Posted by: lisaparavisini | May 28, 2012

Indo-Trinis: 167 years of rich heritage

It has been a long time since the first set of indentured labourers set foot on Trinidad and Tobago’s shores – 167 years to the day this week to be exact. Yet, the food, fashion and jewellery, which were part of the cultural heritage they brought with them back then, remain popular among the East Indians, as Seeta Persad reports in this article for Trinidad and Tobago’s Newsday.

Today, people of all walks of life are involved in the Indian culture here in TT.
The music and dance have made great strides, evolving into modern day art enjoyed by all. The religious festivals of Divali, Eid-ul-Fitr and Phagwa are now also on the country’s general calendar.
The fashion has also taken this country by storm, and various Indian trade fairs now regularly visit here and offer low prices in jewellery and clothing, including saris, shalwar kameezs, gararas, kurtas, dhotis and shararas.
While over time a lot has changed in the Indian fashion industry, to say that Indian fashion has evolved during that time would be an understatement.
In the last few decades there has been a complete turnaround in the Indian fashion industry and it has become a global brand. Indian designers and Indian clothes have made their presence felt all across the globe.
Here in TT, the simple shalwar kameez (dress and pants with orni) and the most elaborate saris and gararas are worn at many formal functions, fashion shows and Indian weddings.
Both men and women are always searching for the perfect Indian wear for their public appearances.
The foods are also popular at the fast foods outlets or at restaurants throughout the country and big name hotels here. While the first fast food that comes to mind is doubles, there are many other Indian delicacies that are popular as well, including saheenas, aloe pies, kachries and samosas.
These fried delicacies are served with amchar or chutney made with tamarind or mangoes and seasoned with hot peppers and garlic.
As for the line of jewellery, the bangles are most popular. There are a wide variety of colours, designs and make of bangles at the current Indian trade fair at the Divali Nagar in Chaguanas or at the several Indian shops throughout the country.
Women are also going after matching jewellery with necklaces, earrings and bindi (head jewellery) to accompany their saris or shalwars at formal functions.
Among the festivals, Divali stands out as the most popular. This highly religious event attracts people of all walks of life in TT. Everywhere people light deyas as a symbol of light over darkness during the event. Also, for the festival of Phagwa or Holi, many citizens join in as they throw abeer (red liquid) on each other as a sign of victory of good over evil.
The music is by far the most influential, as it was one of the main mediums that brought people together in the early days and remains so.
Today it is a main attraction in bringing thousands of people together for events such as Chutney Soca Monarch and the annual Mother’s Day and Father’s shows and other concerts.
The simple religious groups that existed in the rural districts throughout the country have been the breeding ground for thousands of singers and dancers who have now become international stars. In examining the life of popular acts of today, one is sure to trace their roots to the simple temple services, which featured songs and dances done by the early settlers.
Today we have Raymond Ramnarine, Rakesh Yankaran, Rasika Dindial, Jit Samaroo, Mungal Patasar and many others who are now top-rated performers earning a living from the arts associated with Indian culture.
Hindu weddings are also very popular and friends and relatives look forward to three days of celebration to mark this occasion.
All through the weekend days of weddings, Indian foods are served, music is played and people look forward to wearing the latest fashions coming out of India.
The Bollywood film industry and the local soaps on Zee TV have also influenced the younger generation in fashion, music and dance. The connection between India and TT has grown significantly as many artistes are now involved in cultural exchanges.
The Indian High Commissioner to TT, Malay Mishra, has also been doing a lot work introducing new items of art and culture to TT.
At this time, NIHERST is hosting an exhibition on the science and technology of ancient and modern India.
The exhibition runs until July 20 at the Divali Nagar site in Chaguanas and is endorsed by the National Council for Indian Culture (NCIC). It is free and open to the public from 9 am to 7 pm weekdays and 1 pm to 9 pm on weekends.

For the original report go to http://www.newsday.co.tt/features/0,160822.html

Posted by: lisaparavisini | May 28, 2012

One Bermuda, 22 monarchs and 507 years

In honor of the Diamond Jubilee, another interesting entry in Dr. Edward Harris’ HERITAGE MATTERS series in Bermuda’s Royal Gazette.

Half a millennium and seven years ago, this being the Year of Our Lord 2012, a small Spanish vessel provided the platform from which humans first became aware of the existence of dry land at 65 degrees West by 32 degrees North. Piloting the ship, La Garza, and perhaps the first to spot the archipelago of coral, cedars and cahows, was the island’s namesake, Juan de Bermudez, who was making a transit from the Caribbean Sea to a homeport in Spain in the late autumn of 1505. Prior to that sighting of Bermuda, no one on Earth had any idea that it existed, all alone in the western North Atlantic, some 640 miles from the nearest landfall at what later was called Cape Hatteras.

It would, however, take another 107 years before people recruited to such a cause by the Virginia Company of London settled Bermuda, which five years earlier had planted the first successful English colony in the Americas at Jamestown. That place eventually became part of the United States with the Treaty of Paris in 1783 and thus lost its connection with the English monarchy, a relationship yet surviving at Bermuda and in the thirteen other ‘British Overseas Territories’. Of the fourteen such territories, eleven are islands or groups of islands and like Bermuda are some of the most isolated places on the globe in the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans. Like Bermuda also, some of those were not found until European sailing technology allowed vessels to explore all of the ocean seas, a very recent occurrence in human history, after the long trek out of Africa and the settlement of most parts of the Earth in recent times, geologically speaking.

Thus Bermuda’s connection with the English monarchy began in 1505, when the reigning Henry VII was in his last four years and is partly symbolized today by its flag, with is a defaced Red Ensign carrying the Union Flag in the upper left quadrant and the Island’s coat-of-arms in the right half. The flag is unique among the Overseas Territories, as most of the others fly a defaced Blue Ensign. Along the way to this anniversary time of 400 years of permanent settlement, Bermuda has passed through the reigns of 21 past monarchs, one head of ‘The Commonwealth’ of 16491669 (Oliver Cromwell) and presently celebrates the Diamond Jubilee of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. In another five years, Her Majesty will become the longest serving English monarch, surpassing the 64-year reign of her ancestor, Queen Victoria.

Henry VII established the Tudor dynasty, which began in 1485, seven years before Columbus reached the Americas, and lasted until 1603, so it spanned the 98 years when Bermuda was but a home for refugees from the wrecking of ships on its natural fortifications of reefs, along with some land crabs. In 1511, two years after Henry VIII (he of not a few wives) sat on the throne, the Island made its first appearance in graphic literature, as an image in Oviedo’s map published that year in Europe. After the short reigns of Edward VI and Mary I, a third child of Henry VIII ascended to the throne in 1558 as Elizabeth I, a position she occupied until her death in 1603, the year Captain Diego Ramirez beached his ship for repairs at Spanish Point, have the first recorded African at Bermuda, one Venturilla, among the crew. Elizabeth presided over a dramatic period of New World exploration, but showed no interest in Bermuda, as it had no gold or other goodies, as sought in the Caribbean by her adventurers such as Sir Francis Drake.

The five Tudors gave way to the six monarchs of the Stuarts, who, as the name implies, had much to do with Scotland, for James I was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots. It was during his reign that Bermuda was settled in 1612 and the significant fortifications erected that are now part of the Island’s World Heritage Site. A possibly unique gun of his son, Charles I, was discovered several years ago at Dockyard and is now restored on a replica carriage at the National Museum, given in memory of Douglas Anfossi by his friends and family. Cromwell and the ‘Commonwealth of England’ interrupted the British monarchy for eleven years, but the Stuarts returned in 1660 and completed their run into 1714 with the passing of Queen Anne.

Thereafter, a German lineage was introduced with George I, with George III reigning for sixty years (17601820) during which period what became the United States was lost to Britain: perhaps that was what drove the old boy mad, though some might demure that it should have preserved his sanity. It was in the reign of his son, William IV (18301837) that slavery was abolished through the worldwide British dominions, including Bermuda. Victoria, a granddaughter of George III began her long reign in 1837 and ushered in the period of tremendous growth in industrial activity and other developments that have come to be termed the ‘Victorian Age’. The House of Hanover ended with Edward VII in 1910, a king long in waiting through his mother’s extended monarchy.

Shortly before the beginning of the Great War, George V started the House of Windsor, of which the present monarch, Elizabeth II is a part. George V had to reside over that terrible conflict, in which some 80 Bermudians lost their lives, while his son George VI (19361952) had to cope with the Second World War, in which the island lost 35 men and one woman in service.

Until the reign of Elizabeth II, daughter of George VI, no reigning British monarch had visited Bermuda, but Her Majesty has alighted here from ship and plane on several occasions, the last in 2009 for the four hundredth anniversary of the wreck of the Sea Venture on our eastern shore. Bermuda, in fact, was the first port of call when in 1953, on the royal vessel Britannia, Her Majesty undertook a world voyage in celebration of her coronation.

As the oldest of the Overseas Territories, Bermuda has thus had a centuries-long relationship with the British monarchy and the Premier of Bermuda, the Hon. Paula Cox, JP, MP, has charged a small committee and the National Museum with the production of a book to mark that association, a volume that will naturally culminate in the period of Her Majesty’s reign and Diamond Jubilee.

The Jubilee Book Committee and the National Museum would like to thank all those members of the public who have responded to an appeal for images and artifacts of royal association and to those individuals and companies that are sponsoring the production of the volume on Bermuda’s 507 years of relationship with the British Monarchy.

Edward Cecil Harris, MBE, JP, PHD, FSA is Executive Director of the National Museum at Dockyard. Comments may be made to director@bmm.bm or 704-5480.

For the original report go to http://www.royalgazette.com/article/20120526/ISLAND09/705269951

Posted by: lisaparavisini | May 27, 2012

The Crane keeps ‘em flying back: Barbados gem since 1887

We’ve all seen pictures of a beautiful resort perched atop a cliff above an idyllic beach and it just may be The Crane (www.thecrane.com), the oldest continually-operating resort in the Caribbean, on the Atlantic coast of Barbados. And just as it has done to travellers since opening in 1887, The Crane held me under its spell, writes Aaron Saunders in this article for Calgary’s Herald.

Just eight minutes from the airport and 30 minutes from Bridgetown, it offered a complimentary rum or fruit punch while we waited to check in.

There are 23 types of accommodation at The Crane, ranging from rooms in the historic 1887 hotel to spacious Ocean View Suites that clock in at over 2,000 square feet. Our one-bedroom ocean view suite was extra-spacious at 1,176 square feet and looked out over the resort and the Atlantic Ocean. With a separate kitchen, living area, sleeping area, two bathrooms and a private patio, it was difficult to convince myself to actually leave the room and go exploring.

Each room also contains a map of the grounds as well as a full program listing the activities at the resort and on the island. We happened to stay at The Crane on a Wednesday, the date that a Village Street Fair is held in the resort’s main square.

Vendors from all around the island came to showcase their wares, ranging from hand-painted art to handcrafted shoes and sandals. There’s even a movie theatre, a general store, and an ice-cream shop on site (try the ginger mint ice cream in the homemade waffle cone – it’s delicious!)

There are two features about The Crane that I think are well worth mentioning: One is the free wireless Internet access, which still remains shockingly missing from many properties.

The other: Free international calling. No, that’s not a typo or the result of one too many trips to the Rum Shack – the Crane features IP (Internet Protocol) telephones, meaning you can call any number you’d like, free of charge. We’d love to see other properties follow in The Crane’s footsteps.

If there’s one thing I always have to do when I travel, it is to dip my foot in the ocean. The Crane makes this remarkably easy, given its location along one of the most pristine stretches of beach on Barbados.

You can take the stairs down or even a glass elevator to the beach level, where the fresh warmth of the Atlantic Ocean awaits you.

The pink-tinted sand here is so fine it feels like chalk powder beneath your feet. It’s postcard-perfect, and I had to pinch myself several times and ask, is this real?

It is – and those who don’t like their water salted will enjoy The Crane’s six pools, including special ones set aside for kids and families.

Beyond the amazing pools and the alluringly restful accommodations, it was the sense of community at The Crane that left the greatest impression on me.

We had drinks on the veranda of the 1887 Bar, looking out onto Crane Village square and the resort’s guests as they mingled and browsed through the Street Fair.

The day was fading, street lamps popped on, illuminating the square in soft, soothing light.

As The Crane’s director of marketing Joanna Robinson explained to us, many guests return here year after year to visit with friends made during previous trips. Some guests even book years ahead, staying for months at a time. And I can fully understand why.

At night, I kept the glass windows of my room open and closed the shutters, letting the warmth and the sound of the thundering Atlantic lull me to sleep – the same thing that has been bringing travellers here for over a century

For the original report go to http://www.calgaryherald.com/travel/Crane+keeps+flying+back/6672772/story.html

Posted by: lisaparavisini | May 27, 2012

VI Band Features Showtime’s Jougo in Newly Released Single

After creating a splash and a name for themselves last year, VI Band is hoping to keep their fans happy with the release of a new single titled ‘Beat Drop’, which incorporates Jougo, vocalist with five-time road march champion, Showtime Band, BVI Platinum News reports.
Lead singer for VI Band, Nigel Williams said the idea behind the new release was to produce a collaboration with a local band and thanked Jougo for his cooperation.
“We wanted to show the fans out there that VI Band is still around and we are coming bigger and better this year. The idea for this song was to get collaboration for VI Band and also pleasing the fans for both VI Band and also Showtime Band with the featuring of Jougo,” Williams stated.
He said that the release of the single is a stepping stone for the band as they seek to solidify themselves on the local scene with the release of an album sometime this year, which they hope will also gain international recognition.
Currently, the band is working on three other songs including a party mix.
“We will be producing an album this year with features and maybe a different type of genre in music, like R&B. We’re not just trying to target the Virgin Islands, but more international music. We are hoping to push this new song on many different medias out there; radio, internet and CDs.
VI Band has been together for some three years now and during an interview with BVI Platinum News last year, Williams pointed out that the reason for forming the band was the love of the Virgin Islands style of calypso and also wanting to put band members’ talents to good use in positive ways.
Last year, the band released a CD that received airplay during the August festival celebration. However, Williams had pointed out that the promotion of local bands and music is dying mainly because bands look forward to a lot of events such as the rise and shine tramp that has been reduced in a lot of ways and means.
He added that the entertainment in the Festival Village is now more international than local, but the parade is the “savior of it all”, since the community comes out to display mass colors while having fun on that day with mostly local bands.
This year for festival, Williams said the band will advocate for a few nights in the village where the local bands can perform all night.
“Our plan for this year’s festival is to bring good clean music to not just target the young, but also the older folks. We’re looking forward to entertain at our festival villages, parade, jams and jouvert. Of course we are hoping that our music for this year will be taking over the air ways because we are also looking for that road march title. Right now our fans can check out our YouTube link with this new song and look out for bigger things with this song to come for this year, because I know the fans love it and we will be pushing hard,” Williams stated.
The new song can be found on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJfVJM5rAXE

For the original report go to http://www.bviplatinum.com/news.php?page=Article&articleID=1337272364

This summer, to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Jamaican Independence, The O2 and its multiple venues including indigO2, will be transformed into a Caribbean oasis as over 50 artists take to the stage as part of Respect Jamaica 50.
The two week extravaganza, from July 25 to August 6, will include a multitude of legendary Jamaican singers, DJs, writers, comedians, actors and poets from Damian Marley and Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry to Shaggy and Jimmy Cliff showcasing the cultural depth and diversity of this esteemed nation.
Supported by the Jamaican Government, Respect Jamaica 50 will add a sprinkling of Caribbean flavour to what’s set to be a great summer for Jamaica!
Among the dozens of musicians flying in to the capital is triple Grammy award-winning reggae artist Damian Marley, the youngest son of Bob Marley. He will be delivering his trademark blend of dancehall and reggae with hits like ‘Welcome to Jamrock’ and ‘As We Enter’ to thousands of fans.
Joining them on the bill will be Junior Murvin, whose 1976 song ‘Police and Thieves’ cemented his place in reggae history, becoming an international hit covered by artists such as The Clash and Culture Club.
Another celebrated reggae artist to join the festival is dub veteran Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry who has worked with the likes of Bob Marley & The Wailers, the Beastie Boys and Animal Collective. With over half a century of music under his belt, Perry is considered one of the godfathers of the scene. Joining him on the bill is Jimmy Cliff who will be wowing the crowds with breakout hits like ‘You Can Get It If You Really Want’ and ‘Sitting in Limbo’.
For those in search of something lighthearted, some of the finest contenders in Jamaican comedy will be providing the laughs for the crowds at Proud2 July 27 ‘ August 6.
Other outstanding cultural events at Respect Jamaica 50 include Messenger: The Bob Marley Exhibition at the BME July 24 ‘ October 22. Visitors will be invited to explore a retrospective featuring personal memorabilia, candid photographs, old concert posters, records, music clips and archive video footage.
Other artists confirmed on the roster include: Shaggy, Tappa Zukie, Jamaican Legends Band, Mutabaruka, John Holt, Freddie McGregor, Tarrus Riley, Toots & The Maytals, Young Toots, Horace Andy, Morgan Heritage, Raging Fyah, Yellowman, Dennis Alcapone, Benjamin Zephaniah, U-Roy, The Abyssinians, Winston Reedy, Mad Professor, Mighty Diamonds, Leroy ‘Heptones’ Sibbles, Marcia Griffiths, Maxi Priest, Gyptian, Johnny Clarke, Derrick Morgan, Max Romeo, Jah9, Sir Lloyd Coxsone, Michael Prophet, Gaylads, Bob Andy, Fatman Hi Fi and Jah Shaka Sound System.
For more information please visit: http://www.respectjamaica50.co.uk/

Follow on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/respectjamaica50

For the original report go to http://www.music-news.com/shownews.asp?H=Jamaican-celebrates-50th-Anniversary-of-Independence-with-Damian-Marley&nItemID=52403

Posted by: lisaparavisini | May 27, 2012

Cuba Artists Look to US Collectors as New Source of Cash

For Cuban artists, U.S. collectors are providing a new source of much-appreciated cash, the Associated Press reports.

Ruben Alpizar never met the American collector who fell in love with his painting of a plummeting Icarus against a starry background, hanging on the wall of a Spanish colonial-era fortress across the bay from Havana. Nor did he get a name or a hometown, or even learn whether the buyer was a man or a woman.

It all happened quickly, starting with a phone call from a broker. “How much for the painting? Look, I think somebody wants it. I’ll call you right back.” Soon after, the phone rang again: “Sold.”

“We need more people coming from Gringoland,” Alpizar said with a smile, not a hint of derision in his voice as he employed a term that can be either affectionate or pejorative depending on the context. “They pay the price you ask.”

The streets of the Cuban capital are, in fact, awash with American art pilgrims during the monthlong Biennial, a showcase connecting local contemporary artists with well-heeled foreign collectors – key clients in a country whose citizens have little real purchasing power.

Alpizar, for one, would not say how much his painting sold for, but offered that his work normally goes for between $3,000 and $15,000, a windfall in a country where most people earn the equivalent of $20 a month.

The Americans are arriving in larger numbers because of the Obama administration’s relaxation of U.S. embargo travel rules. They say they see a chance to explore the unknown and look for the ultimate conversation piece to hang on the living room wall.

“I think there is a mystique and the association with the ‘time-capsule island’ and all that’s inaccessible,” said Rachel Weingeist, an adviser to Shelley and Donald Rubin on their Cuban art collection. The couple’s New York-based Rubin Foundation promotes the arts and humanitarian causes.

“Frankly we haven’t had much access until recently,” Weingeist said.

The Americans say they’re impressed by the island’s sophisticated fine arts scene compared to those in other countries in the Caribbean and elsewhere. Auctions by Christie’s and Sotheby’s have firmly cemented Cuban art in the U.S. consciousness, such as this week’s sale of a painting by the late surrealist Wilfredo Lam for $4.56 million.

“There’s so much heart. It’s very intense. It’s about a sense of place,” said Jennifer Jacobs of Portland, Oregon, who led a private group of 15 collectors from Seattle to the Biennial. “It really spoke to me personally.”

Terry Hall, an art collector and accountant from Gurnee, Illinois, just south of the Wisconsin border, said she was surprised by the variety she saw.

Cuban art embraces diverse themes and styles, and even ventures into the political. One piece on display at the Biennial, shaped like a mailbox, has a slot with large, sharp bloody fangs and an invitation for “Complaints and Suggestions.”

“I came down here expecting art that was more colorful, more Caribbean in flavor and what I found is more international, more cutting-edge, more ambitious art,” said Hall. “I’ve really been very excited about it. I think it rivals anything I’ve seen anywhere else as far as the execution, the expertise and the ambitious ideas.”

More than 1,300 American artists, curators, collectors and fans have been accredited for the Biennial, organizers say, an unusually large delegation from what some say is the most important market for Cuban art. Unlike with other island goods, it’s perfectly legal for Americans to buy Cuban art, which is covered under an exemption to the 50-year-old U.S. embargo allowing the purchase of “informational materials.”

“They’re coming by the busload,” said Alpizar, who just two weeks into the Biennial had sold a half-dozen works including the piece featuring Icarus, entitled “Home.” Another painting that was snapped up by an American collector, “My Ark,” was a whimsical cross between a stern of a boat and a religious tableau, with famous historical figures peeking out from the windows: Ernest Hemingway, Karl Marx, Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo and Pope John Paul II.

While Cuban emigrant artists living in Miami sometimes struggle to be noticed, artists who remain on the island enjoy the cachet of providing a kind of forbidden fruit for U.S. collectors. People on both sides of the exchange say the mutual affinity exists not despite but because of the five decades of geographical proximity and political animosity.

Many collectors are Cuban-Americans, perhaps eager to acquire a link to their lost homeland. Others are patrons from big cities such as New York, San Francisco and Seattle that are more open to detente.

“There’s a very easy connection between us. The American public … has a very special sensitivity to Cuban art,” said Carlos Rene Aguilera, who exhibited a dozen paintings inspired by black holes, string theory and other scientific mysteries, hauled all the way from the eastern city of Santiago. “Maybe it’s because of curiosity about each other’s history. Maybe it’s because we are neighbors and there is a messy relationship between our countries, so this creates interest.”

So great is that interest that Americans are often willing to shell out the asking price with little background research, and with a little luck, even junior artists can command eye-popping prices. Tales abound about fourth-year university students selling pieces for $15,000, equal to the prices commanded by Alpizar, an established artist whose work has been shown in dozens of individual and collective exhibitions over a 23-year career.

“It’s what the market will bear, and why not shoot for the moon?” Weingeist said. “All it takes is somebody feeling giddy who’s got the money for something they like.”

The transactions are usually handshake agreements to wire money to bank accounts holding international currencies that many artists prefer to keep in Spain, the Netherlands or Canada, rather than the local bank accounts for Cuban pesos used only on the island. The seller then ships carefully wrapped paintings to overseas addresses.

Galleries are cut out of their traditional middleman role, giving collectors the sense that they’re getting a better deal. The arrangement also brings buyers in direct contact with the artists as they go knocking on the doors of home studios.

Artists say the Biennial is a crucial time to build their names and establish those contacts.

“I’ve collected a ton of business cards,” said artist Tamara Campo, whose ode to the world financial crisis is installed in a bunker of La Cabana fortress. It features a wave of some 650 banknotes fashioned from fragrant cedar cascading from the ceiling into a jumbled pile on the floor.

“A lot of people want to talk to me,” Campo said. “I have to check my email, because it’s been days.”

For the original report go to http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/lifestyle/2012/05/26/cuba-artists-look-to-us-collectors-as-new-source-cash/#ixzz1w2Do0xko

Physically ripped and emotionally expansive, the Haitian dance troupe Ayikodans returned to Miami and the Adrienne Arsht Center on Friday evening. The swell of emotion that surrounded the troupe’s performance there a year ago, as community leaders gathered to support a company on the verge of collapse after the Haitian earthquake, has leveled off somewhat. And that made it easier to look at the troupe and its work—as Jordan Levine writes in this review for The Miami Herald.

Choreographer/director Jeanguy Saintus’ nine dancers perform with a physical and emotional intensity that makes them seem always about to explode. Lean, narrow-framed and muscular to a degree exceptional even for the dance world, they’re built like greyhounds — but with the ferocity of tigers. Add powerful live drumming, and Ayikodans has a terrifically intense — and at times overwhelming — impact.

Saintus created Anmwey Ayiti Manman! (Cry Haiti Mother) right after the 2010 earthquake, as he and the three dancers he was able to gather grappled with the terrible event. The mesmerizing Linda Isabelle Francois is a Haiti mother figure, but she’s no maternal tower of strength — she’s as tortured and uncertain as her trembling offspring, Johnnoirry St. Phillippe and Makenson Israel Blanchard. Barbed wire drapes the bare concrete wall at the back of the Carnival Studio Theater, and tops two walls covered with newspapers on each side (Haiti hemmed in by bad news), and the sounds of wind, ominous rumbles and singer James Germain’s plaintive vocals add to the bleakness.

The men scramble on the floor and clutch Francois’ legs, cover their gaping mouths in a silent howl, hurl themselves at the walls and try to climb over. Francois stretches arms and legs in spasmodic pleading, then curls into a ball, unable to help herself or them. At the end she puts her neck into a noose hanging from the ceiling, then jerks it down, and hurls it to the ground in defiant, frustrated rage as the lights go out — a moment so unnerving and strange the audience didn’t know how to react. Ayiti Manman is so raw that it can seem like therapeutic more than artistic expression, an unmediated outpouring of emotion.

Danse de l’araignee (Dance of the Spider), a new work commissioned by Arsht Center, was passionate in a more physical and exhilarating way. Inspired by Gede Zarenyen, a Haitian vodou spirit, and by spiders themselves. Saintus doesn’t shy from creepy-crawly imagery or movement — Danse de L’Araignee seethes with aggressive, coiling, unthinking energy, and even touches of cartoony horror. The nine dancers wear ghostly grey-black lip and eye makeup, and early on carry metal bowls on their heads, where reflected red lights look like buggy eyes. (Al Crawford, lighting designer for the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, donated his talent for dramatic lighting.)

But what mostly emerges from Araignee is a surging collective power, driven by five drummers pounding out incendiary, rapid and complex rhythms, and Germain’s soaring, moaning, raw gospel voice. The dancers, in Malou Cadet and Miko Guillaume’s tight briefs or slinky black dresses, writhe and crawl and roll over each other, reaching hands clutched like claws, taut legs snaking up by their ears, eager to attack or merge. The women — Francois, Cassandra Woolley Dolce, and Sephora Germain — stalk and snake their torsos. Steven Vilsaint and Emmanuel Pierre hang from a suspended ladder, seeming to turn themselves inside out. The dancers explode in leaps and (in the case of the astonishing Vilsaint) flips in the air, then rocket to the floor. The dancers’ intensity and force are spectacular, and Saintus brings them and Araignee to a wild level of animal intensity and energy. It’s thrilling — breathtaking even — but also exhausting, like a ritual that lifts you up even as it wrings you out.

For the original report go to http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/05/26/2818858/haitian-dance-troupe-ayikodans.html#storylink=cpy

Posted by: lisaparavisini | May 27, 2012

Barbados: Take agriculture to the next level

Abandoning the agricultural sector in Barbados would be a mistake, rather new policies should be put in place to take this sector to the next level—Barbados’ Advocate reports.

That is the view of chairman of the National Agricultural Commission, Dr. Chelston Brathwaite, who delivered the lecture entitled “The Critical Importance of the Agricultural Sector to the Sustainable Economic Growth in Barbados” at the Men’s Educational Support Association (MESA) meeting held at the St. Michael School, Martindales Road, St. Michael on Wednesday night.

“There are those in our society who believe that we should abandon agriculture and invest our energies and resources in a true service economy based on tourism and financial services,” said Dr. Brathwaite. Disagreeing with this point of view, Dr. Brathwaite stated that “it would be a political, economic, social and environmental mistake to abandon agriculture”.

Among the reasons he provided for retaining the agricultural sector were maintaining the beauty and environmental health of this nation and producing foods locally would reduce the food import bill and amount of foreign exchange leaving the country.

He added that local crops instead of a diet of fast food can lead to a change in the Barbadian diet, reduce chronic non-communicable diseases and lead to food and nutrition security.

Dr. Brathwaite stressed that producing bulk sugar at a cost of $3000 a tonne and selling it at just over $900 per tonne is no longer profitable for Barbados.

Calling for this aspect of colonialism to end, he said that what resources should be focused on is the production of food such as root crops, fish, fruits and vegetables and Blackbelly lamb, not on sugar to export to overseas markets.

The Director Emeritus of the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture said new policies are needed to change the agricultural sector but this can only occur and succeed if there is a national commitment to the effort.

He said there must be an introduction of new technologies; new marketing arrangements as farmers in particular need a wholesale market to sell their produce; a market information system; an enhanced technical and managerial capacity of farmers since farmers need to see their work as a business.

Dr. Brathwaite also suggested that there be new investment in food storage and green house technology. He added that corn and cassava should be grown locally for animal feed.

“We need a modern Ministry of Agriculture or a Ministry of Food that focuses on food production, quality and safety,in addition to more research on local food needs,” he contended.

As he called for greater linkages between the agricultural and tourism sector in terms of serving more local cuisine using locally grown crops, he said “those who think we should abandon the agricultural sector should think again.”

Dr. Brathwaite also said that praedial larceny is a serious issue that needed to be addressed in this society.

Speaking on this issue during the discussion session, director of the National Council for Science and Technology, Dr. Lennox Chandler noted what is needed is enforcement.

“When you look back over the years, very few people have been prosecuted for praedial larceny. It is not taken seriously enough. People are crying out for this new piece of legislation but we already have legislation on the books that we need to enforce. There is no seriousness on the part of the police to enforce the legislation, so whatever legislation is put in place and it is not enforced, it won’t work,” said Dr. Chandler.

For the original report go to http://www.barbadosadvocate.com/newsitem.asp?more=local&NewsID=24916

Posted by: lisaparavisini | May 27, 2012

Tom Wolfe film follows master satirist in Miami

A CBS report on Tom Wolfe’s collaboration with Cuban-born Oscar Corral.

Oscar Corral thought someone was yanking his chain the day the phone rang at The Miami Herald newsroom and a soft-spoken voice with just a hint of southern drawl said: “Oscar Corral, this is Tom Wolfe.”
That would be master journalist-turned-novelist Tom Wolfe.
For decades Wolfe had traversed the country in his trademark white suit and fedora, sending up the idiosyncrasies of rich and poor in novels like the New York City-based “The Bonfire of the Vanities,” and “A Man in Full,” set in Atlanta. Now the satirist had his sights on Miami, and he wanted then-reporter Corral’s help.
Over the course of several years beginning in 2008, Corral became a tour guide and translator for Wolfe, taking the famed author from Miami’s raucous Columbus Day Regatta to Little Haiti’s Santeria shops. With Wolfe’s approval, Corral began filming their escapades. The result is the documentary “Bloodlines,” which follows Wolfe as he researches his latest novel to be released this October.
Wolfe told The Associated Press he came to Miami to write a book about immigration: “Not how people get in, but how they get along with one another, and sometimes how they don’t.”
The book, “Back to Blood,” promises to be a “Bonfire”-like take on Miami, with Wolfe’s familiar themes of class, race, family, corruption and of course sex. Among the characters are a Cuban-American nurse and cop, a French sex doctor and a journalist on the trail of a Russian-mob-comes-to-Miami story.
The documentary — Corral’s first — is both an ode to the reclusive literary giant and a voyage through the best and worst of wacky Miami.
“It was like hanging out with Yoda,” said Corral of accompanying Wolfe on more than half a dozen trips to Miami.
“After the first trip, I thought to myself, ‘I am watching literary history unfold,’” he said. “Tom Wolfe is pounding the pavement as he has throughout his career… and it’s a great story for anyone about how good writing comes to life.”
The film captures rare, candid moments with Wolfe. He is soaked during the regatta as bikini-clad revelers boat-hop across Biscayne Bay. He checks out white suits at thrift shops, visits new immigrant homes and rubs elbows with Miami’s elite. The film, which Corral wrote, directed and produced, also features interviews from Wolfe’s longtime friend, former New York and Miami Police Chief John Timoney. He served as the model for a character in Wolfe’s now classic, 1987 expose on race and class, “The Bonfire of the Vanities.”
Describing Wolfe’s latest choice in settings, Timoney jokes in the film: “New York is all about money. Washington is all about power. L.A. is all about fame, and Miami is all about sex.”
Florida-based writer Carl Hiaasen, of whom Wolfe is a fan, also frequently takes aim at the city’s peculiarities, once claiming certain events were so impossible to believe, they were, “beyond Tom Wolfe.”
Wolfe calls the city and its surroundings remarkable.
“Miami is the only city in the world where people from another country and another culture have taken over though the ballot box. And it’s all happened in slightly over one generation,” he told the AP.
He said Corral introduced him to areas he had no idea about.
“Oscar will go anywhere and ask anybody anything, which is one of the main keys of being a good reporter,” he said, adding Corral also instinctively knew when to turn off the camera so as not to interfere with an interview.
When Wolfe first arrived in Miami, he knew little about the grittier aspects of life in the Magic City, or about how Cuban immigrants no longer came to Little Havana but now flocked to the suburbs of Hialeah, which lays a major role in the book. Once famous for its racetrack, the city is now a mix of mini-mansions on undersized lots and one-bedroom, concrete homes where newly arrived Cubans cram together.
Corral says he had long thought Miami would be the ideal setting for a book by Wolfe, whose past work also includes nonfiction like “The Right Stuff,” and “The Electric Acid Kool-Aid Test.”
“It’s almost unreal to outsiders. It might seem preposterous, but it’s real,” he said.
Corral, himself a Cuban-American, should know. He received death threats, and his family was forced to leave their home for two months after he wrote a 2007 expose about fellow reporters who were also getting paid by the federal government for their work for the U.S.-backed Marti broadcasts. The broadcasts are beamed into Cuba and often take aim at the Cuban government.
When Corral heard about Wolfe’s desire to write about Miami, he took a chance and wrote him a letter, including the experience. That led to the phone call.
Corral says it wasn’t easy filming the sometimes elusive Wolfe, who would pop into town at a moment’s notice or fly in and not call at all. He hopes some of Wolfe’s techniques come through in the film.
“He’s a journalist at heart. He listens. He wants to know your position, and why you take it. He is the master at getting people to reveal themselves,” Corral said.
Corral plans to release the film, now in post-production, in time with for the book’s expected October release date. He aims to provide a new glimpse into his beloved home town, and he hopes to attract a new generation of multimedia enthusiasts to his literary idol.
Online: www.tomwolfemovie.com

For the original report go to http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505245_162-57441779/tom-wolfe-film-follows-master-satirist-in-miami/

Posted by: lisaparavisini | May 27, 2012

How not to eat the wrong frog

Panamanian fringe-lipped bats eat frogs even though gulping the wrong one in the dark could be fatal—as Susan Milius writes in this article for Science News.

New high-speed video of the tropical bats swooping toward various frogs and toads shows that the predators deploy a sequence of senses to update their judgment of prey during an attack to avoid eating a toxic amphibian, says behavioral ecologist Rachel Page of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Gamboa, Panama. The bats proved hard to fool even when researchers played the call of a favorite edible frog while offering up another species, Page and her colleagues report in an upcoming Naturwissenschaften.

In the tropics, various bats will nab a frog if given half a chance, but only the fringe-lipped species (Trachops cirrhosus) is known to follow frog calls, such as the “tuuun chuck” call of the túngara frog (Engystomops pustulosus).

In tests in Panama, Page and her colleagues found that fringe-lipped bats turned aside in mid-air if researchers broadcast enticing túngara calls but offered up a cane toad (Rhinella marina), which is way too big for a bat to carry off.

The possibility that incoming bats might use echolocation to avoid overweight prey intrigues bat specialist Brock Fenton at the University of Western Ontario in Canada. Early studies of these bats largely ignored possible last-minute echolocation, he says.

The new tests also revealed that playing túngara calls while offering a right-sized but toxic leaf litter toad (Rhinella alata) led bats to catch and then drop the unpleasant prey. (Both bats and toads survived.)

This reaction fits with research on certain moth-hunting bats, says John M. Ratcliffe at the University of Southern Denmark. These moth specialists avoid a toxic tiger beetle when they hear its clicking noises but become much more likely to pick it up if researchers mute the clicks.

For the original report go to http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/340989/title/How_not_to_eat_the_wrong_frog

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