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DESCRIPTION:Culture + Art + Education + International solidarity + Community = 5 
 Reasons to Celebrate June 5!\n\n35 years later, La Peña Cool-tural 
 Center's mission of creating a welcoming & affordable space to promote 
 cultural understanding, peace, solidarity, and community action through the 
 arts & education remains as vital as ever: Like Brand New! The City of 
 Berkeley will proclaim June 5th as La Peña Day in Berkeley while the 
 Street Carnival & Fair will take place on Prince St. and Shattuck 
 Ave.\n\nLa Peña 35th Anniversary Street Festival Booth Application 
 Form\n\nWould you like to inform the community about the work of your 
 organization? Or sell your handmade art, jewelry or clothing? We invite you 
 to join us for La Peña's 35th Anniversary Street Festival on June 5, 2010 
 from 12-6pm on Prince Street at Shattuck Avenue in Berkeley. To be 
 considered for participation PLEASE COMPLETE THE FORM AND RETURN BY MAY 15. 
 You can fill out the form online: CLICK HERE.\n\nFor additional 
 information, please call Sophia at 510/849-2568 ext. 20. We will be in 
 touch with you soon!\n \nStreet Festival during La Peña Day in 
 Berkeley\n\nLike Brand New! La Peña Celebrates its 35th 
 Anniversary\nSaturday, June 5. Noon - 6pm. Free\nLa Peña Cultural Center, 
 3105 Shattuck Ave. in Berkeley\n510-849-2568 
 http://www.lapena.org/index.php?s=141\n\nFor its 35 Anniversary Street 
 Festival on June 5, La Peña showcases the talents and treasures of its 
 diverse community, young and old, with a showcase of students and faculty 
 who will perform Afro-Cuban, Afro-Peruvian, Puerto Rican, African, Chilean 
 and other Latin American dances on the stage of Prince and Shattuck 
 streets, beginning at noon. Artists and community organizations will share 
 their work as part of the celebrations.\n\nThe performers are:\n\nDanza 
 Azteca\n\nDanza Azteca performing traditional ceremonial dances. A living, 
 cultural tradition filled with the artistic and spiritual traditions of the 
 Pre-Columbian Aztecs, their neighbors, and their post-conquest Mestizo 
 descendants. It is a form of prayer, individual, and yet communal.\n 
 \nLatin Jazz Ensemble. Instructor: Josh Jones\n\nIn this popular 
 class/ensemble, vocalists, and percussionists students learn with horns, 
 percussion and string instruments to perform great Salsa and Latin Jazz 
 arrangements. Josh Jones is recognized internationally from his touring 
 with such jazz greats as Don Cherry, Steve Coleman, Dave Murray, and Chico 
 Freeman. He is  an important influence and strong supporter of jazz in the 
 community.\n\nOsvaldo Torres \n\nImprisoned, harassed and blacklisted from 
 commercial venues during the US-backed military dictatorship in Chile, 
 Osvaldo songs hold poignant lyrics and enchanting melodies. He is known for 
 his storytelling talents and for his work with and about the Aymaran 
 culture of northern Chile.\n \nCarnavales De Mi Pueblo!\n\nTo celebrate La 
 Peña's 35th Anniversary, folklorist Gabriela Shiroma assembled a troupe of 
 dancers and musicians to celebrate with Carnavales   (farewell to the 
 flesh) La Peña. The Carnavales have always been a motif for celebration; 
 however, this Spanish religious tradition was in many ways used to control 
 slaves in Spanish colonies. Carnivals have taken different meanings and 
 styles in Latin American culture. De Rompe y Raja’s Carnaval Limeño 
 presents the Son de los Diablos, group Hatunmarka with Carnaval Boliviano 
 performing sikureadas & tarkeadas, and Aguacero presenting the bomba of 
 Carnaval de Puerto Rico.\n \nAfro-Puerto Rican Adult and Youth Bomba 
 Classes\n\nInstructors: Shefali Shah & Hector Lugo. The bomba is a uniquely 
 Puerto Rican musical genre for dance. It is derived from West Africa, 
 through the importation of slaves. The bomba flourished wherever the slaves 
 and their descendants lived and worked. In Puerto Rico, this was typically 
 on the colonial plantations that were common along the coastal 
 plains.\n\nAfro-Peruvian Adult Dance, Cajon & Youth Ensemble 
 Classes\n\nInstructors: Gabriela Shiroma & Pedro Rosales. Afro-Peruvian 
 music has its roots in the communities of black slaves brought to work in 
 the mines along the Peruvian coast. Because slaves were forbidden from 
 playing instruments, percussion instruments developed out of the simplest 
 household appliances. The cajon is a wooden-box in which the player sits on 
 to play. The seminal performer Nicomedes Santa Cruz and the group Peru 
 Negro popularized this music and dance.\n\nWest African Djembe Drum 
 Class\n\nInstructor: Jesse Servin. A skin-covered hand drum shaped like a 
 large goblet. According to the Bamana people in Mali, the name of the 
 djembe comes directly from the saying "Anke dje, anke be" which literally 
 translates to "everyone gather together" and defines the drum's 
 purpose.\n\nAraucauria w/ Rafael Manriquez\n\nAraucaria shares a distinct 
 sample of dances representing Chile's diverse geography and culture. 
 Araucaria is the name of a native tree found in southern Chile and Tierra 
 del Fuego. A leading exponent of Latin American music in the Bay Area for 
 over 30 years. Rafael brings us the gift of both his exquisite voice and 
 remarkable skill on Latin American string instruments.\n \nLa Peña 
 Community Chorus\n\nSinging songs of peace and justice since it began in 
 1978. The Chorus’ music includes styles based in the world’s folk and 
 social justice movements and performs in nursing homes, elders’ 
 residences, hospitals, migrant labor camps, juvenile halls, rehabilitation 
 centers, and public schools.\n\nWillard Middle School/La Peña Latin Jazz 
 Ensemble\n\nInstructor: Chus Alonso. ith over 25 years of experience 
 performing, composing, and leading musical projects, Chus is a flutist 
 director of the flamenco and Cuban music group Potaje. The Willard Middle 
 School/La Peña Latin Jazz Ensemble is a collaborative project between the 
 school, La Peña and the SF Community Music Center.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/06/02/18649619.php
SUMMARY:La Pena 35th Anniversary Series Presents: Street Carnival & Fair
LOCATION:Prince & Shattuck Ave. 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/06/02/18649619.php
DTSTART:20100605T190000Z
DTEND:20100606T010000Z
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