Arts and Entertainment
June 12, 2023
From: Junteenth FestivalSchedule:
Saturday, June 10 | Bus Tour, Canterbury Shaker Village
African Roots: Herbal Medicine, Inoculation & The Shaker Connection
By the beginning of the nineteenth century, Europeans and Africans living in America joined with Native Americans, creating plant-based therapies to care for the body. The Shakers, at Canterbury and other villages, not only adopted some of these therapies but also refined and sold their own remedies.
Join Curator and Historian Dr. Shirley Wajda for a special talk and tour on the history of medicine at Canterbury Shaker Village. Participants will explore several buildings including the Infirmary and the Syrup Shop. Additionally, Dr. Wajda will place the Shakers’ use and development of medicine in the broader context of early American life. Along the way, participants will learn more about Sister Edith Green an African American Shaker who lived, worked, and worshipped at Canterbury Shaker Village.
Tour Guide: Dr. Shirley Wajda
Tour Bus will pick up participants at Connect Community Church in Portsmouth NH, located off I-95, exit 7
Address: 200 Chase Dr, Portsmouth, NH 03801
Bus Pick Up: 9:15 AM
Bus Arrives: 10:30 AM
Tour Starts: 11:00 AM
Price: $35 - $45
Register here
Wednesday, June 14 | Panel Discussion | 6:00 PM | Currier Museum |Manchester, NH
Still, uprooted? Heartache and hope in new hampshire
In 2009, the Center for the Humanities at the University of New Hampshire produced a 30-minute documentary, Uprooted: Heartache and Hope in New Hampshire, that featured the lives of five refugees who were re-settled in New Hampshire. They told their personal stories of war, persecution, refugee camps, and starting again in New Hampshire. Umija and Rasim Gusinac, Udai Baskota, Zahara Mahitula, and Munaf Mahmood come from different countries and backgrounds, but they are part of New Hampshire's ongoing demographic narrative.
This program will revisit the narrative from the film as we learn where these individuals’ journeys have taken them, particularly their continued search to establish a home and develop a sense of belonging in our state.
The first 30 to register for the in-person program will recieve a copy of Uprooted: Heartache and Hope in New Hampshire.
Presenters:
Rashida Eltag Mohamed, Domestic & Sexual Violence Advocate, Manchester Police Department
Anzura Gakwaya, Community Building Specialist, NeighborWorks Southern New Hampshire
Fisto Ndayishimiye, Lead Organizer, Change for Concord
Moderator:
Grace Kindeke, Program Coordinator, American Friends Service Committee NH
Register here
Register for Virtual
Friday, June 16 | 5:00 PM | Art Exhibit | 3S Artspace | Portsmouth
If You Knew, Let It Be Us
McKinley Wallace III, a mixed-media painter and art educator, paints, draws, and collages to tell stories of power manifested in resilient peoples.
Exploring race, history, and intersectionality, Wallace’s artistic ideas are often expressed in a graphic style that incorporates realism, minimalism, and hard-edge painting. Strengthened by my role as a Black educator, I capture moments of atmospheric and direct tension and rebellion to rattle America's exclusionary ideals and legacies – choices enacted by the impact of deferring Black joy for centuries.
Join us for this opening reception where McKinley Wallace and the other artist sharing the Gallery space at the same time will be engaging in a moderated artist conversation together to talk about their work and process, and open questions up to Gallery attendees as well as those watching via live stream on Twitch.
Register here
Saturday, June 17 | 12:00 PM | Reggae Festival | Strawbery Banke, Portsmouth
Chanting Down Babylon: Redemption Songs Of The Diaspora
It is not an overstatement to say that world culture has been influenced by Jamaican reggae music and culture. With its roots grounded in an African sensibility of expressing philosophical words through music, its slow rhythmic beat, its militant, rebellious, and spiritual lyrics, and its positive message about unity, reggae continues to be a source for highlighting issues of social justice.
This festival celebrates the music of the African Diaspora and honors the legacy of roots reggae. Join us for performances by reggae legends, Marcia Griffiths, Brigadier Jerry, Nadine Southerland, Onix Brown, Lady G, and Glen Washington; Caribbean foods, craft vendors, and a chance to vibe to great music.
“One good thing about music, when it hits you, you feel no pain.” Robert Nesta Marley.
Register here
Sunday, June 18 | 4:00 PM | Dance Performance | Music Hall | Portsmouth
Camille a. Brown & dancers: reclaiming black narratives
In African societies, dance serves many complex social purposes. Often there is no clear distinction between ritual celebration, social recreation, and history-keeping. African Diasporic dances, Samba and tap dance, line dance, hip hop, Capoeira, and twerking are all dance styles that have their origins on the continent of Africa.
Camille A. Brown and Dancers is a group that is reclaiming Black narratives for Black and brown people and elevating African Diasporic culture to its rightful place in American society. Spreading the joy of dance, they create and present performances that celebrate community, investigate historical and contemporary culture and recognize our shared humanity.
In addition to the dance performance, Camille A. Brown Dance Company will be offering a workshop with the Black Heritage Trail of NH and The Music Hall. For information and tickets for the BHTNH workshop, click here.
Price: $30 - $70
Register here
Monday, June 19 | 11:00 AM | African Drumming | African Burying Ground | FREE
The Healing Rhythm Of The Drums
Traditionally the drum was the heartbeat and soul of African communities, thus holding deep historic and symbolic significance. The drums herald political and social events and ceremonies of birth, death, and marriage. They spark courtships, home-coming and going, and accompany religious rites and rituals that call up ancestral spirits while creating an atmosphere that promotes healing and social resilience.
This commemorative event, live streaming from the Portsmouth African Burying Ground, pays homage to the ancestors buried there. The healing beat of the drums provided by Akwaaba Ensemble, an African drumming and dance group, and a ceremony by Rev. Robert Thompson will honor the ancestors who survived upon these shores.
2:00 PM | Gospel Choir Performance | South Church | $35 pp
From Africa To America: We Are The Drums
Performance plays a key role in narrating the African story in America. The Negro spirituals sung by enslaved Africans laid the foundation for today’s gospel, blues, jazz, and rap music. All of these musical forms provide artists the chance to express the Black experience.
Returning to Portsmouth, The Howard Gospel Choir, a group of students, alumni, and community members from Howard University, will lift our spirits as we celebrate, heal, and empower our communities. As the first college choir of its kind in the world, the Howard Gospel Choir is a trailblazer for gospel music ministries on collegiate campuses across the globe.
Choir Members Include:
Choir Director: Ray Bramble
Cost is $35 per person. Space is Limited.
Register here
Date: June 10 - 19, 2023
Location: Black Heritage Trail - 222 Court Street , Portsmouth, NH 03801
Click here for Information