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My new friends were in the process of making a hip-hop arts movement tailored to their specific national context, a movement that could address their particular social, cultural and political aspirations.
The theatre of hip-hop in Dakar is not played only on proscenium stages with linear playscripts. It is performed on street corners, in living rooms, in community centers and under the auspices of arts organizations. AuthorJoseph G. Schloss argues that the hip-hop movement is by definition theatre: The grassroots feel and interdisciplinary strategies of hip-hop arts practice are reminiscent of revolutionary theatre practices inspired by jazz during the Harlem Renaissance and the Black Arts Movement in the United States. These movements are sampled in hip-hop arts and inspire similar arts activism around the world. Current debates over the political and ideological role of hip-hop-inspired art echo similar debates about the use of art as propaganda during the Harlem Renaissance and the Cold War.
My African colleague, theatre scholar Omofolabo Ajayi-Soyinka, sent me her observations about hip-hop-inspired arts within the larger history of liberationist theatre and arts practices on both sides of the Atlantic.
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We headed for a small hotel called Sobo Bade in Toubab Dialaw
about 55km south of the capital, Dakar. Sobo Bade is a sort of
community started in the Seventies by a man named Gerard Chenet.
People visit to take part in courses on traditional African music,
dancing, experimental theatre, sculpture, ceramics and
painting.
My son roams free all day, having long conversations with
souvenir sellers about everything from sacred baobab trees to the
end of the ivory trade. We walk along the beach, picking up plastic
waste as we go. He plays with local children, riding the waves on a
makeshift floating device made out of bottles.
Also staying at Sobo Bade was Abiodun Oyewole, one of the
founding members of The Last Poets. The band was one of the early
founders of hip-hop that rose out of the civil rights movements of
the late Sixties in Harlem. Oyewole is now a professor at Colombia
University.
The paediatric theatre based at Hpital General Idrissa Pouye (HOGIP)has been kitted out with the latest equipment and brightly coloured wall aesthetics which provide comfort to children within the hospital environment.
Research shows that half of Africa's population (1.3B) are children. It is also estimated that 85% of children in Africa will require some kind of surgical care by the age of 15. Given the anticipated population growth of Africa, there will be a significant need for paediatric surgical interventions.
Over 1.7billion children lack access to safe surgery. Every year, more children die from not getting the surgery they need than from Malaria, HIV and TB combined. By end of 2021, KidsOR will have installed 51operating rooms and provided over 43,000 life-changing surgeries.
Celebrate the year of Senegal with music, song, and dance! The College of the Arts and Global Education present Khaware (Xaware), directed by Dasha Chapman and Theresa Howard of the Department of Dance. This celebration of West African dance and music features djembe and sabar drum traditions, as well as enchanting kora music, contemporary compositions, and diverse movement techniques. The evening will highlight a rich array of approaches to Senegalese performance by both master artists and students: dance works choreographed and performed by Awa Pikine and Pape Moussa Sonko, and music by Adama Tall (drums) and Morikeba Kouyate (kora), will shine alongside choreography by Kaolack (Pape Ibrahima Ndiaye). The KSU Percussion Ensemble, directed by John Lawless of the Bailey School of Music, will accompany student dancers with traditional Senegalese rhythms, using authentic instruments for this performance. Immerse yourself in an evening of total theatre with Khaware (Xaware)!
Dakar - Management in Senegal project is holding today (31/10) its closing ceremony in Dakar, Senegal. The ceremony brings together representatives from the European Union, Senegalese authorities and international cooperation partners, such as the French, Spanish and Italian Embassies.
Based on the national strategy on border management developed in 2013, the Senegalese Government and the European Union agreed on strengthening border security and management, enhancing cooperation and developing border control and surveillance. The main objectives of the project were the facilitation of the lawful movement of people and goods, while tackling trans-border crimes along the Senegalese border with Mauritania and Mali.
Along the borders that Senegal shares with Mauritania and Mali, eight joint border crossing points (BCPs) for police and customs were built, and one joint border crossing point was renovated. These BCPs were equipped with furniture, solar panels and technical equipment. During the project, more than 250 border security officials were trained on border control and surveillance, including the detection of forged documents.
The Senegalese security forces tasked with surveillance and control received new mobility and technical equipment: 13 4x4 pick-up vehicles; 12 motorcycles; 6 speedboats; 30 digital night-vision goggles; 30 docu-boxes; endoscopes; magnifying lenses and UV lamps. At the same time, sensitizing campaigns addressed to border communities were offered by theatre groups, through sketches in local languages.
More than 1,350 people were sensitized during the activities at BCPs. Moreover, several hundred people across the villages along the border were reached by the sensitization campaigns through itinerant caravans, TV spots and radio messages.
This pilot project, funded by the EU and implemented by IOM Senegal, started in September 2014 and targeted the border with Mauritania and a portion of the border with Mali. The main objective has been to enhance integrated border management, to facilitate the free movement of people and goods, and to enforce national security.
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The initiator of the renewal of cultural ties between Russia and Senegal was Slu Akimgereeva, a graduate of the ballet department of GITIS and director of the ballet academy of the Grand Theatre of Senegal.
Competitors to Russian dancers in Senegal are Italians, Belgians and French. However, the influence of the Russian theatre school in Senegal is undeniable. Masterclasses on classical dance were conducted by Maksim Valukin, professor of the choreography department of GITIS.
The creative trip of GITIS to Dakar ended with a concert at the Grand Theatre of Senegal. Ballet students Evgeny Khandras and Ksenia Rudenko and musical theatre students Zakhar Kuts and Alessandra Romanko took to the stage. The programme included Russian folk dances, arias and duets from Russian and foreign operas. The audience received the students of GITIS with great gratitude.
"BRICS is one of the key elements of the emerging multipolar world order, which increasingly reflects the interests and aspirations of the states of both the global South and the East. We are open to strengthening cooperation with all countries expressing interest in the group's activities, we are engaged in an active dialogue in the BRICS plus/ outreach format, and are working to establish a category of partner states"
On a hot and dusty morning on January 20, 2013 in Ziguinchor, a region of southern Senegal, the capital of the region (also Ziguinchor) was waking up to a grand event being organised in the centre of the city.
Rows and rows of chairs, a stage for dignitaries, a platform for speeches, banners and sound tests all to prepare for the public declaration for the abandonment of female genital cutting (FGC) and child/forced marriage by 427 communities.
On the day of the declaration, after many months of inter-village meetings and awareness-raising caravans, the communities began with a peaceful march towards the square. Women, men, and children walked and danced down the streets of the city to the swaying rhythms of Senegalese beats. When everyone reached the square, there was more dancing and celebrating. The government delegation soon arrived and walked around the entire square together with Tostan Senegal, Tostan International, Tostan The Gambia, and all the regions involved in the regional declaration, greeting everyone.
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