Page 6 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 8, 1988 CULTURE Students embrace Africa BY VERONICA WOOLRIDGE Heritage What is Africa to me: Copper sun or scarlet sea, Jungle star or jungle track, Strong bronzed men, or regal black Women from whose loins I sprang When the birds of Eden sang? - Countee Cullen In the Summer of '87, not to be mistaken for the summer of '65, this student Academics went to Europe, this student stayed home. That student enrolled in summer classes, that student enrolled in none. Twelve students went to West Africa and studied societies in transition. This know- ledge was empirically grown. 201 AfroAmerican 458 Black World Stud- ies/Summer 1987 PARTICIPANTS were "well integrated, both culturally and socially," said Professor Jemadari Kamara, the course instructor. They studied and cultivated knowledge through ex- perience and were from a variety of University units, ranging from undergraduates to Ph.D. candidates. The students' academic affiliation varied within the humanities and throughout the sciences. Under the authorization of the Center for AfroAmperican and African Studies, students convened in Michigan from all parts of the continental United States - from the Uni- versity of California at Berkeley to Michigan State University. The study tour course in- cluded stops in Senegal, Gambia, the Ivory Coast, Ghana, and Benin. In plane, by auto, and on foot, students looked, listened and learned. "The rich cultural heritage of West African societies provided the background for this exploration of the contemporary social, political, and economic conditions which confront developing societies in West Africa," read the course description. "It blended aca- demic lectures, readings, and research with ac- tive experiences and travel which provided a unique educational exposure to the diversity of West African societies." AMONG THEIR many activities, stu- dents witnessed traditional dances and theater. Students also attended lectures on African lit- erature, traditional crafts and arts, traditional spiritual healers, and economics and politics. The foreign minister of Benin hosted a special reception for the group. The group also vis- ited the home of Alex Haley's ancestral roots. Studying West African society through "field experiences" was the core of the explo- ration process, Kamara said. These experiences ranged from traditional to contemporary. An experience students are not soon to forget is the trip to the memorial research center for W.E.B. DuBois - the home in Ghana where the famous historian spent the last years of his life. The home has become a library re- search center. The African people made the students feel very welcome. While visiting various vil- lages, Kamara said, the group learned that communal relationships are built up on an interpersonal basis. "The Africans invited us into their homes, sharing meals and contact. For the students, the people they met really made the most valuable experience," Kamara said. AFTERWARD, students shared- insights about what they had learned through oral and written presentations on their chosen research topics. When students shared their experi- ences, Professor Kamara noticed various stu- dents were affected in different ways. Each set of expectations according to background and exposure influenced their different responses, Kamara said. "It was a sensory experience for most stu- dents because West Africa was different cul- turally than anywhere else they had been before," Kamara said. "Many students realized that the prior perceptions that they had grown up with were quite different than reality." Students were also affected by the stark contrast of societal extremes of wealth and poverty, Kamara said. Students generally commented on the sophistication of universi- ties and the quality of presentations made by the faculty. THE TOUR was open to all students throughout the United States. Background in- terests of each individual student were consid- ered. There was no language requirement, but familiarity with French was strongly encour- aged. The summer term was funded by the presi- dent's office. Kamara said he does not know if it will be repeated. -Woolridge is an LSA junior. Group promotes Black theater BY VICTORIA BAECHER The Black Theater Workshop be- gan in the early '70s as an effort by the University to include Black the- ater in its Theater and Arts Depart- ment. Offered as a class in 1972, the Black Theater Workshop was created to bring in more Black faculty and students as well as an inclusionary curriculum. Charles Jackson, the new director of the workshop, remembers the at- mosphere when he was enrolled in the program in 1981. "THERE WERE many prod- uctions and quite a few Black stud- ents working for their masters and Ph.D.s as well as those majoring in theater at the undergraduate level." Things unfortunately started to change. Lundeana Thomas, a theater doctoral candidate who has been at the University since 1981, noticed a dramatic change in the department's attitude toward Black theater. "By 1985, the Theater Depart- ment had decided they were not go- ing to have Black theater anymore," she said. THE DEPARTMENT during this time had moved from being un- der the control of LSA to under the College of Music, and they also were undergoing changes in the staff, gaining a new department head. The "new" Theater Department slashed the funding for Black theater, but they continued to offer the workshop as a class taught by Lundeana Thomas. Thomas decided to find other avenues to show the work that she and her students were doing, so together they formed the Black The- ater Workshop. They put on fund- raising performances to enable them to produce the types of shows they wanted. Their first fundraising event, -"Black Theater on Parade," was in December 1985. The following fall, they did a "Salute to Black Musi- cals." "Then came the publicity and me- dia attention to the University's racial situation in the beginning of 1987. This attention applied pressure to the entire University to start making some changes and the The- ater Department was no exception. They hired Charles Jackson - a theater doctoral candidate at Wayne State who received his masters at the University - As full-time director and instructor of the Black Theater Workshop for fall term, 1987. Charles Jackson was astonished at the decline of Black theater since his earlier years here. "THERE WAS a dramatic de- crease in Black students majoring in theater... those who had parts in productions were playing subservient roles... The curriculum was not in- clusive; the Black Theater Workshop had been ghettoized from the rest of the department," Jackson said. He said he believes Black theater should not be only a workshop, but a program within the department it- self. His first performance, Home, written by Samm-Art Williams, was shown in February, and next year he plans to produce Mighty Gents, a play about gang violence and its ef- fect on the psyche. He has also changed the title and format of the Black Theater Workshop class into two courses: Acting and the Black Experience and Introduction to Black Theater. The Black Theater Workshop or- ganization also produced the Black Nativity last December. Thomas was very proud of its mixture of talents, saying, "This was a performance which utilized the talents of many students in AfroAmerican dance, music, and theater... The Black Na- tivity was the first Black musical performed in six years at the University." Both Thomas and Jack- son emphasize that the University must strive to include a strong Black theater and arts curriculum. -Baecher is an LSA senior. i Counter-clockwise from top: LSA senior Renuka Uthappa (left) and LSA sophomore Daxa Patel dance to Peter Gabriel's "Biko" following last year's third annual Unity Day Freedom March. The dance and song commemorate Stephen Biko, a South African political prisoner murdered by police. (Photo: David Lubliner) Frank Shipman and Jose Marcus, members of South Dakota's Yellow Thunder Drum Group, give a demon- stration before last year's Ann Arbor Pow Wow. (Photo: Karen Handelman) Sophomores (from left) Yasmine Moideen, Nathie Malayang, LaDonna Joseph, and Denise White perform "Lift Every Voice and Sing" at East Quad's 14th annual Multicul- tural Arts Festival. (Photo: Karen Handelman) LSA first-year stu- dent Crystal Gardner shouts "Haranbee!" ("Let us pull toge- ther") at a Kwanza celebration. (Photo: Karen Handelman) CLASSIFIED ADS! Call 764-0557 RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING C 0 R P S I I F *IO >mWE I MA 'm 17U PASS IT' APlTTTw I I OPE--MI I L -;2NT "S; 1I