GiffGaff

Get a free giffgaff Sim

Thursday, 19 November 2009

Lamu Cultural Festival

Lamu Cultural Festival
Lamu Old Town is a unique and rare historical living heritage with more than 700 years of continuous settlement. In 2001, it was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. Since then the Lamu Cultural Promotion Group, a community based group, has been organizing an annual cultural festival to promote and preserve the unique Swahili heritage of the Lamu Archipelago. With support from international embassies, Kenyan authorities and local stakeholders, the Lamu Cultural Promotion Group continues to successfully showcase Swahili culture and traditions through this landmark event.
The three day festival will showcase traditional dances (ngomas), historical masterpieces, which have been an important _expression of neighbourhood rivalries. Besides competitive ngomas, deep seated animosity among Lamu residents in the past was settled through competitions on water and land: Kiswahili poetry competitions, donkey races, dhow races, and these will be some of the highlights of the festival. There will be displays of traditionalhandicraft, henna painting, Swahili bridal ceremony and a Swahili food bazaar. The festival offers a modern sample of these time-honoured traditions against a rich backdrop of the beauty and splendour of the Lamu archipelago.
This year’s festival will also feature a renowned lute player from Morocco, Omar Mazroui, adding a touch of Arab-North African Islamic influence, modern taarab groups from Zanzibar: ‘East African Melody’ and the ‘Sinachuki Kidumbak’, the popular Swahili taarab musician, Juma Bhallo, from Mombasa, and the young dancers/acrobats from the street children rehabilitation programme ‘Kuruka Maisha’.
An exhibition of photographs on Lamu and the Swahili culture, by the renowned photographer, Nigel Pavitt, will be on display in Lamu Fort.
Lamu offers accommodation to suit all pockets. Flying packages are listed herebelow. Transport by road to Lamu is completely safe. Public transport from Mombasa leaves
daily, with about seven buses at different times during the day. The journey to Mokowe on the mainland takes six to seven hours, followed by a half an hour boat ride to Lamu.
Programme
Fri. 18 Nov.
13:00 – 16:00
Jahazi dhow race

20:30 – 22:30

Traditional dances along the seafront

22:30 – 00:30
Traditional dances on stage by Lamu Fort (Mkunguni square)

Sat. 19 Nov.
08 :00 – 16 :00
Traditional skills and craft displays (ironsmith, woodcarving, grinding, pounding, dhow building, henna painting, swahili embroidery, mat making, bao games, leather works)
(Kihaji Grounds)
09:00 – 10 :00
Donkey race (in front of Lamu Museum)
10:00 – 11:00
Talk on ‘Identity and tradition of the Swahili people’ by
National Museums of Kenya
11:00 – 12:00
Canoe Race
14:00 – 16:00
Mashua dhow race and swimming finals
16:30 – 18:00
Prize giving (Mkunguni square)
18:30 – 19:00
Swahili food bazaar (Sunsail Hotel verandah)
20:00 – 22:00
Swahili bridal ceremony (Lamu Fort)
Traditional dances (Mkunguni square and along the seafront)
22:30
Kuruka Maisha dancers, Omar Mazroui (Arabo-Andalusian, sufi musician from Morocco), Sinachuki Kidumbak and East African Melody (from Zanzibar) (Mkunguni square)
Sun. 20 Nov.
09:00 – 12:00
Traditional skills and craft displays (Kihaji Grounds)

22:00
Swahili taarab by the musician, Juma Bhallo, from Mombasa (Mkunguni square)
.

Other attractions:
  • Lamu Museum, exhibiting Swahili culture and the mainland’s non-Swahili groups
  • Lamu Fort, dating back to 1821, having been built by the Sultan of Oman shortly after Lamu’s victory over Pate and Mombasa in the battle of Shela
  • German Post Office Museum
  • Swahili House Museum
  • Takwa National Monument on Manda Island (a settlement dating back to AD 1500, with ruins of a Great Mosque and a pillar tomb)
  • Ruins of Shanga, an 8th century Swahili settlement, on Pate Island, containing remains of the coral walls of 160 houses, two palaces, three mosques and hundreds of tombs
  • The early Swahili settlement of Pate, once a power in the region
  • Numerous sites and monuments that showcase Swahili civilization at its height in the 15th century
  • Donkey sanctuary for the old beasts of burden
  • The dhow making village of Matondoni
A wonderful treat for those who wish to savour the unique architectural and cultural splendour of East Africa’s earliest seaport.
Harsita Waters, Arts and Culture Coordinator
Alliance Francaise de Nairobi
Tel. +254-20-340054/79

Tuesday, 3 November 2009

Bolt humbled by four-legged rival

Breaking News, Kenya, Africa, Politics, Business, Sports, Blogs, Photos, Videos - Bolt humbled by four-legged rival



he world’s fastest man has met something he won’t be able to outrun — his newly adopted cheetah cub.
Usain Bolt and Prime Minister Raila Odinga on Monday launched a new programme to protect wildlife in a partnership with Kenya Wildlife Service.
Mr Bolt and Mr Odinga each adopted animals from the famous orphanage in announcing the new endowment fund.
Kenya Wildlife Service is seeking to raise $100 million (Sh7.5 billion) from the fund by 2020 for wildlife and environment conservation efforts.
Mr Bolt, the Jamaican track star who holds the world record for fastest time in the 100-metre sprint, adopted a fitting pet. The cheetah is the world’s fastest mammal. He named the three-month-old cheetah “Lightning Bolt” to cheers.
And it came as no surprise when Mr Odinga named his adopted eight-month-old lion cub, “Agwambo” to another round of applause.
Another track star, Britain’s former 110-metre hurdles world record holder, Mr Colin Jackson, adopted another animal known for its leaping ability — a four-year-old eland.
And Mr Odinga’s daughter, Winnie, adopted an eight-month-old lioness.
The adoption process seems to have left Mr Bolt a changed man.
Fear no more
“I will fear no more the wild animals,” he said as he cuddled his new pet. Mr Bolt had expressed a fear of wildlife before he travelled to Kenya as an environmental ambassador for the Zeitz Foundation.
For his part, Mr Odinga said Kenya’s wildlife was under severe threat of extinction. The PM praised the Zeitz Foundation for using sports in their conservation initiatives.
The Zeitz Foundation was launched in Kenya on Friday.
Mr Odinga used the event to criticise those who have degazetted Kenyan forests saying it had hastened the human and wildlife conflicts.
He said the government has moved swiftly to protect the remaining forest cover and affirmed that those who will be affected by the wildlife be compensated adequately.