Sight Savers International

Sight Savers International
For someone who is blind, the gift of sight is the greatest gift of all!

Thursday 31 January 2008

Monobloco & Toque Tambor






Monobloco are a Brazilian Band/Bloco. They have become very popular as they do not only play Samba, but other rhythms like Samba-Charme, Ciranda, Coco & Samba funk. They perform in the Rio Carnival and they also performed for in England at the Rhythm of the Worlds Music Festival 2007 in Hitchin with Toque Tambor.
Their music is beautiful, feeling the drums and bass circulating in your body giving you extreme energy and adrenalin rush. They most definitely made the crowd rock at the ROTW Festival 2007.

http://www.monobloco.org/

To purchase their CD’s or to get latest information on their whereabouts, you can also log onto http://www.thesambacompany.org/ and contact Mick.

Toque Tambor

Consists of a group of Band members and dancers in Hitchin and surrounding areas including London specialising in Afro-Brazilian Music. They rehearse weekly. If you are interested in learning how to play the rhythms of Brazil, log onto their website and get more details. For all the lovely ladies wishing to learn Samba, Samba Reggae and many other moves, you can join the weekly classes. The beauty of Samba is that you are all beautiful regardless of weight. You learn to progress each week and get to perform if you are ready when the band takes part in Festivals or Carnivals. This is fun as you get to dress up, experiment with paints and glitters. So is definitely fun.






http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=-WgfE9rCK5Y

Rhythm of the Worlds Festival

So far it looks like the festival MIGHT be taking place on the 12th & 13th July 2008. I am not sure where exactly it will be held and if it will take place, but those are the suggested dates. I hope we get a chance to have Monobloco over as they are also performing on the 12th at the Drum Camp 2008, so there could be a chance they can get to perform on the 13th. As they will definitely blow you away with their rocking and energetic performance. I will keep you posted.

Looks like the festival will go ahead. Will add more information, once i get it. 03.03.08


http://www.rotw.org/

http://www.musicworldwide.org/

Wednesday 16 January 2008

Mozambique


Capital: Maputo
Native Tribes: Bantu
Languages: Portuguese
Most Poplar Music: Marrabenta


*Explored by Vaso da Gama in 1498, and colonized by the Portuguese in 1505.
Independence: 25 June 1975
President: Ex President was Samora Moises Machel (died 1986) he played an important part in the Liberation of his country and also received the Lenin Peace Prize. He is preceeded by Joaquim Chissano (ruled for 19 years) and succeeded by Armando Guebuza, whom has been in power since 2005.

Main Resources: Cashews, Shrimp, Copra, Sugar, Citrus Fruits, Cotton & Tea.

Tourist Attraction: The Bazaruto Archipelago

CPLP (Community of Portuguese Language Countries)


Formed in 1996 by seven member countries, (Africa) Angola, Cape Verder, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, Sao Rome & Principe, (America) Brazil, (Oceania) Timor-Leste(joint 2002) & (Europe) Portugal.

The CPLP is a bloc in the process of construction and the societies of the eight member nations have little knowledge of each other. One of the unique features of the CPLP is that its members are linked by a common language and shared cultural features, which form a bridge among countries separated by great distances and on different continents.


In 2005, during a meeting in Luanda, the ministers of culture of the eight countries declared the May 5th as the Lusophone (a Portuguese speaker either natively or by adoption) Culture Day (Dia da Cultura Lusófona in Portuguese).


In July 2006, during the Bissau summit, Equatorial Guinea and Mauritius were admitted as Associate Observers along with 17 International associations and organizations considered as Consultative Observers.


Since its formation, the CPLP has helped to solve problems in São Tomé and Príncipe and in Guinea-Bissau. These two problems were solved, and in fact, have helped these two countries to take economic reforms (in the case of São Tomé) and democratic ones (in the case of Guinea-Bissau).


The leaders of the CPLP believe that peace in Angola and Mozambique as well as East Timor's independence will favour the further development of the CPLP and a strengthening of multilateral cooperation.


Since many children in rural areas of Lusophone Africa and East Timor are out-of-school youth, the education officials in these regions seek help from Portugal and Brazil to increase the education to spread Portuguese fluency as Portuguese is becoming one of the main languages in Southern Africa, where it is also taught in Namibia & South Africa.


The Bazaruto Archipelago



Pestana Bazaruto Lodge




Mozambique Floods


In early 2000 a cyclone swept across southern Africa leading to three weeks of severe floods which devastated Mozambique.


Now in February 2007, Cyclone Favio struck Mozambique.


Unicef and the Save the Children Alliance said it would be distributing tents and school kits.
It said it was helping local authorities with cholera and malaria prevention and sending in equipment to treat water and improve sanitation.

Emergency Mozambique Floods Appeal

Save the Children UK Latest Appeal

You know the saying of doing a good deed a day, small or big does not matter and in any form. Please help with donations if you can for a worthy cause. It's a one off contribution you can make, and will make a difference to families in Mozambique. x




We urgently need your help

We're providing shelter, clean water and food. We're also working with local authorities to ensure that children displaced by the floods are kept safe. As more families are forced into emergency camps, we need your support to reach even more children.

Please give generously. Your donation really will make a difference.

£15 can buy five blankets to provide warmth and comfort for a flood-affected family living in an emergency camp.

£25 can buy a household kit containing plastic sheeting, water purifiers and containers, kitchen equipment and utensils so that families have shelter, drinkable water and can cook for themselves.

Make a donation now to support our work
For more information about our response or to make a donation, visit our website - http://emailsavethechildren.org.uk/a/hBHjggXAPUFAvBsmgBEBmWd4S1i/stc - or call our appeal hotline on 0800 8 148 148.

Tuesday 15 January 2008

Latest Information from Tostan

I received an update on FGM. This has made me very happy, as it is a step to the eradication of this practice. I have done a post on Tostan in my archives, for you to know more.


Tostan News Alert
January 14, 2008
909 Communities Make History
Thousands in Southeastern Senegal End Female Genital Cutting and Child Marriage in First-Ever Department-Wide Abandonment


Sunday, January 13, 2008
Tambacounda, Senegal

Building on a growing movement for health and human rights in West Africa, all 909 communities in the administrative department of Tambacounda in Southeastern Senegal have declared their abandonment of female genital cutting (FGC) and child/forced marriage.

At an event hosted Sunday in the city of Tambacounda, invited guests from across Senegal and West Africa joined community members from throughout the department as they publicly declared their abandonment of these practices, marking the first time that an entire department has made such a declaration.

"From today forward, this practice no longer has a place in our communities," said Awa Traoré, who read the declaration to the audience of nearly 4,000 people.

100% of the communities in the department participated--a tremendous achievement in a region where recent estimates put the rate of FGC at 85.6% and the average age of marriage for girls at 15 years old.

Public declarations are one outcome of the Community Empowerment Program, an education program run by Tostan, a NGO which has worked with thousands of communities in Senegal since 1991. Tostan uses a participatory approach to education based on traditional methods of communication such as song, poetry, theater, and dance.

Beginning with a foundation of democracy and human rights, the program goes on to cover a wide range of subjects including problem solving, health and hygiene, math, management, literacy, and small projects.

Tostan's program is perhaps best-known for its long-term, patient, and respectful approach. Sunday's event in Tambacounda was six years in the making, building upon four prior public declarations in the department: Malème Niani (2001), Dialacoto (2003), Sinthiou Malème (2004), and Koutiaba (2006). The declaration welcomed 335 new communities, who joined 574 previously declaring communities in abandoning FGC and child/forced marriage.

The 2001 declaration at Malème Niani was itself based on prior declarations that date back to 1997, when 30 women in a community called Malicounda Bambara surprised Tostan and many others by announcing that they wanted to abandon the practice. Since Malicounda Bambara's seminal decision, 2,996 communities in Senegal have declared their abandonment of the practice.

Tostan representatives attribute the success of this movement to their approach, which addresses many different topics and invites people to join a positive movement for change to achieve their self-defined goals of health, peace and well-being.

Tostan also makes sure that communities are in charge of all activities. Of the 909 villages in attendance Sunday, only 116 were direct participants in Tostan's program. The rest were contacted by program participants during outreach activities organized and implemented by Community Management Committees created within each Tostan village.

Tostan leaders say this network-based approach is not only efficient, but essential to change. "When people come together at a public declaration, they are making a collective pledge to abandon FGC and child marriage. They are not only bringing an end to traditions which can be dangerous to the health of women and girls, but more importantly they are making a positive statement that they care about the health and human rights of their communities. " says Khalidou Sy, Program Director of Tostan Senegal.

It is also important that the events reach as many people as possible, Sy said. "Because FGC, in particular, is generally linked to marriage and social status, abandonment requires a collective decision by the whole intramarrying group. The public declaration offers a way for people to have that collective commitment. Without it, people are left to guess whether or not their neighbors in other communities are really committed."

Sunday's event, hosted in the city of Tambacounda, was a testament to Tostan's positive, collective approach. It began with a peaceful but lively march of thousands of people through the streets of this vibrant, dusty city. Accompanied by traditional musicians and dancers, the crowd marched along the main streets of the town, carrying hand-made signs, shouting - "Health and human rights for our daughters!"

Their route took them by the city hall, down the national highway, and into the Tambacounda soccer stadium, where they were greeted by hundreds more supporters. Once inside, representatives sent from each participating community were recognized for their commitment.
There were many moving moments during the ceremony, including speeches from regional and national authorities, adolescent leaders, traditional cutters, and representatives of the participating communities. The event also included traditional songs and theater, with perhaps the most touching moment coming from a play put on by a local group of adolescent girls, their tiny voices filling the stadium and reminding all present of the real reason for the declaration.

While at times joyous and celebratory, these events have serious consequences in the communities that participate. Recent evaluations have shown that the FGC abandonment movement is having a major impact on the rates of FGC in communities in Senegal. In fact, some communities showed 100% abandonment even 10 years later. The Tambacounda event is an integral part of Tostan's work towards achieving the total abandonment of FGC in Senegal by 2015, a goal shared by one of its most vital partners and donors in the region, UNICEF.

Yet Tostan Executive Director Molly Melching says that people should be careful to understand these declarations in context. "A public declaration does not necessarily mean that 100% of people in every participating village have stopped the practice," Melching said. "Some people may remain opposed to abandonment indefinitely. But what is important is that people see that FGC is no longer the norm--and that this practice is no longer required in order to be socially accepted. Once that transformation begins, it becomes increasingly difficult for people to continue the practice. As time passes, and as more and more people decide to abandon, it begins goes away completely."