Heartbreaking Article About Dean du Plessis

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zimfan1
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Heartbreaking Article About Dean du Plessis

Post by zimfan1 »

Dean du Plessis is one of the few white people left in Zimbabwe. He is 29 years old and blind. Most impressive about this remarkable man who displays more joie de vivre than most people who can see is that he has made a name for himself as a cricket commentator on the radio. He broadcasts daily from 5 to 6 P.M. on the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation and has also done commentary for the BBC. He thinks he is the first blind sportscaster in the world. For most of his schooling, he attended the Pioneer School for the Blind, in South Africa. Aside from his disability, he is a regular guy. "I like girls, good beer, and loud music," he tells me when I meet him at a favorite bar.

But he too has been a victim of the Mugabe regime, and his story shows how depraved it has become.

To understand what happened to Dean du Plessis, one must first understand something about Zimbabwean cricket. The national cricket team, like nearly every other facet of Zimbabwean life, has been forcibly politicized in recent years. It used to be one of the best cricket teams, if not the best, in the world. But at around the same time Mugabe began authorizing violent seizures of white-owned farms, he packed the Zimbabwe Cricket Union with ZANU-PF hacks. In April 2004, Heath Streak, one of the country's best cricketers and the national team's captain, was forced to resign over disputes related to racial quotas that led to the firing of many white players. Over the past several years, black and white players alike have quit as a result of political differences with those in charge. In a December 2005 broadcast, du Plessis stated the obvious about the condition of Zimbabwean cricket. "I criticized the people that run Zimbabwe cricket," he told me matter-of-factly. "They don't know anything about the sport."

The day after his broadcast, two men came to the Harare Toyota dealership where du Plessis works as a customer service representative. They told him to come with them. Although du Plessis could not see them, he knew what they had in mind. Still, du Plessis did not make a scene. "I didn't want to cause any attention," he says. "I didn't want anyone else to get involved; it's not fair on them."

The two men drove him for about a half hour, took him to an air-conditioned room, and sat him in what he describes as a "comfortable chair." They then played a recording of the broadcast in question.

"Is that you?" one of the men asked.

"You can hear my voice," du Plessis responded. "Why are you asking me?"

Disappointed with his insubordination, the men twisted his feet and beat his soles with a fan belt for half an hour. This is a form of torture common in Mugabe's Zimbabwe, and human rights NGOs have reported its being perpetrated against many individuals. Known as "falanga," it is used in other locales and is popular with dictatorships because it leaves few visible signs as the soles of the feet are thick and tough.

Up until our interview, du Plessis had not spoken of this torment.

Like many Zimbabweans, he too has fond memories of Mugabe's early years. He met the president in 1982, when Mugabe and his widely admired first wife, Sally, visited du Plessis's school. The president rubbed his head. "In those years I was very scared of the sirens," he explains, speaking of the president's ubiquitous motorcade. In a foreshadowing of his future outspokenness, du Plessis piped up as the First Family made their way to their car, "Please, Mr. Mugabe, I've got a terrible headache. Please don't put on the sirens." The motorcade left quietly, "like sedate human beings," du Plessis recalls. "Years ago Mugabe never used to be like this," he says, shaking his head. "In general, he was a very good man."

Du Plessis continues to broadcast, but he is careful about what he says. "I love my country. . . . Being away [at school] in South Africa I was deprived of growing up in the country I love so much."
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/P ... b.asp?pg=2

zimfan1
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Re: Heartbreaking Article About Dean du Plessis

Post by zimfan1 »

For those who dont know much about him here is his profile
Interview with Dean du Plessis

Hearing is believing

Steven Price interviews Dean du Plessis, the blind Zimbabwean commentator


When you first hear Dean du Plessis talk about cricket on Zimbabwean radio and television or on South African radio, his natural broadcasting voice grabs you instantly.

Then there is the flawless English and articulation, and a perceptible authority with which he speaks, accompanied by a fine knowledge of the game.

It is amazing, then, to learn that Dean was born blind in Harare 28 years ago. Touring sides and commentators alike have all been left awestruck by du Plessis's gift.

He is able to tell the kind of shot from the sound made by the ball on the bat. He can also tell the bowler by the way he lands his feet on the deck. "For example, the way Dwayne Bravo drags his feet, you can make him out, and Shane Warne sounds like he is constipated."

The technique applies to the batsmen, too: "When a batsman hits through the off side, the ball makes a sharp cracking sound. When he plays leg it's a bit muffled because he is playing off his pads. I can tell when a bowler bowls a yorker from the way the batsman jams down the wicket."

Although his brother Gary played cricket in Zimbabwe for Mashonaland and Mashonaland Country Districts, du Plessis did not start off as a cricket fanatic. The seed was planted while at a school for the blind in Worcester, South Africa, when the national side had just been reintroduced to international cricket. But the biggest spur-on for Dean came from his own national team, Zimbabwe, in the 1992 World Cup.

"I really got hooked on to cricket when Zimbabwe beat England. I was very satisfied when Eddo Brandes clean bowled our Zimbabwean export, Graeme Hick. Then afterwards I started doing mock commentaries in the hostel at school. I would wake up in the evening to do commentary. Most of the times it involved Zimbabwe and South Africa, and mostly it would be a Zimbabwean doing something to a South African - like Eddo Brandes clean-bowling Gary Kirsten, or Dave Houghton hitting someone for six.

"The kids didn't like me doing that, and they wanted to sleep, but I paid no attention. Then one evening we were studying for an exam, and I started commentating. One of the very strict teachers heard me and walked up to me. I said to myself 'now I'm in real trouble'. He came up to me, tapped me on the shoulder, and told me, 'Dean, you should take this up as a profession, because you are brilliant!' That coming from a very strict teacher, I felt really motivated."

On returning home to Zimbabwe in 1994, du Plessis followed the domestic first-class competition, the Logan Cup, where he developed his amazing art.

In 2001, he got his first chance to mix with international journalists. "It was Zimbabwe's first ever triangular series involving India and the West Indies. Cricinfo had a media team doing online updates, and a guy called Neil Manthorp said I had a good voice."

He then made his television debut in 2003 when West Indies toured Zimbabwe, getting involved in the second ODI at Bulawayo, alongside Tony Cozier, Pommie Mbangwa, Bruce Yardley and Jimmy Adams. "It was obviously very nice," he said. "TV is different from radio but I adapted quickly, fortunately."

I have never been paid for doing this. I'm doing it because I love doing it

du Plessis laments the day his country let go experienced players, which left the team heavily weakened. "It hurts me to see what has happened to our team," he said. "The rebel issue was very devastating. Losing a whole team like that was like being wiped away from the face of earth. I think the biggest loss was Sean Ervine. I know this is a big statement - but if Ervine had played Test cricket the same number of games Heath Streak played, he would have achieved more than Streak."

du Plessis refuses to blame inexperience as the cause for the Zimbabwe team's poor showing, including the recent ODI series defeat in Bangladesh. "In 1983, in our first World Cup, we beat Australia. In 1987 Dave Houghton got 142 runs, and he and Iain Butchart actually had a record stand for the ninth wicket. Bear in mind that we had no international cricket experience apart from the odd first-class match. We had no top international cricket, yet we still performed admirably.

"In 1992 Zimbabwe had no ODI and Test status, but we beat England. Andy Flower got a hundred against Sri Lanka, so it is a pathetic excuse to say this team has no experience when they have played more that 20 ODIs this year alone. Why is it that the players of those years played lesser games over a period of three years or so, and they were more competitive than the current players?"

He talks as well of an undying craving to see a full-strength Zimbabwe side again, but "if we can't get all the players back, the only way to improve is to have a lot more four-day games against top sides. We have to be competitive and even beat them, otherwise next year Tests will be ending in two days."

du Plessis currently freelances for a Zimbabwe radio station and presents a cricket TV programme. His biggest dream, to turn professional, however, remains unfulfilled.

"You cannot make a career out of broadcasting in Zimbabwe. I have never been paid for doing this. I'm doing it because I love doing it," he said. "But now I want to become professional. I'm keen to visit even more countries. If I get something elsewhere, I'm willing to leave the country I love so much."

Raised in Kadoma, a small town south-west of Harare, Dean pays tribute to his family. "If it was not for my brother Gary, I would not have known anything about the game, it's simple as that. My father has been very instrumental. He makes sure I get to the studio on time and gets me stuff from the internet. My family means a lot to me."

So let's hope to hear more of Dean du Plessis.
http://www.cricinfo.com/zimbabwe/conten ... 71583.html

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Kopje
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Re: Heartbreaking Article About Dean du Plessis

Post by Kopje »

Man i am touched...i can't believe they did this to him. This is so wrong at all levels :(

zimfan1
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Re: Heartbreaking Article About Dean du Plessis

Post by zimfan1 »

Kopje wrote:Man i am touched...i can't believe they did this to him. This is so wrong at all levels :(
I agree just shows the power that ZANU PF had in Zimbabwe cricket at the time, i just hope that for all Zimbaweans this is a thing of the past

But whats more unbelievable is that after the attack he carried on working as a commentator putting acorss his veiws as recently as the tour by Sri Lanka in december last year.

There is a man with true courage!!!

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Kopje
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Re: Heartbreaking Article About Dean du Plessis

Post by Kopje »

zimfan1 wrote:
Kopje wrote:Man i am touched...i can't believe they did this to him. This is so wrong at all levels :(
I agree just shows the power that ZANU PF had in Zimbabwe cricket at the time, i just hope that for all Zimbaweans this is a thing of the past, i think the insident occured around 2005/2006
I hope so mate, we need to clean out politics from our game. Things are starting to look good for us, i hope he comes back on tv and this time he gets paid for his services.

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tawac
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Re: Heartbreaking Article About Dean du Plessis

Post by tawac »

Dean has been one of the most vocal people against the country's cricket administration that I will give to him. Im never one whose quick to take sides but surposing all this actually happened. What are the chances of hearing Dean on radio? Not much I guess. Well I will let you knw I have heard Dean on radio recently... Lets try being positive so as to build our country and stop taking sides. I really dont understand what you mean by Dean being "one of the few whites left in the country" Where have the rest gone I wonder. Does that make him a target of some sort? Please lets get our facts right! With the franchise regime I think things look very promising. And I lot is changing due to the GPA.
CHRISTOPHER MPOFU: 'The problem was fear of failure. I used to think that when I played, if I didn't do well in one game, I would lose my place for the next one but now I've let go of that'

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