The Culture Keepers

The Culture Keepers The Culture Keepers are a group of dedicated persons wishing to keep true West African Culture alive, through song, dance, music, storytelling & educating.

Foday Camara is a Senegalese national, born in the southern part of the country known as the Casamance. He is a strong advocate of keeping culture alive and does so as a representative for his own culture, Mandinka by singing and playing melodies he has grown up with. Foday has danced his native dances in the US and Germany as well as numerous countries in Africa. Foday performs spiritual dances w

earing masks and costumes that he makes himself. Foday has also choreographed the traditional dances and taught many tourists who visited his country, Foday has been in Australia since 2003, and in that time he has worked with students inside the education arena, persons with disabilities and members of the public offering workshops tailored to the needs of the participants. Foday has performed at numerous cultural events, festivals, hotels, bars and city landmarks such as the museum and zoo,
Foday is now beginning his own business offering workshops in dance and drumming, performances of dance and drumming for large and small events, For more information please contact him on 0400464131

17/09/2022
https://youtu.be/TwH5EFJHuTQ
15/10/2016

https://youtu.be/TwH5EFJHuTQ

This video documentary is a historical survey of socio-political transformation in pre-colonial Kombo from the era of Baynunka dominance, the establishment o...

13/10/2016

THE MAROONS OF JAMAICA
(CULTURE KEEPERS OF WEST AFRICAN CULTURE IN JAMAICA)
Maroons were escaped slaves. They ran away from their Spanish-owned plantations when the British took the Caribbean island of Jamaica from Spain in 1655. The word maroon comes from the Spanish word‘cimarrones‘, which meant ‘mountaineers’. They fled to the mountainous areas of Jamaica, where it was difficult for their owners to follow and catch them, and formed independent communities as free men and women.
As more slaves were imported from Africa to work on the developing sugar plantations, and the population of enslaved Africans grew on Jamaica, there were more rebellions by the slaves. Some of the rebel slaves disappeared into the mountains and joined the Maroon communities. As the Maroon population grew, the Jamaican government decided to defeat the Maroons once and for all. They were seen as a constant threat by the government. The First Maroon War began in 1728. The campaign against them made the Maroons more determined than ever. Under their leader called Cudjoe, the Maroons fought back. In 1739, the British and the Maroons made peace. The freedom of the Maroons was recognised and their land was given to them. The Maroons were to govern themselves. In return they would support the British government in Jamaica against foreign invasion and would help capture rebel slaves and runaways from the plantations and return them to their owners. Although this agreement might seem strange now, it was one way for the Maroons to live in peace with the island’s government.
Pictured here is a drawing entitled Pacification with the Maroon Negroes, dated 1801. It is an imaginary view of a meeting between British soldiers and Maroons. It is not clear whether it is meant to be of the 1739 or the 1795 peace agreement. The leaders of the Maroons did meet British officers to accept a peace agreement offered to them.
There were many years of peace between the Maroons and the British in Jamaica. But, in 1795, the new Governor of Jamaica, Balcarres, decided to deal with some minor breaches of the peace treaty by a community of Maroons called the Trelawney Town Maroons. The plantation owners asked the governor not to take action. They felt that an agreement should be reached with the Maroons to maintain the peace of the town. The governor went ahead against this advice, arresting several of the leaders of Trelawney Town. This started the Second Maroon War. 300 Maroons in Trelawney Town held out against 1500 troops and 3000 local volunteer troops. After five months of fighting, the undefeated Maroons were offered an agreement for peace. When they surrendered their arms, the Governor cheated on the peace agreement offered. The Maroons were arrested and, against the agreement they had accepted, were transported off the island to Nova Scotia, on the east coast of north America, and later went to Sierra Leone, West Africa. Leonard Parkinson was one of the leaders of the Maroons, he was active in the Second Maroon War. The local authorities put a price on his head of £50, (about £2,500 today), wanted dead or alive. Parkinson, pictured here, was known as the Captain of the Maroons.
Trelawney Town was the largest of the Maroon settlements on the island of Jamaica. The image pictured here of Trelawney Town shows the British soldiers riding in to attack the town. The Maroons are surrounding them, ready to resist, and would beat them back. Maroons were known for their skilful tactics in combat, whereby they relied on their knowledge of the surrounding environment to outwit the attackers.
With acknowledgment to Richard Hart for his work on the history of the Maroon community of Jamaica.

https://youtu.be/rnQ2rqvLtiA
13/10/2016

https://youtu.be/rnQ2rqvLtiA

Historian, Author, Journalist Sister Farika monologue on the Jamaican Maroon. The Jamaican Maroons were runaway slaves who fought the British during the 18th...

https://youtu.be/n5pW91FthfU
30/09/2016

https://youtu.be/n5pW91FthfU

Two year old Jali Sherrifo Kouyate is the son of two jalis, Suntou Kouyate and Makoy Jobarteh in Brikama in The Gambia. He is named after a third jali, Jali ...

https://youtu.be/9nqD8XWybpQ
29/09/2016

https://youtu.be/9nqD8XWybpQ

A griot (gree-oh) is the keeper of the West African oral tradition and the tribe’s genealogy through poetic songs. Bob is invited to Gambia by his long-time ...

14/09/2016
https://youtu.be/ZBXOg30xPaQ
09/09/2016

https://youtu.be/ZBXOg30xPaQ

On a market day in the Bwa village of Boni, in central Burkina Faso, West Africa a group of masks perform, including the great plank masks called nwantantay,...

Me and my partner with the youth from Stella Maris. 20 July 2016.
29/07/2016

Me and my partner with the youth from Stella Maris.
20 July 2016.

23/07/2016

Thodozh N'jel, talented and a beautiful man to boot. We would love to get him to Australia to Perform at the "Oneness Festival' in December! Any ideas

When someone talks about African drumming the mind often conjures up mental pictures of dark skin, brightly coloured gar...
03/06/2016

When someone talks about African drumming the mind often conjures up mental pictures of dark skin, brightly coloured garments, big wide smiles and DJEMBE.
Let us introduce you to two of our favourite drums, SEWRUBA and TAMA..
Your mentors, Foday Camara and Amadou Kalissa are accomplished musicians with both drums and if you are EXTREMELY passionate they can not only teach you to play and explain the drums' significance in West African tradition.... but guide you in CREATING your very own sewruba or tama.
Ahhhh but which is which we hear you ask???
Happy researching!!
One Love

https://youtu.be/z1MjmggD0wU

http://jspinwestafrica.blogspot.com/ http://sambalivesinafrica.blogspot.com/ The 1990's in The Gambia West Africa where many cultures & traditions meld toget...

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