When
Shaumba-Yandje Dibinga first started planning to bring members of her
Roxbury-based youth dance organization OrigiNation to South Africa, her
goal was simply to give her students the opportunity to perform in
another country.
Little did she know that the
10-day trip would be a soul-searching, life-changing experience for her
and her 17 young charges.
Last year Dibinga, OrigiNation’s executive director, came up with the
idea of bringing her students to South Africa. She contacted her
brother, who lived there at the time, to help arrange the trip because
she thought it would be great to expose her students to the country’s
rich culture and history.
“We always wanted to bring OrigiNation to Africa,” she said. “I wanted
to expose them to different traditions, especially the music and dances
of Africa.”
After setting a Nov. 22 date for the trip, the youth members raised
funds through a series of bake sales and donations from community
members to not only pay for the trip, but also purchase school supplies
and clothing for the South African students they were visiting. In
their travels last month, the dance troupe members performed for and
taught dance steps to their South African counterparts in schools in
Johannesburg, Pretoria and Cape Town.
OrigiNation member David Brown, 17, said it was wonderful to teach
South African youth hip-hop and tap dance steps, and to learn some new
steps as well.
“I learned about Zulu dances,” he said. “I didn’t know before that hip-hop and Zulu dances were so similar.”
In addition to the performances, the trip members also learned about
South Africa’s turbulent racial history. They visited historical
landmarks like Nelson Mandela’s home in the black township of Soweto
and the Hector Pieterson Museum, memorializing one the first students
to be killed during the 1976 student uprising against the apartheid
regime in Soweto.
However, it was a visit to the Apartheid Musuem in Johannesburg that
made trip members reevaluate how they perceive racism, both in Africa
and in America.
During the visit, OrigiNation members were in the museum at the same
time as a group of white teenagers from Britain. Some OrigiNation
members were offended when the white teenagers made lewd, racially
insensitive gestures about an exhibit of naked black men who were
handcuffed by the apartheid regime’s security force.
“That was just offensive,” said trip participant Ashley Vassall, 19.
“To be in the Apartheid Museum and see that kind of disrespect is
totally uncalled for. I have never seen racism like that in America in
my lifetime. It was certainly a learning experience.”
The experience in the Apartheid Museum led to further discussion that
evening about race relations, especially the use of the n-word among
African American youth.
“Being in South Africa allowed us to understand why the word shouldn’t
be used,” said trip participant Shekia Scott, 18.
Dampening those tensions was the interaction with South African youth.
Many of the trip members said they felt that they were being welcomed
“home” by the Africans’ warm reception. It was also an opportunity for
them to debunk stereotypes about Africa — many said they learned that
most things related about Africa in Western media are not only wrong,
but just plain ignorant and racist.
“Before we went to South Africa, people told us that lions and monkeys
roam the streets and everyone there is poor and has AIDS,” said trip
member Keenan Cooks, 17. “All of that is simply not true. Now when I
hear people here say things like that, I get mad.”
Since coming back from the trip on Dec. 3, OrigiNation has already
started making plans for another trip to a different country in Africa
next year. In addition, trip members are raising funds to bring their
South African tour guide to Boston next February for Black History
Month, and send her back with more school supplies and clothing for
South African youth.
The participants said they felt that the trip permanently changed their view of the world.
“It was the best experience of my life,” said trip participant Ashley
Bleeker, 18. “I brought back so much to share with others and to keep
for myself.”