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Letting Dance Educate You
March 3, 2014
Letting Dance Educate You
A.H. Cemendtaur
[Photos by Dipak Pallana]
If there was ever an argument about dance as a form
of expression, not predating speech, the sight of an audience of almost two
hundred people, comprising various ethnicities and linguistic groups, coequally
enjoying music and dance program held on Sunday, March 2, must have closed that
debate.
Sunday’s event held at the India Community Center in
Milpitas, and arranged by the San Francisco Bay Area chapter of the Citizens
Foundation (TCF) meant to inform the audience about the work of TCF and how the
organization’s efforts are in fact making a perceptible change in the education
scene in Pakistan. And what better way
to attract audience on a weekend than to weave the information about the
non-profit organization around a dance performance.
TCF’s program dubbed ‘An Evening of Kathak’ started
with a musical performance by Jeff Whittier (Bansuri) and Leslie Schneider
(tabla).
Opening
up the show, Zeba Naseem Savage,
program’s MC and a math teacher from Southern California, told the audience
that her parents, Amjad and Najma Noorani, joined TCF in 1999 when there were
35 schools built by TCF, with 3000 students in those schools--TCF started its
work in 1995. She said today there are
910 TCF schools, and 126,000 girls and boys are enrolled in them. In April this year, TCF will reach its major
milestone of building one-thousand schools.
A video report on the
TCF’s work in education titled ‘Closing the Gap’, made by Bangalore born noted
American journalist Fred DeSam Lazaro, was shown to the audience.
Maidah Chughtai spoke
about her recent trip to Pakistan in which she made an unannounced visit to a
TCF school. She said the dedication of
the TCF school staff immensely impressed her.
Faraz, another TCF
associate, spoke about his latest visit to a TCF school in Karachi. He encouraged people to visit TCF built and
run schools whenever they make a trip to Pakistan.
Laiq Chughtai, TCF San
Francisco Bay Area Chapter lead, showed photos of a school being built in
Gambat, Sindh using money raised in the Silicon Valley.
Introducing the first
dance performance of the evening, Zeba Savage said, “The Traditional Kathak
solo is meant to highlight the various components of this classical Indian
dance form. Though there is a framework
to the solo, much of it is improvised, adding to the excitement and dynamism of
what you will observe through the exchange between the dancer and the
musician.”
The solo dance
performance featured Farah Yasmeen Shaikh, a veteran Kathak dancer who after
learning the art, many
years ago, from the Chitresh Das
Dance Company, San Francisco, has been associated with that group; the
musicians included eminent Afghan American tabla player, Nader Salar; and Ben Kunin, a noted musician on sarod. Farah dressed in a traditional green pishwas
and choori dar pajama, trotted the stage, and twisted and twirled in delicate
moves, with her ghunghroo accentuating the dance rhythms.
Farah Shaikh’s solo
performance got further solo at the end of the first segment when the musicians
took a break and Farah got hold of a harmonium.
Then it was her music, her melody, and her dance. Her fingers moved smoothly on the harmonium keys
while her feet thumped the floor in an impressive coordination with the music.
Next was an artistic
interlocution between the tabla player and the dancer—the musician presenting a
beat, challenging the dancer to perform on it, the dancer responding and in
that response challenging the percussionist to do even better.
In the segment that
followed, the stage was given to Nader Salar for a solo performance on
tabla. Salar proved himself to be a
wonderful entertainer, getting a roaring applause at the end of a tabla
rendition that had reached a frantically rapid rhythm in its finale.
The best of the show was
kept for the last. It was a dance and music performance accompanying excerpts
read from the “Twentieth Wife”, a novel by Indu Sundaresan.
From
stories in scriptures later filled with minute details by contemporary
religious leaders, to plays like ‘Julius Caesar’ and movies like ‘Titanic’,
history embellished with fictional details attracts crowds. Indu Sundarasan’s book ‘The Twentieth wife’
is one of those stories based on a particular era of the Mughal history. The protagonist of the book is the Persian
trader Ghayas Baig’s daughter Mehrunnisa who is wedded to Mughal Emperor
Akbar’s military officer Ali Quli even though Prince Salim wanted to marry
Mehrunnisa. Many years later when Prince
Salim is enthroned as Emperor Jahangir and Mehrunnisa is a widow, the two meet
again, and Jahangir takes his quondam crush as his twentieth wife. In the power
vacuum that exists because of Jahangir’s alcoholism and narcoticism, Mehrunnisa,
now known as Nur-e-Jihan, increases her influence in the court and gradually becomes
the most powerful Mughal empress history ever saw.
Excerpts
from ‘The Twentieth Wife’ were read by Irum Musharraf, while Farah Shaikh--with
musical help from Nader Salar and Ben Kunin--provided a dance depiction of the
scenes narrated in the reading. The
performance grabbed people’s imagination and took them to the Seventeenth
Century Mughal court, a place of great activity and intrigue.
Art
is supposed to provoke minds, to make people think, and that was exactly what
the dance and musical rendition of the ‘The Twentieth Wife’ did to the audience. Standing in line for snacks at the end of the
program conversations were heard about the various performances and the mastery
demonstrated by the artists.
[It is also here:
http://pakistanlink.org/Community/2014/Mar14/07/01.HTM]