Parfait Bassale and Migrations Arts Project Artists

25ey_1678_x_281.png
donation_events_839_x_281.png catalog_web_banner.png

 

Hosted by: 
Produced by: 
KBOO
Program:: 
Air date: 
Tue, 11/17/2020 - 11:00am to 11:30am
We feature the music of Portland musician Parfait Bassale, a Bhutanese poet Dilip Sunar and the singers of the Tongan Sewing Circle

 

Dmae encores profiles of West African guitarist and singer Parfait Bassale, Bhutanese poet Dilip Sunar with interpreter Suprina Koirala and the Tongan Sewing Circle led by Kato Kakala Kavapalu and Kolini Fusitua. All were featured in Dmae's special yearlong project Migrations about immigrant and refugee artists.  The Migrations project was made possible with with funding from the Regional Arts and Culture Council. For more info on the Migrations project visit: https://www.facebook.com/MigrationsArts

(Airs 11am Tues 11/17/19 on KBOO 90.7FM and podcast later the same afternoon at StagenStudio.com.)

More about the artists:

Parfait Bassale was originally from West Africa, Bassale weaves joyous guitar melodies with his intricate vocals. He often sings about his experiences and introspections of immigrant dreams and daily life.  Bassale performs live and debuts some of his new songs on the EP. He also tells about the Columbe Project, his peace education program for youth.  Parfait Bassale was born in Benin in April 1981. Because his father worked for an overseas company, Parfait Bassale had migrated throughout West Africa by age 13. Among his experiences were the ostracism of being labelled a “foreigner” and the challenges of language barriers, cultural differences, and integration.As a teenager, he began using rhymes and rap music to express his frustration with society. Music became his tool for protest. Since then, his music continued to evolve. At 24, after moving to the U.S.A., he picked up a guitar and began writing songs to process and document his experience. Hear his music at http://parfaitonline.com/.

Tongan Sewing Circle (now called the Tongan Women's Association of Oregon) a feature on Portland's Tongan community through the stories Kato Kakala Kavapalu and Kolini Fusitua for the Migrations project  focusing on little known immigrant and refugee arts in the Portland area. We'll hear about the Tongan and Pacific Islander Sewing Circle, a group of women who get together to sew and sing in beautiful harmonies as they work. Learn how this one group is the hub for hundreds of Tongan families in the Northwest. Find out more about them at: https://www.facebook.com/nylisa.hood?fref=nf

Dilip Sunar is a poet and a  Bhutanese refugee from Nepal. Sunar along with his wife and eight children were one of a hundred thousand Bhutanese who were forced to leave Bhutan because they had a different language and culture. The Nepali-Bhutanese had been there for generations but had to take refuge in Nepal, losing their lands and property. Sunar and his family lived in little shacks without running water or much medical care until 2009. He still has difficulty walking from a broken hip that hasn’t healed right. Sunar will be reading his poetry with interpreter Suprina Koirala.

More about the Bhutanese community:

About 2,500 Bhutanese refugees currently live in Oregon.  The king of Bhutan imposed the Citizenship Act of 1985, which enforced a single national culture. It required Bhutanese who were culturally Nepalese to change their clothing and cultural traditions. The government also tightened its citizenship laws. As a result, Bhutanese people of Nepalese ethnicity — many of whom had lived there for several generations — were declared illegal immigrants. Nearly one-sixth of the population, or about 100,000 people, were expelled and ended up in refugee camps.

Find out more about the Bhutanese and all refugee communities in Portland at (IRCO) the Immigrant and Refugee Community of Oregon at http://irco.org/.

You can hear Stage & Studio on:

Download audio file
Genre(s): 

Audio by Topic: