Nigeria dance carnival helps residents reclaim the streets
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[December 28, 2022]
LAGOS (Reuters) - In a street in a poor neighbourhood of Lagos, a
bare-chested young man, Gift Eze, holds his screaming partner, helping
calm the rage within and stop him fighting.
Residents of Oworonshoki have seen their share of violence, with
robberies and tit-for-tat gang murders once commonplace in this part of
Nigeria's vast, boisterous commercial capital.
But the scene on Christmas Eve, a dance routine between two men caked in
chalk, showed how far the community has come since the annual Slum
Party, an art event using dance to tell stories of the local community,
was established four years ago.
Days of dance workshops culminated with an all-day carnival aiming to
reclaim the streets and reduce tensions between rival gangs. Before
long, onlookers were dancing along with the drums, blurring the lines
between performers and their audience.
"We are using dance as a focal point ... to come to the community and
just talk about the various socio-political issues that needed to be
addressed, using a party as the template," said Sunday Ozegbe-Obiajulu,
who founded the event.
Eze, one of the Slum Party's participants, said the event has been
transformational.
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Dancers perform during an annual slum
party in Oworonshoki, Lagos, Nigeria December 23, 2022. REUTERS/Temilade
Adelaja
"I've been able to achieve a big
goal in my life, and Slum Party has really changed a whole lot for
me," he said.
Community leader Oriyomi Akeem said Slum Party has helped bring
peace to a neighbourhood once known as a no-go area overrun by
gangs. "Now everything is calm and good," Akeem said.
Ozegbe-Obiajulu hopes the carnival's success could be replicated by
people in other troubled areas of Nigeria and beyond.
"With their dance, their poetry, their music, they can definitely
use it to bring some sort of attention to their community, they can
also use it to inspire the young ones."
(Reporting by Seun Sanni; writing by Hereward Holland; editing by
Mark Heinrich)
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