Thursday, December 31, 2009
Invictus
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Subsaharska
Monday, December 21, 2009
New Boy
Monday, November 9, 2009
A parable for Kenya
Friday, November 6, 2009
Sedjedo
- Angélique Kidjo (born on July 14, 1960) is a Grammy Award-winning Beninoise singer-songwriter, noted for her diverse musical influences and creative music videos. More on wiki.
- Kidjo's official website.
- Kidjo's Youtube channel.
- Live version of Sedjedo here.
- Check out her amazing videos on Myspace.
Thursday, November 5, 2009
The Danger of a Single Story
The first part of the talk reminded so much of my own childhood when I set out to write a book about the "Secret Nine", modeled of course on Enid Blyton's "Secret Seven" stories. There are so many other parallels I drew between her early life in Nigeria and mine in India. I found her concept of the misleading single story eye-opening and profound.
Monday, November 2, 2009
African Desert Rift Confirmed As New Ocean In The Making
Now, scientists from several countries have confirmed that the volcanic processes at work beneath the Ethiopian rift are nearly identical to those at the bottom of the world's oceans, and the rift is indeed likely the beginning of a new sea."
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
The Okavango Macbeth
"McCall Smith is visiting from Scotland to witness the finished version of the opera, which will run for 10 performances until 17 October and may later tour schools in Botswana. Its production – and the location – has been a labour of love for a writer who has fallen in love with the country that has provided a setting for his literary success."
Read more here.
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Sore Sore
From his Official Website.
The Thing Around Your Neck
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
African Music Encyclopedia
Monday, August 17, 2009
Kenya sings for India
"Set against the backdrops of Nairobi city and the beautiful landscape of Uhuru Park (Maasai country), a Kenyan choir sings the Indian national anthem. The director has chosen the Indian anthem because Kenya is home to a sizeable Indian population (including Sikhs & Jains also) of approximately 2.5 million, most of them descendants of the East African Railways labourers who were brought over by the British during the late 19th and early 20th centuries when the British colonialists ruled Kenya and the rest of the East African region."
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Tea in the Sahara
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Languages in Sub-Saharan Africa
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Sub-Saharan Africa
We often hear the term "Sub-Saharan Africa". What area does this term refer to?
- Sub-Saharan Africa is a geographical term used to describe the area of the African continent which lies south of the Sahara, or those African countries which are fully or partially located south of the Sahara.
- It contrasts with North Africa, which is considered a part of the Arab World.
The Sahel is the transitional zone between the Sahara and the tropical savanna (the Sudan region) and forest-savanna mosaic to the south. - The Horn of Africa and large parts of Sudan are geographically part of sub-Saharan Africa, but nevertheless show strong Middle Eastern influence and are also part of the Arab world.
- The Sub-Saharan region is also known as Black Africa, in reference to its many black populations.
Monday, August 10, 2009
The Sahara Desert
- The Sahara ("The Greatest Desert") is the world's largest hot desert.
- At over 9,000,000 square kilometers (3,500,000 sq mi), it covers most of Northern Africa, making it almost as large as the United States or the continent of Europe.
- The desert stretches from the Red Sea, including parts of the Mediterranean coasts, to the outskirts of the Atlantic Ocean.
- The Sahara divides the continent of Africa into North and Sub-Saharan Africa.
- To the south, it is delimited by the Sahel: a belt of semi-arid tropical savanna that comprises the northern region of central and western Sub-Saharan Africa.
- The Sahara covers huge parts of Algeria, Chad, Egypt, Libya, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Western Sahara, Sudan and Tunisia.
- Here's a beautiful image of the Sahara.
- Read more here.
Thursday, August 6, 2009
The King of Raï
Picture from Cheb Khaled's Official Website.
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
La Victoire sur les Sachets
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Monday, August 3, 2009
MJ in Africa
Africa mourns the loss of the King of Pop.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
C comme Corneille
Source: Wikipedia
My favourite Corneille songs so far, Avec Classe:
Official Website.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Afrigadget
Extremely cool blog!
Monday, May 11, 2009
African Art
I chanced upon this website, AfricanArt.com which features all kinds of authentic hand-crafted African Art for sale. From masks to musical instruments, from wild animal miniatures to walking canes, they sell it all.
From the Website: AfricanArt.com was created to share with you the magnificent art and crafts of Africa for your joy and for the benefit of artists and craftsmen and their families in Africa. We source our artwork directly from Africa from countries like Cote d’Ivoire, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Ghana, Kenya, Tanzania and South Africa to name a few.
Their paintings section is beautiful and features art by Daniel Akortia and Osei Anim from Ghana. They also have a wonderful photo gallery. Check it out!
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Vieux Farka Touré
More of Vieux's music on MySpace and check out his official website here.
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Mauritian Moments
Quatre Bornes Sunday Market
Baie Du Cap
Shallow Beaches
Trou Aux Cerfs
Black River Gorge Viewpoint
Rochester Falls
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Dholl Puri, Gateau Piment and Alouda
One afternoon, we took the bus from Cybercity to Rose Hill at noon (cost us Rs.6). Rose Hill is one of the nearby areas (the other being Quatre Bornes where I was staying). Rose Hill reminds me of Jayanagar 4th block in Bangalore - it has a main market and is always busy and bustling with life. It's also noisy and there is plenty of traffic.
The first thing we tried was "Dholl Puri". Dholl Puri is basically a kind of bread (Poori) which is stuffed with crushed pulses (dal) before it is cooked. The result is a sort of double-layered-non-sweet-Obbattu-Poori which is soft and filled with sprinklings of dal inside. When you order it and specify how spicy you want it, it is filled with this amazing red sauce which is spicy and tangy and the Dholl Puri is given to you folded in half. The right way to eat it, is to fold it further in one more half and hold it with your finger tips on one corner and eat it from the other end, so that none of the sauce spills out. Now, my dholl puri was steaming hot(which is how it should be eaten, I was told) and I had a hard time holding it like that and eating it. So I dug into it in full masala-dosa style and had a ball getting my fingers all dirty while the locals "tsk-tsk"ed at me. :)
I also tried a "Gateau Piment" which literally translates to "Chilli Cake". What is it? Ever tried a "Paruppu Vada"? I was most amused to eat a little Vada with SUCH an exotic name. It was deep fried and tasted extremely good!
After a nice round of Dholl Puri (which cost all of Rs.5 by the way) and Gateau Piment (Rs.1 each), it was time for some "Alouda". What is Alouda? Well, Alouda, is more or less, Falooda! So for Rs.10 you can get a tall glass of Alouda - which is made with cold milk, jelly, some other ingredients that I could not recognise and the glass is topped with a few delicious spoonfuls of ice cream (which was the same colour as the Alouda). Now this Alouda, is really very, very tasty. After his first sip, my colleague Debjoy's eyes opened really wide and a big smile covered his face! To wash the spicy Dholl Puri down with a giant glass of cold Alouda is a total treat - and such a delicious meal - all for Rs.16!! Fantastic lunch, I thought.
After this, we walked around in Rose Hill for quite a while trying to find something vegetarian to take back for our boss. This is no easy task, I tell you. If you are non-vegetarian, you are bound to have a good time here and if not, you are bound to be hunting for your meals (no pun intended!! :P).
Monday, May 4, 2009
Windows XP
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Soweto Blues
I had a hard time finding the lyrics, so I thought it would be fitting to save them here:
The children got a letter from the master
It said: No more Xhosa, Sotho, no more Zulu.
Refusing to comply they sent an answer
That's when the policemen came to the rescue
Children were flying bullets dying
The mothers screaming and crying
The fathers were working in the cities
The evening news brought out all the publicity:
Just a little atrocity, deep in the city
Soweto blues (4)
Benikuphi ma madoda (where were the men)
Mabedubula abantwana (when the children were being shot)
Benikhupi na (where were you)
Abantwana beshaywa ngezimbokodo (when the children were throwing stones)
Benikhupi na (where were you)
There was a full moon on the golden city
Knocking at the door was the man without pity
Accusing everyone of conspiracy
Tightening the curfew charging people with walking
Yes, the border is where he was awaiting
Waiting for the children, frightened and running
A handful got away but all the others
Hurried their chain without any publicity
Just a little atrocity, deep in the city
Soweto blues (4)
Benikuphi ma madoda (where were the men)
Mabedubula abantwana (when the children were being shot)
Benikhupi na (where were you)
Abantwana beshaywa ngezimbokodo (when the children were throwing stones)
Benikhupi na (where were you)
Soweto blues (3)
Soweto blues - abu yethu a mama
Soweto blues - they are killing all the children
Soweto blues - without any publicity
Soweto blues - oh, they are finishing the nation
Soweto blues - while calling it black on black
Soweto blues - but everybody knows they are behind it
Soweto Blues - without any publicity
Soweto blues - god, somebody, help!
Soweto blues - (abu yethu a mama)
Soweto blues
Another beautiful version of Soweto Blues:
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Port Louis
Taxis are extremely expensive in Mauritius and so, I took the bus as much as possible. One weekend, I went to Port Louis, the capital of Mauritius.
If you take the motorway, the ride is simply breathtaking. After a few miles of road, all of a sudden you will see the sea in the distance and it looks marvelous! Also, in the frame from the car, you will see the road below (heading downhill) and the water looming above it and this really makes it special.
This is the Caudan Waterfront at Port Louis. There are lots of restaurants at the waterfront and my friends Swaroopa and Unish took me to "Tandoori Express" for lunch. Before they arrived, I watched Akshay Kumar and John Abraham (famous Indian Movie Stars) dancing away at Caudan with a bunch of hot European women dressed in sailor suits. Same dance step, 4 million takes. *Yawn*. :P. But gosh, you need patience to make a movie. Mauritius is one of Bollywood's favourite destinations, especially for romance sequences.
After lunch, I dragged Swaroopa and Unish to the Klassic theatre to watch the "L'enfant au Grelot", which was, by the way, one of the most lovely animated movies I've ever watched. It's such a treat to watch a French movie in the theatre - how could I not make use of the opportunity? I enjoyed myself completely and was quite thrilled that my friends enjoyed it too!
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Pamplemousses
In the district of Pamplemousses, which is in the north of the island, there is a beautiful botanical garden. It is peaceful and serene and provides a welcome overdose of fresh green!
Here is some info I found: "Famous to naturalists for its 500 species of indigenous and exotic plants of which 80 are palms, this garden is located in the proximity of Port-Louis and spreads over 60 acres.
Among the plants growing there, there are the giant Victorial Regia water lilies and the talipot palm, said to flower once every sixty years and then die. The garden was created by Pierre Poivre in 1767 in the Estate of the French Governor Mahé de Labourdonnais. The latter's Chateau de Mon Plaisir, built in 1735, is found there."
Monday, April 27, 2009
Grand Baie
The first beach I went to in Mauritus was in the Northern region of the island - Grand Baie. This place is a definite must-go for any tourist. The area is filled with delightful stores (all of them look like they were picked out of five star hotels and laid out neatly). Definitely the kind of place you can shop at if you've got bank accounts in Dollars and Euros.
Just behind these pretty stores, I caught sight of the blue-green waters and it gave me such a high! I sprinted all the way to the beach and pulled out my camera and clicked away!
The sand on the beaches is white and SO soft, I cannot describe it! It almost felt like talcum powder! And it felt SO good under my feet, I kept running to and fro between two trees just to feel the sand under my feet and I'm pretty sure I scared a couple of kids with this behaviour.
And the water! Gosh, how can this be sea water? It is so soft and smooth and (somebody please throw me a thesaurus here). It feels like the whole ocean is a giant swimming pool. There aren't any waves - the sea is extremly calm and relaxed - probably where the Mauritians get their laid-back and relaxed attitude from!
It's heavenly to sit on the benches under the trees and look at the beautiful, calm waters - I could've stayed there for hours!
At Grand Baie, I really wanted to go on a Glass Bottom Boat ride. Quite self-explanatory, but anyway, a glass bottom boat is a regular boat with a large portion of the bottom made of glass. Initially, this doesn't matter of course, but a few miles into the sea and you start to see all sorts of exotic marine life. Beautiful, large corals - some as big as cars, I tell you! And in such brilliant colours, shapes and patterns. I couldn't stop ooh-ing and aah-ing. And then the fish start appearing. Nasser, who owned this boat, pointed out all sorts of wonderful fish. The ride lasted about an hour and on the way out into the ocean, we passed by several five start resort beaches, where we saw cartloads of foreigners bathing in the sun and the water. Lots of people were enjoying different kinds of water sports also.
Midway through the ride, Nasser stopped the boat and gave us pieces of bread to throw into the ocean. All of a sudden there were hundreds of fish everywhere, hungry for bread, crowding around our boat. It was so exciting. I held pieces of bread a little under the surface of water and got a total high from feeling the little fellows nibble at my fingers. While feeding the fish, it was a treat to look through the glass and get a clear view of all the fish.
Blue-Green happens to be my favourite colour combination. To get such an overdose of it was simply overwhelming! Miles and miles of calm, blue-green waters with the sun dancing all over in little gold patterns. Sheer bliss!
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Obuswandi
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Gris-Gris
After the calm seas of the North, I met the angry seas of the south. There are lots of rocks and high cliffs along the coastline and the waves crash upon them with all their fury. The first spot we went to is called "Gris-Gris" which is Kreol for Black Magic. It is believed that at some point, Black Magic was practised here (which is probably why my hair was flying all over the place and I felt like a Golliwog-Voodoo doll). :P
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Papillons
They have here an amazing insectarium where thousands of insects are beautifully displayed. An entomologist who lives in Africa worked on these exhibits for 30 years. All of are neatly labelled in his beautiful handwriting. There were bugs and creepy-crawlies of all sorts. The butterflies were beautiful and the spiders scary!
Monday, April 20, 2009
Casela Bird Park
The Casela Park entrance ticket costs Rs.150 but they have a superb safari ride through the mountains for just Rs.30. I spotted these beauties while we were heading towards the mountains.
At Casela, I had the privilege of meeting Lori, the cockatoo. She is 30 years old. She can talk, dance and whistle a variety of tunes. She loves meeting new people. I had read about her and was eager to meet her.
At the petting zoo Lori was in her cage and as soon as I saw her I said "Hello" at least 10 times and she wouldn't reply. I kept wondering why until the sweet lady who takes care of her (and who took this picture) said "Oh, Lori speaks only French"!! She responded to my first "Bonjour" and happily climbed onto my arm to have a nice conversation with me and whistle some tunes for me. She was fascinated with my camera. I took a picture of her and showed it to her and she was amazed with it - she kept touching it with her beak. She also liked my bag and had a nice time walking all over it. So adorable!
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Inch'allah
MC Solaar is the stage name of Claude M'Barali (born March 5, 1969), a francophone hip hop and rap artist. Claude M'Barali was born in Dakar, Senegal to parents of Chadian origin. When he was six months old his parents immigrated to France. He is famous for his wordplay... his official website is called SolaarSystem!!
Inch'allah is one of the catchiest songs I've ever heard and I love the frequent reference to the Maghreban robe, the Djellaba.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Gangatalao
In Grand Bassin, you have a large temple at Ganga Talao. Apparently, many years ago, a priest had a recurring dream about a temple by a lake and he walked to this lake at Grand Bassin and built the temple here. There is a small island in this lake and the temple priests are said to have spotted fairies dancing on this island at night. At some point, water from the River Ganges was brought from India and mixed with the lake water and hence the name, Ganga Talao [from Talab]. By the way, did you know the 13th Jyothirlingam is in Mauritius? And please sit down before you read this, the 13th Jyothirlingam is called "Mauritiuseshwar".