In answer to the desperate need for humanitarian relief for the Syrian people inside their country as well as in Syrian refugee camps in neighbouring countries, Mosaic Initiative for Syria has announced a fundraising gala taking place this Saturday, 17 March. It will support Syrian artists and showcase Syrian culture at Kensington Town Hall, as part of the Reel Syria 2012 festival which runs 15-18 March.
All proceeds from this event will benefit the communities affected by the current humanitarian crisis. On the Sunday Bill Drummond will recreate the "Surround for Damascus" show he performed in Syria and is looking for volunteers. See below.
Gala programme, Saturday 17 March:
4:00 pm: Syrian-style bazaar with traditional food from the region.
6:00 pm: Series of short Syrian films.
7:00 pm: featuring the renowned Syrian composer, singer and poet, Samih Choukeir (pictured below), as well as a performance by Khyam Allami on the oud. There will also be an audience with Ali Ferzat, the celebrated Syrian political cartoonist.
Venue: Kensington Town Hall, Hornton Street, London, W8 7NX.
Samih Choukeir is a Syrian composer, singer and poet. In 1983, he released his first album, Liman Oughany, and he has since toured Arab and European countries. He composed "Ya Heyf" (What a Shame) only one month after the uprising began in Deraa’, and the first song to become a theme for the Syrian pro-democracy activists. Choukeir has sung predominantly about the Israeli military occupation of Palestine and most notably put to music the poems of the late Palestinian award-winning poet Mahmoud Darwish. He was a guest of honour at the 47th anniversary of the Palestinian revolution, Paris in January.
Ali Ferzat is a celebrated Syrian cartoonist who was awarded [3] the 2011 Press Freedom Prize by Reporters Without Borders and Le Monde. For denouncing the corruption and abuses of Bashar Al-Assad’s rule, he was attacked in August by masked gunmen, who broke his hands as a warning. He has been nominated for Index on Censorship's 2012 award for artists, filmmakers and writers whose work asserts artistic freedom and battles against repression and injustice.
Khyam Allami was born in Damascus, Syria to Iraqi parents in 1981, and is now based in London. He took up the ‘ūd (or Oud) in 2004 and has already been on the cover of the UK’s Froots Magazine. In 2010 his dedication and hard work was recognised nationally when he became the first recipient of the prestigious World Routes Academy scholarship from BBC Radio 3. http://www.khyamallami.com/site/ [4]
Thursday 15 March
Friday 16 March
Free entry (Free Word Centre, 60 Farringdon Road, EC1R 3GA)
Sunday 18 March
To take part, please email surround@reelfestivals.org [5]
Links
[1] https://theartsdesk.com/users/peter-culshaw
[2] https://www.addtoany.com/share_save
[3] http://en.rsf.org/reporters-without-borders-le-monde-08-12-2011,41523.html
[4] http://www.khyamallami.com/site/
[5] mailto:surround@reelfestivals.org
[6] https://theartsdesk.com/node/3901/view
[7] https://theartsdesk.com/node/4482/view
[8] https://theartsdesk.com/node/4207/view
[9] https://theartsdesk.com/new-music
[10] https://theartsdesk.com/topics/featured-buzz
[11] https://theartsdesk.com/topics/buzz