Monday, January 12, 2009

If you’ve ever wanted to come to Senegal, December 2009 is IT: Listen up everyone and listen well! In December 2009 Senegal is going to make history again by hosting the third edition of the World Festival of Black Arts (FESMAN III). The first edition of the festival was in Dakar in 1966 and featured world renowned artists. Here is a look into the history provided on the website:

FESMAN ’66 was in essence a thunderbolt: the Festival was the visible, tangible product of the years spent by Black peoples to win back their dignity. It delighted the audiences and critics who were sufficiently open to understand its importance. And this great event took place in an African land that had only recently been returned to African rule, in a creative explosion that brought together a range of disciplines and different generations.

Whether or not they were in favour at the time of the concept of Negritude in theory, the artists and intellectuals taking part in the Festival nevertheless kept their artistic promises. Where else, if not at the FESMAN, could one have then found both the American Negro Dance Company with Arthur Mitchell and Alvin Ailey, the great Bahia capoerists such as Mestre Pastrinha alongside the Senegalese National Ballet Ensemble? Where else could audiences have listened to the two great stars Duke Ellington and Marion Williams, along with Julie Akofa Akoussah and Bella Bellow, both unknowns at the time, and a Samba queen such as Clementina de Jesus? Under what other circumstances could the international literary jury members Aimé Césaire and Langston Hughes have awarded prizes to the writers in their thirties Tchicaya U’Tamsi (for Epitome) and Wole Soyinka (for The Road) and to the author of a first book published the previous year, entitled No Easy Walk to Freedom, by a certain Nelson Mandela?


FESMAN II, hosted in Lagos, Nigeria in 1977 was also a worldwide hit and a step forward in the creation and fortification of our most cherished black art institutions:

The programmes were once again exceptional. In the field of music in particular, the FESTAC caused a sensation, with not only a retrospectively impressive line-up (Stevie Wonder, Myriam Makeba, Gilberto Gil, King Sunny Ade, Gil Scott-Heron, Tabu Ley Rochereau, Sun Ra, mPongo Love, Carmen McRae, Pépé Felly, Caetano Veloso, Donald Byrd, Hoballadii Waaberi, Isaac Hayes, Les Amazones de Guinée, Randy Weston, Mighty Sparrow and Sidiki Diabaté to name just a few), but also an unprecedented impact from the South to the North of the planet, owing to the development of radio, records and cassettes…

The other disciplines were not to be overshadowed, particularly in the IN, which notably saw the confrontation of the first fruits of cultural development initiatives undertaken by African States during the first FESMAN (schools and centres for choreographic and theatre creation and the visual arts) as well as by independent companies and movements in the United States, Brazil and the Caribbean, which were also often facing difficulties in their respective countries to achieve recognition of their specific requirements and commitments (for example the Americans Angela Jackson and Barbara Ann Teer, the founder of the National Black Theater of Harlem, the Brazilian Abdias do Nascimento, etc.).

To read the full history of FESMAN click here. Watch excerpts from the famous William Greaves documentary on FESMAN ’66 and the Peter Gaunt documentary on FESMAN ’77.

FESMAN III will be held from December 1st to December 21st, 2009 in various venues throughout Dakar and the rest of the country. Although the full program has yet to be unveiled on the website, it has announced that several notable figures and artists do plan to attend: Manu Dibango, Césaria Evora, Danny Glover, Salif Keita, Tracy Reese, Youssou N’Dour, Sidney Poitier, Gilberto Gil...to name a few.

So I invite you all to come to Dakar anytime, but especially in December! The sooner you buy your tickets and confirm with me the better.

And if you’re not impressed by my invitation, here’s one from Mr. Abdoulaye Wade, President of Senegal:

I chose a theme of great relevance: “the African Renaissance.” Indeed, Motherland Africa has the duty to contribute to the emergence of a universal civilization, in which all cultures are represented in order to share and to grow. I am certain my Senegal, along with the Teranga (hospitality) of its citizens, will help in this regard. This meeting will be decisive. It will be a display of brilliance of Black World fertile creativity. It will also be a moral rebirth and a mobilization of all forces towards Africa’s development…

I call all Africans, all the sons and daughters of the Diaspora, all my fellow citizens, all the partners that are ready to walk by our side, all States, all international organizations, foundations, firms, etc. for a shining success for this Festival, and for the rise of a new Africa.

His Excellency Maître Abdoulaye Wade
President of the Republic of Senegal
FESMAN 2009 Honorary Committee President

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