Sociolingo’s Africa

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Archive for the 'CULTURE' Category


Mali, Guinea: Ali Farka Toure lives on!

Posted by sociolingo on May 8, 2008

Posted by sociolingo on May 8, 2008

I know a lot of you guys already know this, but I am finding out what a rich source of cultural material YouTube is! Whilst trying to get together a post on a Jazz festival in Guinea in honour of the Malian guitarist Ali Farka Toure, who sadly died a couple of years ago, I found a lot of YouTube clips. Born in the village of Nafunke near Timbuktu he never forgot his northern Mali roots, and in fact was ignored for some time in Mali because he was regarded as a ‘northerner’. In 2004 he was elected mayor of Niafunke. He is considered the pioneer of ‘Mali Blues‘ and his jazz style is appreciated all over the world. He won 2 Grammy awards for Talking Timbuktu and again in 2006, for his album in collaboration with another famous Malian musician, Toumani Diabate, In the Heart of the Moon (both links have clips you can play).

I did a little searching. I found this interesting video of the great man, posted by pusanguy, not just playing but giving his thoughts about ‘African Americans’. I hope you find it encouraging!

Well, back to the Jazz festival. According to APA News it is being held in Guinea at the Franco-Guinean Centre. It started on 7th will end on 11th May. The Guineans are honouring Farka Toure

because had given up attending a cultural festival in Nice, France, where he was to earn €80,000, to take part in the 2nd edition of the Jazz Festival

The following link can only be listened to through YouTube, I can’t embed it. But is is such a seminal recording of Farka Toure I really wanted to bring it to your attention. It was recorded at the Segou festival in 2005. The other instrument being played is the Ngoni or xalam and is played by Bassekou Kouyate. Enjoy!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSWuzp_0hn4&feature=related

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ARTS AND CRAFTS, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African music, Guinea, Mali | No Comments »

Nigeria: The search for a true Igbo National Attire

Posted by sociolingo on May 5, 2008

I’ve been discovering more African bloggers. The Long Harmattan Season is a Nigerian blogger who writes informed comment about many aspects of life.

One article that caught my eye was about The search for a true Igbo National Attire

In Nigeria, there is no better way to identify people from the different ethnic regions than through their dress. Some of these dresses have since been elevated to the status of national dresses and are worn by members of other ethnic groups at weddings and other public functions.

Read the full article

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ANTHROPOLOGY, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African dress, CULTURE, Nigeria | No Comments »

Nigeria: Igbo spirituality

Posted by sociolingo on May 5, 2008

The Igbo are a people group of Nigeria. An interesting article about Igbo spirituality can be found on Assata Shakur Forums.

Igbo spirituallity

by Onyi Anyiwo

The spiritual system of Ndi Igbo (the Igbo people) is one of the oldest on Earth. The roots of Igbo spirituality is the same as the roots of every other African one; that is, in Africa. Igbo spirituality predates Islam, Christianity, Judaism and every other -ism that one can think of. If there are any similarities between the traditional practices of the Igbo and those of other religions, it is because they were borrowed from our ancestors, and not the other way around.

The ancient spirituality of the Ndi Igbo, like most other traditional African spiritual systems, has been misunderstood and demonized unjustly. Evangelical churches, with the help of Nollywood movies, have helped to paint a negative picture of traditional Igbo spirituality that dates back to the arrival of the Europeans in Alaigbo (Igboland). It is quite unfortunate that most of the people who condemn Igbo spirituality do not know much about it, and base their most of their information from the lies of the very same people who wanted to destroy it and everything about our culture. While all the misconceptions about the traditional practices cannot be corrected in one article, this introduction to Igbo Spirituality will help clear a few things up.

Read the full article

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ANTHROPOLOGY, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African religion, African traditional religion, CULTURE, Nigeria | No Comments »

African blogs: The 52nd Venice Biennale: The African Pavilion and Malick Sidibé’s Achievement

Posted by sociolingo on May 5, 2008

A new blog, The Face of Afrika, is aiming to focus on positive  news celebrating the continent of Africa.  Please support this initiative.

One recent post about The 52nd Venice Biennale: The African Pavilion and Malick Sidibé’s Achievement caught my eye:

The Venice Biennale’s prestigious Golden Lion lifetime achievement award was presented to Malick Sidibé, from Mali. The artist made history. Not only was he the first photographer to be so honored but Sidibé was the first African artist to ever win the award.

Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement:
Malick Sidibé, born in Soloba, Mali, in 1936. Lives and works in Bamako, Mali.

Photo credit AFP

Read the full post


Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ARTS AND CRAFTS, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN LIFE, AFRICAN NEWS, African blogs, African photography, African prizes, LIFE, Mali, NEWS, Positive news | 1 Comment »

African archaeology Nigeria: Lost Yoruba kingdom

Posted by sociolingo on May 3, 2008

An older article but one which may be of interest:

Source: New York Times

Eredo Journal; A Wall, a Moat, Behold! A Lost Yoruba Kingdom

]

By NORIMITSU ONISHI

Published: September 20, 1999

Off the main road in this unassuming town, a footpath that snakes through the thick bush and trees of the Nigerian rain forest leads to the remains of what is certainly one of the largest monuments in sub-Saharan Africa: a 100-mile-long wall and moat whose construction began a millennium ago.

Read the full article

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGY, AFRICAN ARCHITECTURE, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN HISTORY, CULTURE, Earthen architectural heritage, HISTORY, Nigeria | No Comments »

African films: Timbal Fest Calls for Entries - Deadline: May 5, 2008

Posted by sociolingo on May 2, 2008

Timbal Fest Calls for Entries - Deadline: May 5, 2008

We are pleased to announce our new event, Timbal Fest.  We are feature films by Africans and/or set in Africa.  We worked with local sponsors to help cover costs so we could eliminate the entry fees.

The Timbal Fest is scheduled for June 6 - 8 in Philadelphia. We are accepting submissions until Monday, May 5th.  Each filmmaker may submit only one project for review.  There is no entry fee.  The screening schedule will be announced by May 19th.  The entry form is available at www.TimbalFest.com. We hope you will help us spread the word about this new event.

We think it will be an amazing opportunity for your participating filmmakers.

Timbal Fest
June 6-8, 2008
Philadelphia, PA
contact@timbalfest.com
http://www.timbalfest.com
http://www.myspace.com/timbalfest

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African film festival, African films | No Comments »

Mali human rights: New family law debated

Posted by sociolingo on May 2, 2008

Cross-posted from Sociolingo’s Mali

Posted by sociolingo on May 2, 2008

The following article shows some aspects of Mali democracy in action.  It seems to be a tenet of Mali democracy that all interested parties have a say and are consulted in the drafting of legal documents. However, having a ’say’ or being able to express and opinion does not necessarily mean that demanded changes will be agreed. In this case some Islamic organisations are opposing a family law bill particularly in the areas of inheritance and the recognition of religious marriages.

The family law bill, which was first drafted back in 1996, is being hotly debated at the moment in Mali. It ratifies international protocols that Mali has already signed up for including the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights, and the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women. The driving force behind the latest attempt to get this bill passed is a group of women parliamentarians who have got together with lawyers and human rights activists and are  pushing this bill back to prominence again.

Source: IRIN NEWS

MALI: New family law faces opposition from Muslim organisations

BAMAKO , 2 May 2008 (IRIN) - A new family law code waiting to be adopted by Parliament is facing opposition from some Islamic groups who claim it goes against Islamic principles, particularly when it comes to proposed changes to the country’s marriage laws.

The new code aims to bring more equality between men and women in relation to marital status, parental rights, ownership of land and inheritance, wages and pensions, employment laws and education.

“The code is a significant step towards gender equality while reflecting the reality of Malian culture today,” the minister of women, children and the family, Maiga Sina Damba told IRIN.

The current code has seen little change since it was first passed in 1962, three years after Mali gained independence, and according to Oumor Cissé, communications adviser at the ministry for women, children and the family, it is heavily influenced by “outmoded” French laws, and a strict reading of Koranic texts.

Opposition

When the draft code went out to civil society groups for the latest round of consultations in early 2008, some Islamic groups started campaigning hard against the proposed changes to marriage laws, inheritance laws and property rights.

In early April the Islamic Salvation Association (AISLAM) called for the bill to be withdrawn from Parliament.

“All the proposals we made in the consultation phase of the new code were rejected,” said Mohamed Kimbiri, president of AISLAM.

The most controversial sticking points relate to shifts in marriage laws. Today in Mali traditional or ‘religious marriages’ as opposed to civil marriages, are legally accepted but the new code will cease to legally recognise religious marriages.

“Despite much opposition to this change, legalising religious marriages has been dropped from the bill altogether,” Kimbiri complained to IRIN.

But Parliamentarian Mountaga Tall elected in Segou a town north of Bamako, said religious or ‘traditional’ marriages deny some women their basic rights.

“Widows who have only had a traditional marriage are legally excluded from any inheritance rights and their children must go through expensive, lengthy and often humiliating procedures to inherit the basic family allowances due to them.”

In defiance of the soon-to-be-adopted law, Islamic groups are continuing to issue marriage certificates.

“For the moment, the issue is unresolved. But if [these marriages] go ahead it will be in violation of the law, and the marriage certificate will not be legal. No one can appropriate a power that is not legally bestowed,” said Cissé.

Further controversy

In another vein, under the current law when two people marry if they commit to monogamy they must stick to it in theory, but in reality a husband can re-marry without the consent of his wife.

“Men can circumvent the law by making a new marriage without any legal consequences,” said Daouda Cissé, a legal adviser to the women’s ministry.

The code also gives more inheritance rights to illegitimate children, and enables them to choose either their mother’s or their father’s name, but according to Kimbiri, “Islam can not accept that. [Illegtimate children] can only inherit their mother’s name, they do not have a right to their father’s.”

And finally, some clerics are concerned about changes the new code makes to giving couples joint rights to land and property - currently separate rights are maintained for property. But one Imam told IRIN, “under Islamic law spouses must accept separation of ownership of possessions.”

Compromise solution?

The code has already faced many delays and some fear it will stagnate altogether. Redrafting began in 1996 but it was slow to gain momentum in Parliament.

“Many Parliamentarians didn’t want to see change. or else they didn’t bother to read it,” Oumor Cissé told IRIN.

But in 2007 a group of women Parliamentarians - there are about a dozen, said Cissé - formed a group with lawyers and human rights activists to defend the code’s changes and to push it through Parliament.

“If Mali wants to be a fully-functioning democracy it is important to pass this code,” Omar Touri, head of a women’s rights network, Association of Women’s NGOs (CAFO), told IRIN. “People have to change their behaviour and they have to accept change.”

The code brings Mali in line with a number of international protocols it has signed up to, including the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights, and the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.

Given this, she said, “We have no choice but to pass it.”

But Abdoulaye Dembélé, deputy of the National Assembly, thinks it much more likely that a compromise deal will have to be struck, ensuring yet more delays.

“In this atmosphere of misunderstanding it is difficult for deputies to vote for this code at the risk of provoking a mass-uprising. We have to take into account the concerns and aspirations of all groups before passing it through Parliament.”

sd/aj/nr

[END]

© IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.irinnews.org

Special IRIN Zimbabwe coverage: http://www.irinnews.org/InDepthMain.aspx?InDepthId=71&ReportId=77476

[This item comes to you via IRIN, the humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations or its Member States. Reposting or reproduction, with attribution, for non-commercial purposes is permitted. Terms and conditions: http://www.irinnews.org/copyright.aspx

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN POLITICS, African Islam, African civil society, African democracy, African human rights, African marriage, African religion, Mali, POLITICS | No Comments »

Tanzania: Albinos fight back

Posted by sociolingo on May 1, 2008

Source: BBC NEWS

Tanzania’s first albino MP has told the BBC of her surprise at being nominated by the president - and her determination to fight the discrimination that she and other people with albinism suffer.

Twenty people with albinism have been murdered in the past year in Tanzania, where there is a widespread belief that the condition is the result of a curse.

Read the full story

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ANTHROPOLOGY, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN LIFE, AFRICAN POLITICS, African traditional religion, African women, CULTURE, LIFE, POLITICS, Tanzania | No Comments »

African anthropology: Niger calls for regional joking kinship week in Africa

Posted by sociolingo on April 26, 2008

Source: APA
Niger calls for regional joking kinship week in Africa

APA-Niamey (Niger) Niger intends to launch a regional joking kinship week involving all African countries which have this social phenomenon, Niger culture minister, Oumarou Hadary, announced Thursday evening.

Speaking at the integration night of Niger communities which closed the first national joking kinship week (18-24 April), Hadary said Niger would “endeavour for a better participation of other sub regional countries in order to establish an African joking kinship week whose capital will be Niamey,” he underlined.

Read the full article

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ANTHROPOLOGY, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, CULTURE, Niger | No Comments »

Academic paper:Ubuntu and the globalisation of Southern African thought and society

Posted by sociolingo on April 26, 2008

Source: Shikanda.net
2002 Wim van Binsbergen

Abstract

Set against the background of the author’s personal intellectual and political itinerary, the argument explores the contents, the format and societal locus of the concept of ubuntu as propounded by academic philosophers, managers and politicians in Southern Africa today. The concept’s utopian and prophetic nature is recognised. This allows the author to see a considerable positive application for the concept at the centre of the globalised, urban societies of Southern Africa today. Ubuntu philosophy is argued to constitute not a straight-forward emic rendering of a pre-existing African philosophy available since times immemorial in the various languages belonging to the Bantu language family. Instead, ubuntu philosophy is a remote etic reconstruction, in an alien globalised format, of a set of implied ideas that do inform aspects of village and kin relations in many contexts in contemporary Southern Africa. The historical depth of these ideas is difficult to gauge. Their format differs greatly from the academic codifications of ubuntu. After highlighting the anatomy of reconciliation, the role of intellectuals, and the globalisation of Southern African society, the argument concludes with an examination of the potential dangers of ubuntu: mystifying real conflict, perpetuating resentment (as in the case of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission), and obscuring the excessive pursuit of individual gain.

Read the full paper

Posted in ACADEMIC, AFRICA, AFRICAN ANTHROPOLOGY, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, African papers reports, African philosophy, CULTURE | No Comments »

Sudan archaeology: Mysterious church and palace from the beginning of the 1st millennium A.D. discovered

Posted by sociolingo on April 26, 2008

Source: Science and Scholarship in Poland

Mysterious church and palace from the beginning of the 1st millennium A.D. discovered by Polish archaeologists in Sudan

At the beginning of this year, archaeologists from Warsaw University, headed by Dr Bogdan Żurawski discovered the remains of an Early Christian church and an even older palace. “During research in the area of Selib, a village located on the right bank of the Nile, between the 4th and 3rd cataract, the remains of a build ing erected on the plan of a huge rectangle were found. It soon turned out that this was one of the most unique churches found in the area of ancient Nubia, that is modern Sudan” - Dr Zuzanna Wygnańska, editor of “Archewieści Centrum Archeologii Śródziemnomorskiej” (Archaeo-new from the Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology) informed. Thanks to geophysical research and aerial photographs made from a kite, it was possible to establish that a circular building eight metres in diameter made from red brick was adjacent to the main building.

Read the full article

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGY, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN HISTORY, CULTURE, HISTORY, Sudan | No Comments »

France returns stolen treasures to Burkina Faso

Posted by sociolingo on April 21, 2008

Source: Yahoo News

France returns stolen treasures to Burkina Faso: minister

Fri Apr 18, 3:07 PM ET

France has returned to Burkina Faso a haul of stolen archaeological treasures discovered in a northern French port, the Burkinabe culture minister told AFP Friday.

Filippe Sawadogo said 262 items of “national archaeological and cultural significance” to the landlocked west African nation were returned via the French embassy in Ouagadougou on Wednesday.

He praised the “perspicacity” of French customs officers at the French city of Rouen, on the River Seine, for the seizure in December 2007 of ancient ceramic, stone and bronze materials dating back to 1,300 BC.

Sawadogo said they had been stolen by a French couple, adding that France returning the pieces to Burkina Faso’s national museum was “a sign of the good cooperation which should exist between our countries”.

The trafficking of cultural heritage is not new, with Burkinabe authorities seizing 200 statuettes in September 2004 at Ouagadougou airport as they were about to be transported illegally to Europe.

French customs also intercepted 669 such items from Mali at Paris’ main Charles de Gaulle airport in 2007 along with further treasures from Niger, cultural commissioner Jean Claude Dioma told the Sidwaya newspaper.

“We were lucky, but at the same time, it’s a worrying development, because it shows there are people who are organised and who work this kind of trafficking at a very high level,” said France’s ambassador to Burkina Faso, Francois Goldblatt, in the newspaper’s report.

“I’m not up to speed with the exact legal position, but it is clear that under international conventions and the laws of France, those found guilty of this kind of trafficking face being fined at the least, with prison a possibility in the most serious cases.”

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN CULTURE, African cultural heritage, Burkina Faso, CULTURE | No Comments »

African archaeology book: The African Archaeology Network

Posted by sociolingo on April 19, 2008

Source: African Book Collective

The African Archaeology Network

Reports and a Review

Edited by Felix Chami, Gilbert Pwiti

The first in the book series Studies in the African Past was published in 2001, consisting of reports produced by the archaeology research project, ‘Human Responses and Contribution to Environmental Change’. The new research initiative developed out of this project is known as the ‘African Archaeology Network’. This is investigating how ancient African societies exploited resources, developed settlements and established long-distance trade networks. A pan-African project, it aims to develop new models to understand how ancient communities adjusted and responded to political and environmental upheavals; and to demonstrate the potential for more research in the different areas of African archaeology.

Consisting of ten chapters, this volume includes nine scientific reports and one review emanating from Mali, Nigeria, Uganda, Kenya, the Island of Mafia in Tanzania, Mozambique, Namibia, Madagascar and Zimbabwe. Topics covered include: dense ancient settlements along the Sahara desert; mappings of historical settlements in south-west Nigeria; excavations of the areas around Lake Victoria in Uganda; ancient iron industries; evidence of the domestication of animals and the importation of goods into Tanzania from India and the Nile Valley in the Neolithic age; contact with early European traders and travellers from 160, and how these paved the way for the extension of the western European system into African communities; and hunter- gather and pastoral adaptive strategies in the Namib desert.

ISBN 9789976604085 | 200 pages | 244 x 170 mm | 2005 | Dar es Salaam University Press, Tanzania | Paperback

Available from the African Book Collective

£21.95

Posted in AFRICA, AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGY, AFRICAN COUNTRIES, AFRICAN HISTORY, CULTURE, HISTORY, Kenya, Madagascar, Mali, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda, Zimbabwe | No Comments »

15 Niger: African troupes to attend « Emergences » festival in Niamey

Posted by sociolingo on April 19, 2008

Source: APA

15 African troupes to attend « Emergences » festival in Niamey

APA-Niamey (Niger) Niamey will from April 28 to May 4, host the second theatre festival dubbed “Emergences”, to be attended by 15 professional companies and troops from western and central African countries, the Director of the festival, Niger national Alfred Dogbé, told APA.

“Emergences” has billed about forty theatre representations in cultural and artistic centres, in prisons and schools in five districts of the Niger capital city.

“The festival is not only limited to theatre shows. It is also a framework of exchange, because art professionals will hold ten workshops on initiation to arts for youths and cultural associations in Niamey”, the Dogbé said.

He said the festival constitutes a training and improvement framework for theatre practitioners through professional internships in sound and light production, in interpretation, dramatic art and cultural journalism.

The training will be undertaken by about sixty artists, technicians and communication specialists.

He said “Emergences 2008″ will be a moment for sharing of information and reflexion on the theatre activity as well as on cultural innovation in Niger.

Participants will come from Benin, Burkina-Faso, Cameroon, Congo, Cote-d’Ivoire, Guinea, Togo and Niger.

DS/od/ovh/tjm/APA 2008-04-07

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