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African
Festival stands tall in Lowell
June 16, 2002 By DENNIS SHAUGHNESSEY - Lowell Sun Online
Sun Staff LOWELL -- The rain and cold temperatures could not dampen the spirit
and enthusiasm of the several hundred people who gathered for the second annual
Greater Lowell African Festival at the JFK Civic Center yesterday. A diverse
group, representing the various nations of the African continent, gathered
to celebrate their culture through music, dance, food and traditional African
dress. Zoe Kamara, who is of Ghanese descent, sat behind a table of homemade
dolls dressed in African garb, which she peddled. Kamara lives in Lowell and
was impressed by the turnout. "If the weather was a little better, we would have seen many
more people, but we're having fun anyway," she said. "I think this is great.
It brings us back to our culture." Her fiance, George Arthur, came to the United
States from Ghana in 1998. "The festival is for the enlightening of the American
people," George said. "It also gives us a sense of being home. To be a part
of the unity that exists from all the African countries is an honor."
The light
drizzle falling on the plaza could not hinder the revelers from dancing to
the music of Rumbafrica, a Congolese band based in Stoneham. "We love music. We love
to dance and play," said guitarist Ouffwet Konan. "It is part of a very rich
culture." In the various food tents lining the plaza, people feasted on samosa,
a deep-fried roll filled with beef, pepper, onions and tomato. "It is the food
of Africa," said Lowell resident Daniel Kimemiah, who came to the United States
from Kenya 10 years ago. "Getting together, united, enjoying freedom and prosperity,
that is what the African festival means to me," he added.
The festival kicked
off yesterday morning with speeches from local officials, including Mayor Rita
Mercier, and featured a keynote address from Ambassador Amadou Kebe, executive
secretary of the Organization of African Unity to the United Nations. "Think
about the role that Africa plays in the 21st century," Kebe said. "Africa is
a credit to humankind. By creating the OAU, the objective is to create a framework
of cooperation and integration among African nations. We need to work with
the American authorities and respect the laws of the land and promote our culture."
The
OAU represents a federation of 54 African countries. Brightly colored costumes
from many of those countries, including Mali, Morocco, Senegal, the Gambia
and the Ivory Coast, gave festival-goers a sense of the homeland. Sam Stevquoah,
a social worker from Lowell and one of the organizers of the festival, jumped
in time to the music as he prepared hot, spicy pork ribs with his wife, Edith. "The
festival is an opportunity for me to showcase my culture, and to get my neighbors
and my American friends to sample our food and music, and to create an awareness
of the pressures and triumphs of the Africans in our community," Stevquoah said. "It
makes me happy to be here, and in spite of the bad weather, we had a good turnout.
Next year will be even better." Elaine Harding, a Boston resident who hails from
Sierra Leone, sampled Stevequoah's ribs, which are seasoned with lots of pepper
and other tongue-tingling spices. "I love the African festival." she said. "I
came from Boston today to rejoice with by beautiful African brothers and sisters."
(c) 2002 The Sun
(Lowell, MA). All rights reserved. Reproduced with the permission
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