In music and dance, Sudanese performers transport refugee audiences back
home
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[October 03, 2024]
BY FATMA KHALED
CAIRO (AP) — As the performers took the stage and the traditional drum
beat gained momentum, Sudanese refugees sitting in the audience were
moved to tears. Hadia Moussa said the melody reminded her of the
country's Nuba Mountains, her family's ancestral home.
"Performances like this help people mentally affected by the war. It
reminds us of the Sudanese folklore and our culture," she said.
Sudan has been engulfed by violence since April 2023, when war between
the Sudanese military and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces broke
out across the country. The conflict has turned the capital, Khartoum,
into an urban battlefield and displaced 4.6 million people, according to
the U.N. migration agency, including more than 419,000 people who fled
to Egypt.
A band with 12 Sudanese members now lives with thousands of refugees in
Egypt. The troupe, called “Camirata," includes researchers, singers and
poets who are determined to preserve the knowledge of traditional
Sudanese folk music and dance to keep it from being lost in the ruinous
war.
Founded in 1997, the band rose to popularity in Khartoum before it began
traveling to different states, enlisting diverse musicians, dancers and
styles. They sing in 25 different Sudanese languages. Founder Dafallah
el-Hag said the band's members started relocating to Egypt in recently,
as Sudan struggled through a difficult economic and political transition
after a 2019 popular uprising unseated longtime ruler Omar al-Bashir.
Others followed after the violence began. El-Hag arrived late last year.
The band uses a variety of local musical instruments on stage. El-Hag
says audiences are often surprised to see instruments such as the
tanbour, a stringed instrument, being played with the nuggara drums,
combined with tunes of the banimbo, a wooden xylophone.
“This combination of musical instruments helped promote some sort of
forgiveness and togetherness among the Sudanese people,” el-Hag said,
adding that he is eager to revive a museum in Khartoum that housed
historic instruments and was reportedly looted and damaged.
Fatma Farid, 21, a singer and dancer from Kordofan, moved to Egypt in
2021. Her aunt was killed in 2023 when an explosive fell on their house
in al-Obeid, the capital of North Kordofan.
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Sudanese Camirata troupe perform at the Italian culture center in
Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, July 24, 2024. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)
“The way I see art has changed a lot
since the war began," she said. "You think of what you present as an
artist. You can deliver a message,” she said.
Kawthar Osman, a native of Madani city who has been singing with the
band since 1997, feels nostalgic when she sings about the Nile
River, which forms in Sudan from two upper branches, the Blue and
White Nile.
“It reminds me of what makes Sudan the way it is,” she said, adding
that the war only “pushed the band to sing more for peace.”
Over 2 million Sudanese fled the country, mostly to neighboring
Egypt and Chad, where the Global Hunger Index has reported a
“serious” level of hunger in Chad. Over half a million forcibly
displaced Sudanese have sought refuge in Chad, mostly women and
children.
Living conditions for those who stayed in Sudan have worsened as the
war spread beyond Khartoum. Many made hard decisions early in the
war either to flee across frontlines or risk being caught in the
middle of fighting. In Darfur, the war turned particularly brutal
and created famine conditions, with militias attacking entire
villages and burning them to the ground.
Armed robberies, lootings and the seizure of homes for bases were
some of the challenges faced by Sudanese who stayed in the country's
urban areas. Others struggled to secure food and water, find sources
for electricity and obtain medical treatment since hospitals have
been raided by fighters or hit by airstrikes. Communications
networks are often barely functional.
The performers say they struggle to speak with family and friends
still in the country, much less think about returning.
“We don’t know if we’ll return to Sudan again or will see Sudan
again or walk in the same streets,” Farid said.
___
Video Journalist Mohamed Salah contributed to this report from
Cairo.
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