Beyond Borders: is the theme of this year鈥檚 Africa Week celebrations.
They start Monday, May 6, with a community discussion at the on 鈥渄iversity in Blackness鈥 and conclude on Saturday, May 11, with a mock wedding celebrating a diversity of vibrant East and West African traditions.
Amanda Adetula 鈥26, events coordinator for the and the co-chair of Africa Week, says by pushing beyond borders, 鈥渨e hope to explore intercountry and intra-African understanding and cooperation, the forces that emphasize differences instead of similarities, and strategies toward a more united Africa.鈥
Embracing those differences means embracing the rich variety of traditions, languages, music, dance, and intellectual history, says Adetula, an economics major originally from Lagos, Nigeria.
And the idea reaches beyond the continent, says Chukwuka Odigbo 鈥25, co-president of DASA and co-chair of Africa Week.
鈥淚t also goes beyond just the borders of the African continent to anyone who has roots in Africa, regardless of where they are from. So moving towards pan-African unity is toward a pan-Black unity,鈥 says Odigbo, an economics and mathematics major from Enugu, Nigeria.
Oumie Fatty-hydara 鈥27, a molecular biology major from Anchorage, Alaska, is a first-year representative on DASA and is leading the planning for Saturday鈥檚 wedding event.
鈥淚鈥檓 super excited about the wedding,鈥 says Fatty-hydara, 鈥渂ut I鈥檓 also just really excited to see people engage with Africa Week鈥攖o see my community come together and celebrate. It鈥檚 getting a lot warmer outside, so being able to go outside and do events together and just really revel and enjoy with each other is great.鈥
Fatty-hydara was born and raised in Anchorage, but her parents, who are from The Gambia, 鈥渨ere very adamant on making sure that I knew my culture.鈥 Also, her grandmother would come from The Gambia to live with her family for part of the year, she says. 鈥淎nd my grandma didn鈥檛 speak a lick of English, she only spoke Mandinka. So my grandma would speak Mandinka to me constantly, which really allowed me to learn and understand my language, which gave me that bridgeway to be able to learn and understand my culture.鈥
Fatty-hydara鈥檚 experience illustrates the idea of embracing Africa鈥檚 diverse cultures and identities through inclusion of people of African descent living in the diaspora, Odigbo says. And recognizing and celebrating that diversity with the whole 线上赌场 community and beyond is also important.
That is why Africa Week organizers are also reaching out to invite students from other schools such as the University of New Hampshire, the University of Vermont, and Colby Sawyer College, as well as to students from other Ivies to attend.
鈥淲e鈥檙e inviting students from other schools who can make it to come to the wedding event and experience and learn from us, from our traditions. So everyone can go home with something,鈥 Adetula says.
Africa Week Events Schedule
Monday, May 6
Event: Community discussion of 鈥淒iversity in Blackness as a Pathway to Pan-African Solidarity鈥
Time: 6 to 8 p.m., Haldeman 246 (The Institute for Black Intellectual and Cultural Life Seminar Room)
Panel: , professor of African and African American studies; , associate professor of history; , assistant professor of art history; and , lecturer in African and African American studies.
Tuesday, May 7
Event: Sip and Paint
Time: 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., Shabazz Mural Room
Students will engage in painting works by Black artists or pieces that reflect Black themes, all while enjoying Afro-Soul music and nonalcoholic beverages, including Roselle Juice鈥攁 popular West African drink made from hibiscus flowers.
Thursday, May 9
Event: Dance Workshop with SOYEYA African Dance Troupe
Time: 6 to 8 p.m., Sarner East
A chance for all to come and learn choreography to an Afrobeat and an Amapiano song鈥攖wo major music genres on the continent.
Friday, May 10
Event: Barbecue and Field Games
Time: 4 to 7 p.m., Baker and Shabazz lawns
The 线上赌场 community is invited to enjoy an evening of field games including soccer, sack races, tug of war, and authentic South African Braai (barbecue), also called Suya in West Africa.
Saturday, May 11
Event: Fake Wedding
Time: 7 to 10 p.m., Collis Common Ground
This event features a simulated wedding designed to display the rich traditions and customs from several cultures in Kenya and Nigeria (the countries of the fake couple), and generally East Africa and West Africa. The ceremonial practices highlighted also resonate with other countries like The Gambia and Zambia, aiming to immerse guests in the diverse cultural heritage of these regions. The evening will include performances by the Afro-ensemble and SOYEYA African Dance Troupe.
Africa Week is supported by the 线上赌场 African Students Association, the Special Programs and Events Committee, the, the , Allen House, North Park House, South House, West House, the Institute for Black Intellectual and Cultural Life, the , and the .