Five years after dropping out, Sarah Summers returned to UCT to complete her BA. Photo Je’nine May.
Co-creator of popular web series Coloured Mentality, identity activist, filmmaker, land and housing activist, queer activist: There are many ways to describe Sarah Summers and many ways in which she has already made her mark on the world. Added to this is her story as the “comeback kid” who dropped out of university only to return years later, stronger than ever.
After matriculating from Springfield Convent School in 2008, where she’d struggled to fit in as a person of colour, Sarah enrolled at the University of Cape Town (UCT) for a BA in film production. She managed to pass the first year but at the end of the first term of the second year, she took a leave of absence.
It was a combination of stress about tuition fees (her grandmother had already taken out a loan to fund what she could), feeling disconnected from the university, and, in hindsight, an undiagnosed mental health condition that led her to drop out.
But a decade later, Sarah has one degree in hand and will graduate from UCT on 14 December with BA Honours, a successful WhatsApp series that stemmed from her research project and a long list of achievements accomplished in the time since first leaving the university.
Sarah Summers will graduate with a BA Honours from UCT’s Centre for Film and Media Studies. Photo Supplied.
After dropping out, Sarah joined a spiritual movement, hoping to find herself. But while it initially helped, it would also be the environment in which she experienced her first psychosis, which led to her exiting the movement, depressed and even more uncertain of who she was and what she was meant to do with her life.
Four years down the line, aged 23, Sarah returned to UCT to complete her undergraduate degree. Initially, she struggled with being older than her classmates, but soon her maturity paid off.
“It was easier to focus on doing the work and not take everything so personally. Before … I was quite dramatic about my own ideas,” she said.
“But by the time I went back, I was ready to just put in the effort.”
She also had the help of her partner, Kelly-Eve Koopman, and the financial burden was gone, thanks to funding from the National Student Financial Aid Scheme. Five years after starting her degree, Sarah graduated from UCT in 2015.
“She was dealing with her own mental health challenges, including a few more psychoses.”
Her graduation film, Gatvol, was initially not a resounding success.
“I got the lowest mark in the class,” she recalled.
But Gatvol was one of only two films in the class that made it to the Durban Film Festival and now, some five years after she produced it, Sarah’s film will be shown at Festival Griot, a Brazilian film festival.
In the years that followed her graduation, Sarah worked on numerous film projects, one of which focused on mental health, depression and suicide. While working on this and other socially responsive projects, she was dealing with her own mental health challenges, including a few more psychoses. But it also led her to co-create her biggest project yet.
Coloured Mentality
Wanting to know more about herself and her identity, Sarah began meeting with different people who could help her on her journey. Among these was a group of Khoi activists who were embarking on the annual Indigenous Liberation Walk. The activists invited Sarah and Kelly-Eve along but before joining the 1 000 km walk, the two decided to delve deeper into their coloured identity.
In December 2016, while sharing a coffee in Bootleggers so that they could use the free Wi-Fi, Sarah and Kelly-Eve launched Coloured Mentality, a web series and conversation platform.
“I think within the first hour, there were just thousands of shares and comments,” said Sarah.
“And within that first couple of days, we had 10 000 followers. And then the media … we were getting interviews, calls from that first day, incessantly. And this is literally just Kelly and I doing our own thing, figuring [things] out.”
The first episode of the web series Coloured Mentality. Video Coloured Mentality.
Suddenly, the two were being asked to answer “massive questions about coloured identity” while still trying to better understand themselves. They realised that what had started as an exploration of self had quickly become about more than just them.
“As soon as it became something that was beyond the two of us, we released it and decided to serve it,” said Sarah.
Since launching, Coloured Mentality has garnered over 36 000 likes and followers on Facebook; Kelly-Eve and Sarah have fielded numerous media interviews and spoken on panels alongside the likes of renowned scholar on race Associate Professor Zimitri Erasmus; and they were selected as part of the inaugural cohort of the Atlantic Fellows for Racial Equity (AFRE) in 2017.
Making a comeback
In the same year she joined AFRE, Sarah suffered another psychosis and was, around this time, diagnosed with bipolar disorder. And although she managed to travel across the world, complete the fellowship and host workshops on social media for activism, it was a difficult year.
“Oh, I had a lot of failures. I can talk for days about the failures I had that year,” she said.
Among these so-called failures was trying to set up her own media business, and another was a theatre production that didn’t go ahead. She spent many months in what she described as “bed depression”.
Things started looking up when she realised her love for digital communications and was offered the position of communications officer at the Social Justice Coalition (SJC), a mass-based social movement in the Western Cape.
Then, in 2019, while in her role at the SJC, Sarah returned to UCTʼs Centre for Film and Media Studies, this time for her honours.
Sarah Summers is also part of the We See You collective that recently occupied a luxury home in Camps Bay. Photo Lerato Maduna.
True to her journey, her research project was socially responsive. In the first semester, she focused on mental health stigma in the media, calling for discussions about how structural injustices impact mental well-being. Then, in her second semester, and linked to the first project, Sarah created Sound the Call, a WhatsApp voice note series.
“I was looking at how to create media thatʼs accessible, that creates intimate networks between … women and queer individuals, thatʼs really low in data but has an intimacy that social media lacks,” she said.
The topics of discussion all centred around care, particularly for black women. And along with a first-class mark, Sound the Call’s success is evident in it being in its third season and her receiving funding for its production.
Certainly, financial difficulties, struggles with mental health and an often gruelling journey to find herself could not stand in the way of Sarah making a comeback, over and over again.