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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, July 22, 2001 |
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Rhythmic passage to Africa
Hyderabad: AT A rough estimate there are 500 African students
pursuing various degree and diploma courses here, many of them in
computers. Admits Sabuni: "The IT buzz has brought me to India.
Everyone in my country are talking about it and I wanted to check
it out."
The US was the obvious destination yet Sabuni chose India as he
didn't want to join the bandwagon and has not regretted his
choice. "It is a different country alright but I am familiar with
the Indian way of life. I have several Indians as my friends in
Uganda," he says, adding "they are a powerful community back
there".
Hyderabad, for him, is a home he has never left. "Even my
grandmother who visited me last year felt the same. People here
are very friendly and hospitable. You can knock on your
neighbour's door and seek a glass of water which you cannot
imagine happening in other places like Mumbai, for instance."
In his early 20s, Kamal has come here three years ago and is in
the final year of his computer applications course. "Education
system here is quite flexible and the social scene is just about
picking up....," he says. The African students have their own
small parties in their houses or in some resort where they get to
do their own thing.
"Music is an intrinsic part of our lives. All our gatherings have
music. It is called `Ujama Swahi' (together with music) which is
to motivate ourselves to face life's hardships. I feel Indian
music has an African heart, very rhythmic," he describes.
Sukhbir, Bally Sagoo and others have popularised Indian music in
his country and Sabuni feasts on Bollywood movies and songs.
"People here like rock and do listen to Bob Marley and the likes.
But, I would love to expose them to the large diet of our music."
Baby Face, Faith Evans, Lauren Hill, Puff Daddy, Shaggy, Santana,
Chaka Demus, Aliya, etc, and a host of forms like `Cayo',
`Lingale', `Chandheer' and so on would appeal to our music
senses, he's sure.
Kamal has been part of a music band in his college which, he
boasts, had the four best bands in Uganda. "I love performing.
All my close friends were DJs there. You have to derive energy
from the party crowd, understand them and play what they freak
out on." "A good DJ is a person who can make anyone leaving the
party turn back and say, `Maan! He played my kinda music'," he
chips in.
Changing track to the situation in Africa, he says, "things are
changing, but there is a lot of negative publicity about the
region". "No one acknowledges that raw materials and raw talent
emerge from there," he bemoans. "Black people world over are not
shying away from accepting that Africa is their homeland".
Incidentally, Sabuni's father was a foster brother to Idi Amin.
"Situation was horrible a few years ago as one stepped out of the
house after dusk at his own risk. With democracy taking roots,
there is a sea change."
He agrees the young are restless. But he gets philosophical: "If
one does not forgive there will be no light at the end of the
tunnel".
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