while you are still the same person. You are still the same person, but like the world around you changes. And the way the people look at you, and the experience, you have, changes.
Apartheid Twenty-four hours a day being with me all the time. Make sure I’m not creating problems. I played in a stadium where it was like almost empty because white people wouldn’t come and see my games. In a stadium of I don't know say 6000 there would be like a little fenced corner for maybe 100 people. And that little fenced corner were like maybe 300 black people rooting for me. Like in a corner of the whole stadium.
And the rest was empty?
-------------------------- Click here to read part 2: His meeting with Arthur Ashe and what he meant to Yannick, a little boy from Africa.
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2010-09-20 14:51:05 |Registered| NappyDame
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2010-09-14 13:18:55 |Registered| naturaltrishy







speak for me.
