In a 2001 play, a woman who works for this group defends it to her father, a librarian who harangues his brother’s ashes over the theft of a toy bus. In another play, a man is told about this group by a handbag-shaped crocodile named Niles. This group’s work is the subject of the memoir Country of My Skull, an Oresteia adaptation titled Molora, and the amateur-acted play The Story I Am About to Tell. The Market Theatre first staged a (*) Jane Taylor play partly titled for this organization, which uses puppets and chalk animations by William Kentridge to accompany Ubu Roi speaking before this group. This body’s proceedings form the backdrop of the first solo play by John Kani, which is titled for an oath spoken at its hearings. For 10 points, name this body that heard testimony about human rights violations in post-apartheid South Africa. ■END■
ANSWER: Truth and Reconciliation Commission [or TRC; accept Ubu and the Truth Commission] (The unnamed authors are Yaël Farber, Antjie Krog, and Duma Kumalo. The Kani play is Nothing But the Truth.)
<S, World Literature>
= Average correct buzz position