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Sunday, March 16, 2025

Kambule producers: Teach young people their history

by

15 days ago
20250301

Se­nior Pro­duc­er

 

The pro­duc­ers of Kam­bule say young peo­ple want to know their his­to­ry. In fact, they say they are of­ten an­gry when they do learn it be­cause they feel they should have been taught this at an ear­li­er age.

Speak­ing yes­ter­day at the con­clu­sion of the Kam­bule Street Play on Pic­cadil­ly Greens, Port-of-Spain, show pro­duc­er At­til­lah Springer said their team had to do a lot of emo­tion­al work help­ing their ac­tors come to terms with their his­to­ry.

She said, “There is a need for this in­for­ma­tion, this ed­u­ca­tion that is not di­dac­tic, that’s not in a book, in a text­book. And of course, the text­books don’t have us in them any­way.”

She said the play pro­vid­ed an op­por­tu­ni­ty for them to learn in a way that was al­so en­ter­tain­ing and they were very re­cep­tive to the in­for­ma­tion.

“The young peo­ple, when they start to learn what we have to say, they get re­al­ly an­gry,” Springer said. “Be­cause the ed­u­ca­tion sys­tem is not teach­ing them that about them­selves.”

The Idake­da Group, formed by Pearl Ein­tou Springer and her daugh­ters Dara Healy and At­til­lah, are the pro­duc­ers of Kam­bule, now 20 years old. Healy said they are com­mit­ted to spread­ing the mes­sage of ed­u­cat­ing through Car­ni­val.

The au­di­ence seemed to en­joy it. Many were seen singing and sway­ing through­out the rough­ly 90-minute pro­duc­tion, which Idakea de­scribed as a rit­u­al en­act­ment of the 1881 ri­ot. The play de­scribes how the peo­ple of East Port-of-Spain con­front­ed the po­lice com­mis­sion­er at the time, Cap­tain Bak­er, who at­tempt­ed to use force to stop their Car­ni­val cel­e­bra­tions. The res­i­dents matched and best­ed Bak­er, earn­ing their right to “play mas.” The ac­tu­al con­fronta­tion took place on Duke Street, in the vicin­i­ty of All Stars Pa­n­yard.

Guardian Me­dia spoke to Aafisha, a first-time at­tendee who said the show was worth the ear­ly morn­ing. She de­scribed it as cul­tur­al­ly re­fresh­ing.

Tami­ka, a young dancer and an­oth­er first-time at­tendee, said she en­joyed the sto­ry­telling and how it brought the his­to­ry of Car­ni­val to life for her.

“It was nice to add up all the steps,” she said. “You see where every­thing come from; the sto­ry just brought every­thing to­geth­er for me.”

At the end of the play, the pro­duc­tion team award­ed, for the first time, Spir­it of Car­ni­val Awards. Kalin­da Bois were award­ed to cast mem­ber Em­manuel An­so­lia, who played one of the Pier­rot Grenades in the play, and Prof Mau­reen Warn­er-Lewis, whose work on the African lan­guages in Trinidad and To­ba­go in­formed Ein­tou Springer’s de­ci­sion to change the name of the play from Can­boulay, which means burn­ing cane, to Kam­bule, the Kikon­go word for pro­ces­sion. An­so­lia is al­so the pres­i­dent of the Na­tion­al Dra­ma As­so­ci­a­tion of T&T.

Yes­ter­day’s pre­sen­ta­tion was viewed by Pres­i­dent Chris­tine Kan­ga­loo and her hus­band, as well as act­ing Prime Min­is­ter Stu­art Young.

As is typ­i­cal, the pro­duc­tion end­ed with a tra­di­tion­al mas demon­stra­tion that was led by a tam­boo bam­boo band and fea­tured the Whip Mas­ters, Blue Dev­ils and Black In­di­ans.


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