
Dance
Migration
Double
dose of music and dance for good
BY
RACHAEL CARNES
Two performances in the next two weeks span
centuries of cultural survival and thousands of miles of the music
and dance migrations that ribbon the globe.
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| Perú
Negro |
Let your ticket dollars do some good when Zimbabwean
mbira master Musekiwa Chingodza with Jennifer Kyker, Loveness Wesa
and Kgotso African Dance Theatre come together in Eugene
for Zimbabwe Live. The event benefits Tariro (www.tariro.org),a
nonprofit organization dedicated to providing hope and health for
orphaned teenaged girls whose families have been affected by HIV/AIDS
in Zimbabwe.
UNICEF says stopping the global spread of AIDS hinges
on elevating the human rights of women and girls. The World Bank
concurs, stating that women and girls' lack of education places
them at greater risk of contracting the HIV virus, due to "inequalities
in gender, power and access to resources."
According to the Global Coaltion on Women and AIDS,
"Evidence from Zimbabwe shows that among 15-18 year old girls, those
who are enrolled in school are more than five times less likely
to have HIV than those who have dropped out."
Nestled in Southern Africa between Zambia and Botswana,
Zimbabwe is home to Victoria Falls, a natural wonder of the world,
and was a center of international trade starting in the 12th century.
In the early 19th century, Ndebele people fleeing Boer Migration
settled into the landscape, which was colonized for tobacco growth
in the late 1800's by British and Europeans like Cecil Rhodes. Ensuing
white settlement and subsequent decolonization led to sharp falls
in production and economic collapse. With rampant inflation, food
and fuel shortages and routinely violent uprisings, the government's
2005 urban slum demolition, according to the UN, left 700,000 homeless.
Should dances be preserved? Do original expressions
of a culture, or the remnants of what's remembered, deserve to be
passed along to surviving generations? The Zimbabwe National Traditional
Dance Association used to serve this mission — until it was
discontinued in 2001.
In Zimbabwe's Shona language, Tariro means "hope,"
and this modest benefit and auction will feature dance, music and
poetry from some of the orphans currently supported by Tariro. The
poetry will be read by Willamette High School students. This event
takes place at 5:30 pm Saturday, March 15, at Agate Hall on the
UO campus. Tix at the door are $10, $8 stu.
And next Saturday, March 22, the Hult presents
Perú Negro, a 30-year old company founded to preserve Peru's
African heritage. Appointed as "Ambassadors of Peruvian Culture"
by their government, the group offers outreach to their own community
with a Lima-based school and junior troupe, and they continue to
share Peru's African legacy across the world.
The ancestors of Peruvian-Africans, "Mandinga,"
were brought in the 16th and 17th centuries by the tens of thousands.
Mostly from Western Africa, Angola and the Congo, they arrived in
slave ships at Peru's coast south of Lima, originally to replace
the indigenous labor force in the mines. But when the conditions
proved fatal to them, too, they were sent to sugar and cotton plantations
along the coast.
Today, the Peruvian coastal dances share similarities
to the syncopated poly-rhythms of American tap dance and jazz music,
which also share their roots in African traditions. Though the music
and lyrics are Spanish, the footwork of the zapateo, the
isolated torso and pelvis in the festejo, show off the indelible
intricacies of West African rhythms.
When a people fall victim to disease, war and economic
disparity, so too do their arts face extinction. But throughout
history, across the globe, as languages and religious traditions
are lost, somehow, perhaps due to creativity, adaptability, or sheer
determination, a few dances and songs have managed to survive. When
they're dancing or playing their music, perhaps a people remember
that once they were kings.
Perú Negro starts at 8 pm Saturday, March 22,
at the Hult. $18-30. www.hultcenter.orgor
682-5000 for tix.
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