Sunday, 24 February 2013

Week of 25th February: Films about Trinidad, Nigeria's Constitution, Jazz, Poetry, African Archaeology, Comedy and Ghanaian Food!!


Hello all

Welcome to the end of February, we have an assortment of events from poetry to Nigerian constitutional review, films about Trinidad, Tanzanian energy, jazz, comedy and Ghanaian cooking!
Enjoy and make sure you take advantage of the voucher code VAL10 before the end of the month!!!


Monday 25th February

At 6.30pm Lets Talk will be screening Lets Watch: 3 short films about Trinidad and Tobago at Bar 19:20, 19-20 Great Sutton Street, Farringdon, EC1V 0DR. The films are Panumundo which looks at the history of the steelpan and its influences around the world. T&T50 in Fifteen a 15 minute documentary that looks at important events in Trinidad and Tobago’s history and The Other Side of Carnival a 45 minute documentary looking at the social and economic impact that the T&T carnival has on its society. There will be a discussion and Q&A with director Charyse Tia Harper afterwards, more details here. 

Tuesday 26th February

At 1.00pm is Tanzania as an emerging energy producer at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, Chatham House, 10 St James Square, SW1Y 4LE with the Tanzanian Minister for Energy and Minerals Honourable Sospeter Muhongo who will discuss his plans for the development and management of Tanzania’s energy sector. This is a FREE invitation only event via Tighisti Amare.

From 6.30pm to 8.30pm Professor Kevin MacDonald will be holding an Inaugural Lecture on Re-Mapping West Africa’s Ancient Empires at the UCL Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre, Gower Street, WC1E 6BT. 2012 was the centenary of the publication of Maurice Delafosse’s comprehensive history Haut-Senegal-Niger on the Niger, Senegal and Volta River Basins from 1000AD onwards. In this lecture Professor MacDonald will unravel long held certainties about the location of capitals and heartlands of the two great empires of Ghana and Mali using archaeological data interwoven with oral tradition and text. Register for this extremely fascinating and FREE lecture here

At 6.30pm Five Talents presents An Evening with Lillian Mwikali at the Africa Centre, 38 King Street, Covent Garden, WC2E 8JT. Lillian Mkawali is Kenyan Deputy Director of Thika Community Development Trust with a wealth of experience in microfinance and will be discussing her work and the programme that now has 43 village savings group. Drinks and canapés will be served at this FREE event, RSVP here

Wednesday 27th February

At 7.30pm we have Poetry Jam 4 at the Vibe Gallery, N001, The Biscuit Factory, 100 Clements Road, SE16 4DG. This night of spoken word will be hosted by Errol McGlashan and feature David Lee Morgan  Tenesia Teri-Ann, Rachael Grace Beck, Cerebral Hyper, Deanna Rodger, Matt Cummins, Paloma Heindorff, Pfe Freedom, Leah Bailey, Ant Smith, Consuelo Wodzicki-Malisz, Ebonee Onyx, Annalouise Oakland, Anthony Anaxagorou and James Massiah. Throw in Special surprise guests, surprise performances and open mics spots and you have an evening of groovy grooviness all for just £4.00!

From 9.00am to 1.00pm Chatham House hosts The Review of Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution: Diaspora Consultation at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, Chatham House, 10 St James Square, SW1Y 4LE. With the Honourable Abike Dabiri-Erewa (Chairman Diaspora Committee, Nigerian House of Representatives), Honourable Emeka Ihedioha (Deputy Speaker Nigerian House of Representatives) and Clement Nwankwo (Policy and Legal Advocacy Centre), this is part of the hundreds of public consultations being undertaken to review of the 1999 Constitution. This is an invitation only event, for more details contact the Chatham House, Africa Programme.
Thursday 28th February

At 6.00pm KCL ACS presents Culture Shock 2013-Vengeance at Greenwood Theatre, Guys Campus, 55 Weston Street, London Bridge, SE1 3RA. This story of love, betrayal  friendship and trust shall encompass fashion, dance, comedy and song from different parts of Africa nad the Caribbean, with special external acts; Suli Breaks and Travis Jay. Tickets are £10.00 for members (£12.00 for non members) from here.
At 8.00pm Supa Fine presents Femi Temowo and Situation at the Hideaway, 114 Junction Road, N19 5BL. Proud to be African Clothing favourite Femi Temowo will be playing material from his latest album, Orin Meta while Situation lead by drummer Femi Koleoso with Joe Armon-Jones on keyboard and Will Burcher on bass will be playing original material and covers ranging from Neo Soul, R’n’B, to jazz and hip hop. Supported by DJ Citizen K and DJ Speedy, food will be served from 6.00pm to 10.30pm. Admission is £5.00.

Saturday 2nd March

From 2.00pm to 6.00pm Black History Walks and the National Association of Black Saturday Schools presents 1834 Slavery Compensation: Who got the money? at Room B35, Birbeck College, University of London, Torrington Square,  WC1E 7HX. This presentation discusses the £20m compensation paid to slave owners in 1834, a team of researchers from UCL (Professor Catherine Hall, Dr Nick Draper, Keith McClelland, Kate Donnington and Rachel Lang) have created a user friendly website which establishes; Which individuals received the money and how much, where they lived, what they did with the money and which cultural and educational institutions they established or supported with the money, which islands/ plantations were compensated, physical legacies and much more. Register for this FREE event here.

From 2.00pm to 4.30pm BTWSC will be holding NARM 2013: African Histories: Paul Stephenson and The Bristol Bus Boycott And John Archer and Black Politics at the Gayton Library, 5 St Johns Road, Harrow, Middlesex, HA1 2EE. Kwaku’s presentation will be based on the book and DVD of the same name to focus on role models from the African British history. Register for this FREE event here.

At 6.00pm the Imperial College ACS hosts Afrogala 2013: The Journey at the Great Hall, Sherfield Building, Imperial College London, South Kensington, SW7 2AZ showcasing the evolution of African and Caribbean culture. With food and entertainment tickets are from £15.00 - £25.00 from here.

At 6.30pm Zoes Ghana Kitchen will be hosting Ghana Stand Up at Studio Gi, Enterprise House, 2 Tudor Grove, E9 7QL. In honour of Ghana’s 56th Independence Day Celebration Zoes Ghana Kitchen will be presenting a 3 Course meal of Ghanaian delicacies. With vegetarian options and 2 sittings either at 6.30 or 8.30pm all for just £20.00 this is a delicious treat too good to miss! For menus and bookings check here. 

At 9.00pm Afro-Palace Live Sessions presents Konkoma UK Tour at the New Empowering Church, 1a Westgate Street, Dalston, E8 3RL.  Featuring Konkoma a playing their West African Afro sound based around guitarist Alfred Bannerman and organist Emmanuel Rentzos with Qrquestra Estelar a 30 piece Afro Latin big band complete with 15 piece horn section and Family Atlantica led by multi instrumentalist Jack Yglesias with Luzmira Zerpa playing an acoustic warm up set. Tickets are £10.00 in advance from here and £12.00 on the door. 
Sunday 3rd March

From 3.00pm to 6.00pm Black History Walks presents the3rd series of the Queen Nzingha Lecture Series- Mary Seacole Fights Back in Room B36, Birbeck College, University of London, Malet Street, WC1E 7HX. The lecture will feature Professor Elizabeth Anionwu (recently retired head of the Mary Seacole Centre for Nursing Practice) speaking on the real history of Mary Seacole and Antoinette Kwegan (PhD student at Queen Marys University) who is researching the role of the third sector in raising educational achievement. This is a FREE event, register here 

At 7.00pm is Comedy Face/ Off at the Fairfield Halls, Park Lane, Croydon, CR9 1DG with Eddie Kadi representing West London in the Red Corner and Danny ’Slim’ Gray from south London in the Blue corner hosted by Kevin Jay as the ref! Supported by Kane Brown and A Dot the Comedian with a P.A. performance by Jedi. Tickets are £22.50 (£20.00 concs) call 07906737218 or Box Office 020 8688 9291.

Sunday, 17 February 2013

Week of 18th February: Plays, Coffee, Films, Poetry, Mali, Congo


Greetings and salutations!!

Another fascinating week beckons! For those of you that put off your Valentines celebrations Proud to be African Clothing is still offering you 10% off until the 25th of February with the code VAL10. We have a wide array of events for you, from a second run of Lookman Sanusi’s hilarious play ‘Our Husband Has Gone Mad Again’, Arinze Kene’s new play ‘Gods Property’ at the Albany, Marsha Ambrosius performing live in Islington, African Fashion in Carnaby Street and the British Museum. Fascinating talks on Mali, Congo, African Coffee, African agriculture, Sierra Leonean masquerades, poetry, movies, mathematics, children’s half term drumming and an audience with the Jamaican High Commissioner.  There is something (mostly FREE!!) everyday this week so this half term cannot be boring, get out there and enjoy yourselves!


Monday 18th February

From 5.30pm to 7.00pm is the International Fashion Showcase, Nigeria- Woven Threads as part of London Fashion Week at Kingly Court, Carnaby Street, Soho, W1B 5PW. This exhibition looks at the future of the Nigerian fashion industry and the art of textile craftsmanship. More details of this FREE event here.  

The British Museum’s Exhibition Social Fabric: African Textiles Today, is being held in Room 91, The British Museum, Great Russell Street, Russell Square, WC1B 3DG. The exhibition takes a fresh look at the history, manufacture and social significance of African printed and factory woven fabrics. Textiles including kanga (Kenya and Tanzania), capuluna (Mozambique) and shweshwe (southern Africa) mirror changing times and fashion. This FREE exhibition continues until 21st April and is open till late every Friday.

At 8.00pm there is MonologueSlam UK at the Theatre Royal Stratford East, Gerry Raffles Square, Stratford, E15 1BN, hosted by BBC actor Jimmy Akingbola this event gives 20 actors the opportunity to perform for an audience and for a panel of people who could further their careers. The judges will be Murray Melvin (Actor), Dawn Reid (Deputy Artistic Director), Sam Jones (Casting Director) and Madeleine Charman (Agent). Other big industry names expected to attend include Lenny Henry, Javone Pronce, Aml Ameen, Hugh Quarshie, Chuck Venn, Eric Blakeney, Nick Bagnall, Paulette Randall, Kerry Michael and
Julia Crampsie. Tickets are £10.00 (£7.50 concs) from here. 

Tuesday 19th February

At 10.00am the IRIE! Half Term Club will be taking place at the Moonshot Centre, Fordham Park, Angus Street, New Cross, SE14 6LU. There will be sessions for children aged 5-12 as well as teenagers aged 13-18. Going on till the 21st of February, the young people will be taught dance drumming, percussion and different dance styles including African Caribbean and Street Danc. This is a FREE event, book here.


At 6.00pm the KPMG African and Caribbean Network will be holding Leaders that Inspire-Life Story of a Leader at KPMG, 15 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, E14 5GL. Featuring Baroness Scotland QC who has the distinction of being the first black female QC and the first female Attorney General in the roles 700 year history and Tim Campbell MBE winner of the first Apprentice TV series and London Ambassador for Training and Enterprise. Moderated by Chris Page (KPMG) register for this fascinating FREE event by email.

At 6.00pm Chatham House presents Mali: From Crisis Intervention to Potential Recovery at Royal Institute of International Affairs, Chatham House, 10 St James Square, SW1Y 4LE. Chaired by Dr Claire Spencer (Chatham House) with Ibrahima Diane (BBC Afrique), Paul Melly (Chatham House and Camilla Toulmin (International Institute for Environment and Development). The panel will discuss the complex and long term problems in northern Mali and the viable options for stabilizing the country. This is a FREE event to attend contact Tighisti Amare.

At 7.00pm Britain’s Successful Black Women (BSBW) presents the ‘Inspire Me’ Goals Workshop at the Evering Pentecostal Church, 1 Suffield Road, Seven Sisters, N15 5JX The evening will start with group discussions on How to have a clear vision and How to stay motivated. And will be followed by keynote speakers Mavela Baley founder (BSBW) delivering a presentation on Looking at your failure, laughing at your achievements and Onyi Anyado (Author and Life Coach) who will deliver a presentation on How to write, work and win with your goals. The evening will end with networking and light refreshments. Tickets are £7.00 standard, £14.00 buy 2 get one free from here.

At 7.00pm the Royal Africa Socirety will be hosting the Launch of Andrew Rugasira’s Book ‘A Good African Story’ at the Khalili Lecture Theatre, SOAS, Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, WC1H 0XG. Andrew Rugasira is CEO of Good African Coffee, the first African coffee brand to be listed in UK supermarkets. In this book he recounts the obstacles he and his company faced from lions in theRwenzori mountains, a lack of finance and discrimination. Despite this he has helped thousands of farmers earn a decent living , send their children to school and argues that trade and not aid is the key to Africa’s destiny. Chaired by Alex Jakana (BBC) you can register for this FREE event here.

From 7.00pm to 9.00pm Black History Studies presents The African Origin of Mathematics at PCS Headquarters, 160 Falcon Road, Clapham Junction, SW11 2LN. Mathematician John Matthews will guide participants through ancient African Mathematical systems and demonstrate how these can be used today. Admission is £5.00 per person under 16’s for free.

Wednesday 20th February

At 1.00pm Chatham House will be hosting What Next For the Democratic Republic of Congo at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, Chatham House, 10 St James Square, SW1Y 4LE. Chaired by Dr Knox Chitiyo (Chatham House), with Anneke Van Woudenburg (Human Rights Watch) and Ben Shepherd (Chatham House) the panel will reflect on the current peace talks between the Congolese government and the M23 rebels and consider what options are available for outside parties to bring in a lasting peace. To attend this FREE event contact Tighisti Amare.


At 5.00pm The International Huntley Symposium will be hosting a lecture on Britain’s Black Debt: Reparations for Caribbean Slavery by Professor Sir Hilary Beckles at London Metropolitan Archives, 40 Northampton Road, EC1R 0HB. Based on his new book ‘Britain’s Black Debt: Reparations for Caribbean Slavery and Native Genocide’ the speaker looks at the origins and development of reparations as a regional and international process. To book a FREE place call 0207 332 3851

From 6.00pm to 8.00pm is the Inspirational You Masterclass in PR, Marketing and Communications in Room 414 (4th Floor) Birkbeck, University of London, Torrington Square, Malet Street, WC1E 7HX, the evening begins with interactive networking and then moves on to the keynote speakers, Karen Tippett (Tippett PR), Daren Dixon (International Talent and Brand Partnerships Executive), Latoya Kessie (Fashion Blogger), Anne-Marie Batson (PR and Corporate Communications practitioner) and Hugh Thomas (Vita Coco) who will speak about raising your profile and learning the secrets of mass media, how to successfully run a PR and marketing business, understand the dos and don’ts of PR, Communications and Marketing and develop your awareness of social media and how to use it. This will be followed by a discussion and Q&A and then more networking. Tickets range from £5.00 to £15.00 from here

At 6.30pm we have the monthly networking event Ebony Inspired- A Black Entrepreneurs Network at Mar Azul Restaurant, 124 Clapham Road, Stockwell, SW9 0LA, this FREE event is open to black professionals, innovators and entrepreneurs from all fields and industries RSVP here.

At 6.30pm Amoo Venture Capital Advisory presents place4BRICS: Enterprise Software and Apps at Goodman Derrick LLP, 10 Saint Bride Street, EC4A 4AD. This monthly meetup features speakers, discussions and networks revolving around start ups and seeks to provide a community of like minded self supporting people. February s event is about the decisions enterprises have to make around platforms, teambuilding, social marketing and design. There will be presentations from William Berrington (Partner, Goldenhill International M&A Advisors) moderated by Nzube Ufodike(CEO/ Founder Amoo Venture Capital Advisory). The panel discussion is followed by a pitching competition and then networking and light refreshments. RSVP for this FREE event here. 

At 7.30pm Kayo Chingoyi presents Charlotte Higgins, Belinda Zhawi and Kristiana Colon at the Betsey Trotwood, 56 Farringdon Road, EC1R 3BL. This event will see poetry from charlotte Higgins, Belinda K. Zhawi and Chicago native Kristiana Colon, with music by rapper PaceColdFire. There are also available open mic slots. Tickets are £3.00 in advance from here and £5.00 on the door (£3.00 concessions).

At 7.30pm Arinze Kene’s new play Gods Property will be premiering at The Albany, Douglas Way, Deptford, SE8 4AG. Set in 1982 London gripped by unemployment and inner city riots, two brothers are unexpectedly reunited in a flat in Deptford. Chima (Kingsley Ben-Adir) returns to make past wrongs right and rekindle his relationship with his 16 year old brother Onochie (Ash Hunter) but he is not welcome in the neighbourhood and as word leaks out he has a limited amount of time to get through to his kid brother before he has to face rough justice. Running till 23 February at this theatre, tickets are £8.00 - £14.00 from here.

Thursday 21st February

At 1.30pm Elevation Networks presents the Great Debate Championships at University of London Union, Malet Street, WC1E 7HY in which 8 universities will be battling it out to be crowned the first ever Great Debate Champions. This quarter final draw will feature Birmingham City vs Coventry, Surrey vs LSE, Goldsmiths vs Royal Holloway and South Bank vs Cambridge. Register for this FREE event here.  

At 7.30pm Heavy Wind Media presents the second run of Ola Rotimi’s rib cracking play Our Husband Has Gone Mad Again at the Flash Musicals Youth Theatre, Methuen Road, Edgware, HA9 6EZ. Directed by Lookman Sanusi this play tells the story of a former Army officers plans to enter politics, however his plans are endangered by the arrival of his American wife who is unaware of his other two wives! Running until Sunday the 24th with weekend afternoon matinees at 3.00pm on Saturday and Sunday. Tickets are £11.00 (£6.00 children) from here.

At 1.15pm there is a Gallery Talk in Room 3, the British Museum on Soso wui: A Sierra Leonean mask between worlds. Paul Basu will discuss the masks worn by masquerades of the Sierra Leonean all female Sande Society during a girls the rite of passage ceremonies. This is a FREE event.

From 7.00pm to 9.00pm the Royal Africa Society hosts Land Rush: Who owns Africa? at the Khalili Lecture Theatre, SOAS, Thornhaugh Street, WC1H 0XG. This is a screening of a documentary shot in Mali and the USA exploring the huge expansion of international agri business, specifically following an American seeking to set up a sugar plantation and the Malians who oppose it. It will be followed by a panel discussion chaired by Anna Locke (Overseas Development Institute), with the documentary’s director Hugo Berkeley and Camilla Toulmin (International Institute for Environment and Development). To attend this FREE event register here
Friday 22nd February

From 2.00pm is the first session of A New Way for Black History Month at the Africa Centre, 38 King Street, Covent Garden, WC2E 8JT. It is 25 years since Black History Month began as a month long activity in October, this event seeks to review what has been achieved thus far and charting a way forward. The first session from 2.30pm to 5.00pm will involve discussions and break out groups on African Heritage followed by a programme of presentations, entertainment and public debate from 6.30pm to 9.00pm. Register for this FREE event here.

From 6.30pm to 11.00pm is iCAN- informal Caribbean African Network at La Tasca, Hertsmere Road, Canary Wharf, E14 4AE, this is an informal networking event for people of Caribbean and African heritage, so come down to this FREE event and have fun, network and make links! RSVP here.


From 6.30pm to 10.30pm Star100 presents a Conversation about Ghanaian Entrepreneurship at Allen and Overy, 1 Bishops Square, E1 6AD, with Elikem Nutifafa Kuenyehia Managing Partner at Oxford and Beaumont which is recognised as one of Ghana’s leading corporate law firms with offices in Accra and London. Elikem is also the author of Kuenyehia on Entrepreneurship: A Textbook of Contemporary Ghanaian Entrepreneurship, lectures on Entrepreneurship at the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA) and sits on the board of several companies, he will be discussing entrepreneurship in general and in the context of Ghana, setting up and running a business and his own journey is setting up Oxford and Beaumont. Admission is £13.50 from here

From 6.30pm to 9.30pm Black History Walks hosts The Black History of Comedy in The Blue Room, BFI Southbank, Belvedere Road, SE1 8XX. This session is a visual tapestry of historical comedy from great known and unknown comics from the 1960’s to date. Looked at along a timeline of various international rights struggles, be prepared to laugh and learn at the same time at this FREE event!
At 6.30pm CAFCO hosts An Audience with Her Excellency Aloun Ndombet-Assamba, High Commissioner for Jamaica at 40 Northwood Road, Croydon, CR7 8HQ. This will be an unparalleled opportunity for Jamaicans and friends of Jamaica to meet the Jamaican Government’s highest representative in the United Kingdom and ask questions on politics, business, culture and community both at home and abroad. There will be networking, refreshment and presentations from the community as well as a Q&A with the High Commissioner herself. Send your questions by email or phone 07947 911 982 and register for this FREE event here.

At 7.00pm there is a South by South film screening of Call Me Kuchu at the South London Gallery, 67 Peckham Road, Peckham, SE5 8UH, this is a documentary about discrimination in Uganda. Book this FREE event here

At 7.00pm the SOAS Pan African Society presents Poetry Night featuring spoken word by Akala and special guests in Theatre G2, SOAS, Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, WC1H 0XG. MOBO award winning artust Akala fuses rap, rock and electro punk with fierce lyrical storytelling, he will be joined by Esther Stanford-Xosei  (Sister Ekua) who will speak on the role of art and African culture, Jaja Soze a reforemed street thug turned hip hop artist, activist, author and businessman, JJ Bola a Congo born, London raised writer and poet and Kayo Chingoyi Zambian poet and writer in residence at Kingston University. Tickets are £6.00 in person of £7.00 online from here

At 7.30pm is the Second Association of Dance of the African Diaspora (ADAD) Lifetime Achievement Award at the Finsbury Town Hall, Roseberry Avenue, EC1R 4QT. Bringing together arts professionals and dance supporters to celebrate and reward creative excellence with live entertainment including choreography by Jackie Guy MBE. Tickets are £20.00 from here.

Saturday 23rd February
From 11.00am to 1.00pm the Women’s Empowerment Project will be holding an Information Event about Shalom House at the Putney Library, 5-7 Disraeli Road, Putney, SW15 2DR. The Shalom House Project provides  a refuge for sex workers in Ghana between the ages of 13 and 23. The aim is to provide counselling, health screening and vocational skills for them and raise awareness of the sex trade in Ghana. More details from here.

At 6.00pm Black History Walks presents its second Queen Nzingha Lecture Series: Black Women in Academia- Success, Secrets and Coping Strategies in Room B36, Birkbeck College, University of London, Malet Street, WC1E 7HX. The lecture features 3 generations of African/ Caribbean women who have achieved Phds discussing their experiences in academia. Speakers include Dr Ama Biney who has lectured at Middlesex University and Birkbeck College, Dr Michelle Asantewa an English and Creative writing lecturer at London Metropolitan University and Nathalie Montloius a PHd student who has just completed her doctorate in cultural studies. RSVP for this FREE and informative event here

At 7.00pm is the I Dream of Congo Party at the Conway Hall, 25 Red Lion Square, WC1R 4RL. There will be Soukous, rumba from musicians like Gasandji, Ya Kil and Matondo Mulele, this party marks the end of the ‘I Dream of Congo’ exhibition of photos, words and images from eastern Congo. Tickets are £12.00 and include a free drink from here. All proceeds go to projects in Congo. 

At 6.00pm we have The Finale of Top Model of Colour at Royal Mint Court, Dexter House, Tower Hill, EC3N 4HJ. With the designers of the hit Rihanna TV show ‘Styled to Rock’ hosting a fashion show Rock the Runway, other entertainment will include a catwalk off, best dressed, the peoples choice and refreshments. Tickets start from £25.00 from here

At 7.00pm the Afrospot Showcase will be featuring Mosi Conde at Passing Clouds, 1 Richmond Road, Dalston, E8 4AA. Hosted by bassist Kodjovi Kush and featuring the Afrospot All Stars as well as Guinean griot Mosi Conde and DJ Freestyle and Afrospotify DJ. FREE before 9.00pm, £5.00 before 10.00pm and £8.00 thereafter.
Sunday 24th February

At 6.45pm will be the My Time live show hosted by Maxie with guest panellists Clare Perkins  (from Eastenders), Steven Burrell (Family Affairs) at C102 Farmcharm Trading Estate, 8-12 Creekside, Deptford, SE8 3DX. Topics for discussion will be ‘The “N” word’ and ‘What is the role of a woman in a relationship’. With performances by Deleelah and entertainment by resident DJ King. RSVP this FREE event here.
  
At 7.00pm we have Marsha Ambrosius live at the Islington Assembly Hall, Upper Street, Islington, N1 2UD. The former Floetry singer will be performing tracks from her new album ‘Late Nights and Early Mornings’ as well as older material from her Floetry days. Supported by DJ’s Paul Aaron and K15, Jesse Gamage and Bashiyra live. Tickets start from £22.50 from here.
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Saturday, 9 February 2013

Week of 11th February: Salif Keita, Caribbean literature, Congolese Art, Poetry and Screen Nation Awards


Hello, greeting and salutations,

We are pushing into the second week of February with Valentine’s Day coming up because we are so wonderfully nice at Proud to be African Clothing and are aware of how much Valentines Gifts can cost we are giving you 10% off with the voucher code VAL10 until 25th February 2013.
Yes, you can thank me later!!

This week we have 1 Burundian event, 2 Somali events, 3 Congolese events, music from Mali, Senegalese and African American movies, Caribbean literature, debates, talks poetry and music. And the Screen Nation Awards!

Enjoy the week!

Monday 11th February

At 5.00pm there is a teaser of the Somali documentary Dawan (Awakening) in the Brunei Gallery, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, WC1H 0XG. The full length documentary to come is about rape in Somalia/ Somaliland, to be followed by a discussion about the issues raised. The screening is FREE but a £5.00 donation to support the documentary makers is politely requested, more details here

From 6.30pm to 9.30pm Black History Studies presents Sistas In the Struggle: Women of the Bus Boycott at PCS Headquarters, 160 Falcon Road, Clapham Junction, SW11 2LN. Celebrating US Black History Month  and Rosa Parks 100th Birthday this presentation focuses of the role of the 9 women before Rosa Parks who contributed to the desegregation of transport systems in the USA. There il be food on sale as well. Admission is £5.00, RSVP by email. 

From 6.30pm to 11.00pm Lets Talk will be holding  their Debate and Discussion Evening at Bar 19:20,
19-20 Great Sutton Street, Barbican, EC1V 0DR. Join in for an evening of strong opinions and loose tongues in a relaxed environment. Admission is £2.00 email your questions or just turn up! 


From 7.00pm to 8.30pm is Mary Seacole- The Blak Florence Nightingale? at Dalston CLR Library, 24 Dalston  Lane, Dalston, E8 3AZ, with a panel discussion on the life and work of Mary Seacole, chaired by Wilf Sullivan, the panel consists of Hackney Councillor Patrick Vernon OBE, poet and Zita Holbourne and Simon Woolley Operation Black Vote Director. This is a FREE event

Tuesday 12th February

At 5.00pm the Royal African Society hosts Burundi 1993-2013: Looking Back on 20 years of War, Peace-building and Democracy at the Khalili Lecture Theatre, School of Oriental and African Studies, Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, WC1H 0X. Broken down into 2 panels the first one chaired by Dr Harry Verhoeven (University of Oxford) is on Burundi from 1993 to 2013 with Professor Filip Reyntjens (University of Antwerp), H.E. Bernard Ntahiraja (Burundian Charges d’Affaires in London). The second panel chaired by Dr Aidan Russell (University of Oxford) is on Contextualising Burundi in the Great Lakes Region with Rene-Claude Niyonkuru (Burundian civil society representative), Dr Bert Ingelaere (university of Antwerp). The two panels will explore the role of the UN and AU and their respective interventions, post conflict reconstruction models, democratisation and power sharing between Hutu’s and Tutsis. RSVP for this FREE event here.

At 6.30pm is Private Equity Africa- Q1 2013 Seminar at Clifford Chance, 10 Upper Bank Street, E14 5JJ,featuring Andrew Brown (Emerging Capital Partners), Peter Maila (CDC Group), Stephen West (African Capital Alliance), Samir Abhyankar (Satya Capital), Lloyd West (Abraaj Group), Bobby Console-Verma (TLG Capital), Maria-Laure Knapp (Control Risks), Ken Ihenacho (Clifford Chance) and Razia Khan (Standard Chartered). Topics will include data analysis of 2012 deal making and fundraising, top exits of 2012, Macroeconomic overview, key sub-Saharan opportunities, risks and regulations in 2013 and more. Registration starts from £75.00 from here.

Wednesday 13th February

At 6.00pm the Frontline Club and Royal African Society host Congo Dreams: Hopes and Prospects for the future at Conway Hall. The panel debate chaired by Patrick Smith (Africa Confidential)  is focussed on the peace process and security situation in eastern DRC. The panel will consist of Jan-Peter Stellema (Medcin Sans  Frontier DRC), Jean-Roger Kaseki (Labour Councillor and Human Rights Campaigner), Kassim Kayira (BBC Africa) and Ben Shepard Chatham House). Admission is £15.00 from here.

At 7.30pm Malian superstar Salif Keita will be performing at Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, SE1 8XX, this is his first London show in 2 years with his new album The Gotan Project. The show will be opened by Spanish one man orchestra, multi vocalist Hyperpotamus. Tickets are from £10.00 to £30.00 from here
Thursday 14th February

At 7.00pm the Black Arts Production Theatre presents Bring Back the Love! at The Bernie Grant Arts Centre, Town Hall Approach, Seven Sisters, N15 4RX. Hosted by Justin Watson the show consists of 3 sketches performed in front of a Guest Panel with audience participation. The panellists are Comfort ‘Onit’ Sidel, AnkhAmunet, Travis Knight and Joi Ferguson with poetry by Cezanne Poetess. Tickets are £5.00 in advance, £7.00 on the door book by phoning 0208 808 0860 or 07944 244 116.

 At 7.15pm there is the Caribbean Literary Salon at Free Word, 60 Farringdon Road, EC1R 3GA, hosted by Malika Booker this event brings together award winning writers from across the Caribbean in an intimate atmosphere to read from and discuss their work, featuring Yvette Edwards from Montserrat (author of Cupboard Full of Coats) and Raymond Antrobus from Jamaica (author of Shapes and Disfigurements of Raymond Antrobus). Admission is £8.00 (£5.00 concs) from here

At 7.30pm Tilt and Rich Mix presents Tilt’s London Liming at Rich Mix, 35-47 Bethnal Green Road, Shoreditch. This love themed event where you can drink, dance, socialise and experience poetry, music and spoken word will feature a special visit by Jamaican dub poet Jean ‘Binta’ Breeze MBE,  multi award winning poet John Agard, London based Balkan story teller Jelena Curcic and jazz lyricist and songstress Mellow Baku, all topped off by soca, Brazilian, reggae and dance tunes by DJ Cliffy, admission is £8.00 (£6.00 concs) from here

Friday 15th February

From 7.00pm to 9.30pm The Huntley Archive Heritage Road Show will be taking place at the Hochhauser Auditorium, Sackler Centre, V&A Museum, Cromwell Road, Kensington, SW7 2RL. Eric and Jessica Huntley were radical book publishers and black political activists and educators from British Guiana who have been involved in the British African Caribbean community’s experiences since the late 1950’s. Examine objects, listen to a lecture by Eric Huntley, a performance by award winning poet John Agard and a panel discussion chaired by Makeda Coaston with Eric Huntley, S.I. Martin and Maureen Roberts. Jointly organised with The Huntley Archives at the London Metropolitan Archives. Tickets are £9.00 (£6.00 concessions) from here.

At 7.30pm we have Electric Jalaba, Ruby and the Vines, Alembic and DJ Koichi Sakai at Rich Mix, 35-47 Bethnal Green Road, Shoreditch, E1 6LA. Electric Jalaba consists of Morrocan Gnawa master musician Simo Lagnawi collaboration with London band Soundspecies. Ruby and the Vines consists of vocalist bassist Binisa Bonner, guitarist Greg Sanders and drummer Ben Assiter with a sound as reminiscent of West African Highlife as it is of 80’s post punk, while Alembic is a London based producer who fuses West African percussion, Zimbabwean mbira and Congolese buzz’n’rumble. DJ Koichi Sakai has a highly developed and unique style mixing soul, jazz, funk, reggae, Afrobeat and Latin. Admission is £6.00 (£3.00 guestlist) from here.

Saturday 16th February

The I Dream of Congo: Narratives from the Great Lakes exhibition will be open from 9.30am to 5.00pm at the Conway Hall, this is FREE all day.

At 2.00pm African Odysseys Programme presents ‘Once Upon a Time..When We Were Colored’ and at 5.45pm ‘Chameleon Street’ at the BFI Southbank, Belvedere Road, South Bank, SE1 8XT. The first film depicts a black community in the rural south from 1946 to 1962. Actor-producer-director Tim Reid will be present for a Q&A afterwards. Chameleon Street is the fictionalised account of real life conman William Douglas Street. Introduced by film critic Ashley Clark and followed by a Q&A with director Wendell B. Harris Jnr via Skype. Tickets for each screening are £5.00 from the BFI South Bank Box Office or call 0207 928 3232 

At 6.00pm Young Somali Londoners will be holding a Fundraising Event for Somali Orphans at Oxford House, Derbyshire Street, Bethnal Green, E2 6HG. Organised by young people for everyone the evening will be jam packed with live music, poetry, open mic sessions, fashion shows, comedy, a short play and a raffle. This is all in aid of Tusmo Orphanage Camp in Burao, home to 600 orphans aged 1-9 years, admission is £5.00. More details here.
Sunday 17th February

From 2.30pm to 4.30pm the Africa Centre, 38 King Street, Covent Garden, WC2E 8JT will be screening the Senegalese Film Faat Kine, starring Venus Seye as Kine the manager of a successful petrol station and unmarried mother of two children of different delinquent fathers the film follows her as she goes about her daily life and flits between her friends, family and job, a cheerful film that still somehow manages to be a metaphor on Senegal, tickets are FREE although a donation of £3.00 is appreciated from here.
  
From 5.30pm Screen Nation Media will be hosting the 8th Screen Nation Awards at the Park Plaza Westminster Bridge, 200 Westminster Bridge Road, SE1 7UT. Hosted by actor Wil Johnson and DJ Sarah Jane Crawford. Achievement Awards will be presented by a host of well known faces from  black TV and movies, London 2012 Gold medallists, former Olympic Champions, Premiership footballers and other surprise guests. There will be an exclusive Champagne Cocktail Reception with Caribbean and European Bowl food , followed by the Awards show and then the After Party. Tickets start from £50.00 from here and are selling fast.

At 7.00pm Kat Francois will be hosting the Word4Word Slam at the Theatre Royal Stratford East Bar, Gerry Raffles Square, Stratford, E15 1BN with featured acts and an open mic session with music and drops from Sloetry the DJ. If you want to be part of the event email Kat François. This is a FREE event 

Sunday, 3 February 2013

Week of 4th February: South African Opera, Olusegun Obasanjo Foundation launch, Kenyan elections, jazz, fashion, movies and Nigerian comedy

Proud to be African
Hello Friends,
Another week rolls by with plenty of interesting events, talks, performances, debates and screenings. We have classical music from South Africa, talks on Mali, networking, jazz from Femi Temowo, movies from Chad and South Africa, fashion, media briefings on Kenya, the President Olusegun Obasanjo Foundation launch, the  Economists  Africa Summit, Afropunk, Nigerian comedy.
And of course its Black History Month for our American friends

Its a fun packed week for Proud to be African Clothing so browse and enjoy


Monday 4th February


From 5.15pm to 6.30pm SOAS Professor Jeremy Keenan will be presenting Two weeks in the Sahara/ Sahel: A Long term view of the conflict in Mali and Algeria at the School of Oriental and African Studies, Room 467, College Buildings, Russell Square, WC1H 0XG.

Proud to be South African
From 7.30pm to 9.30pm we have Kick Ass Networking at The Folly Bar, 41 Gracechurch Street, EC3V 0BT, hosted by Paula Hemmings and Sacha Anthony, the evening starts off with Networking and Nibbles until 8.30pm and then an Interrogation Topic on a chosen case study rounded up with Report backs from participants about successful strategies from previous sessions. Tickets (which include a glass of Prosecco) are £28.00(early bird) and £35.00 standard from here

At 7.30pm prize winning South African baritone Njabulo Madlala and pianists William Vann and Maya Irgalina will be performing at Wigmore Hall, 36 Wigmore Street, W1U 2BP. They will be performing South African folk tales as well as Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen (Mahler), Go, Lovely Rose and Now sleeps the crimson Petal (Quilter), Ave Maria, Auf dem Wasser zu singen, Der Doppelganger, Erlkonig (Schubert/ Liszt), Image, Series 2 (Liszt), El fandango del candil from Govescas (Granados), Die Lotosblume, Stille Tranen, Du bist wie eine Blume an Belsatzar (Schumann). Tickets for this wide ranging performance are from £8.00 to £15.00 from here

Tuesday 5th February

From 8.00am to 4.50pm The Economist presents The Africa Summit at The Royal Garden Hotel, 2-24 Kensington High Street,  Kensington, W8 4PT chaired by Daniel Franklin (The Economist), the summit will be opened by Mark Simmonds (Parliamentary Under Secretary of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office). Part 1 themed: Todays Leaders Building Tomorrows Institutions will start with a keynote policy address by President Ellen Sirleaf Johnson of Liberia on Africa Unchained: A strategy for turning the corner, followed by an interview with Mo Ibrahim (Mo Ibrahim Foundation) by Daniel Franklin on Governance and Business in Africa and the a presentation on Institution building and the next generation by Babatunde Osotimehin (United Nations Population Fund). Part 2 themed Investing in Africa- Uncovering the African growth Story moderated by Komla Dumor (BBC Focus on Africa) starts with What’s the Strategy for Achieving Long term sustainable Investment? By Obiageli Ezekwesili (Open Society Foundations), followed by How Badly has the financial crisis hit Africa? and then How is the Intra African FDI shaping the continent? by Richard Sezibera (East African Community), The Future of Finance in Africa- Thoughts from the next generation by Ladi Balogun (First City Monument Bank) and winding up with a panel discussion on Critical Success Factors for the Future of African Investment, Finance and Integration with all the previous speakers. Part 3 of the event starts with The African Middle Class: What does it mean and what are the growth dynamics? by Charles Robertson (Renaissance Capital), Who is the African Consumer (Diageo), How will the Middle Class Consumer societies evolve across the continent? by Strive Masiyiwa (Econet Wireless) and ends with a panel discussion with all the participants on Realising the opportunities with the African Middle Class.
The final segment Part 4 is themed The Next Generation: Innovation and entrepreneurs and is moderated by Becky Anderson (CNN International). The first talk is Getting Africa to Innovate by Herman Chinery-Hesse (SOFTtribe) and Ranveer Chauhan (Olam) followed by Aspirations for Africa: A discussion with the African Leadership Academy with Frank Aswani (African Leadership Academy) and 2 of the Academy’s students  Joshua Oluwasanumi Oyenuga and Priscilla Takonduwa Semphere.
Admission to this packed and high level event  starts at £995.00 although discounts are available from here.

At 7.30pm we have the Femi Temowo Trio Live at the Vortex, 11 Gillett Square, Dalston, N16 8AZ.  The Proud to be African Clothing favourite and 2012 MOBO nominee will be performing with Karl Racheed Abel on bass and Troy Miller on drums selections from his latest album Orin Meta. Tickets for this little slice of awesomeness are £10.00 from here

Wednesday 6th February


At 5.30pm the African Leadership Centre and Kings College Conflict Security and Development Group present Rising radicalism in the Sahel: Mali and Regional Destabilisation in Room 3B20, Strand Campus, Kings College, The Strand, WC2R 2LS. Chaired by Professor Jack Spence OBE (KCL) with speakers Mr Ali Soufan (The Soufan Group) and Dr Funmi Olonisakin (African Leadership Centre). Focusing on Mali this event looks at the wider implications for the Sahel of the fall of Ghaddafi and its effects from Algeria to Nigeria. To attend register for this FREE event  here


At 7.00pm the Mayor if Islington will be hosting a Fun Quiz Night at the Assembly Rooms, Islington Town Hall, 222 Upper Street, Islington, N1 1XR. Held in aid of Manor Gardens a charity that aims to help black, minority and refugee communities’ access health services, reduced isolation of the elderly, help children leave foster care and much more. There will be good food, entertainment, quizzes and lots of prizes including tickets for Arsenal vs Manchester United, a crate of wine, a free cut and blowdry. Tickets are £25.00 (discounts for bulk purchase) and include a free drink a hot and cold Turkish buffet from here

At 8.00pm there is a screening ofA Million Colours’ (South Africa 2012) at Riverside Studios, 1 Crisp Road, Hammersmith, W6 9RL. The film is inspired by the true story of Muntu Ndebele and Norman Knox, black and white child stars of a 1976 South African film, eLollipop and explores how their lives and loves were radically changed during this period in South African history, from fighting on opposite sides of the apartheid struggle to becoming friends again after the Mandela became President. This inspiring story of South Africa is intended to raise funds for the African Caribbean LeukaemiaTrust (ACLT). Tickets are £9.50 (£8.00 concs) from here.   
Thursday 7th February

Proud to be Kenyan
From 10.45am to 12.30pm the London African Media Network (LAMN) and Commonwealth Journalists Association will be holding a Foreign Media Briefing on the Kenyan Elections at the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association room, Westminster Hall, SW1A 0AA. The briefing seeks to provide a platform for journalists to dialogue and engage with Kenyan players in the run up to the Kenyan elections asking questions such as what has the local and international media learned from the 2007/2008 election, what challenges face the media, what are the ground rules and the roles of social media. Chaired by Topi Lyambila (Kenya London News/ LAMN), panellists will include Joel Kibazo (Royal African Society), Dr Nic Cheeseman (Hugh Price Fellow in African Politics, Oxford University), Dr Bitange Ndemo (via video link, Private Secretary, Ministry of Information and Communication, Kenya)  and many mores to be confirmed. This is a FREE invitation only event, email Rita or Agnes to RSVP.

Proud to be South African
At 6.00pm The National Archives host Tracing Your Family History at the Bloomsbury Institute, 50 Bedford Square, WC1B 3DP, chaired by the National Archives Audrey Collin with Peter Christian (author The Genealogists Internet) who will be revealing the most useful sources fir family history research and how to navigate them, Andrea Smart (author Sugar in the Blood) will discuss her fascinating family history and the resulting book and Guy Grannum (author Tracing Your Caribbean Ancestors) who will discuss family history sources, genealogy websites and indexes at the National Archives. The evening starts with drinks at 6.00pm and then the talk at 6.30pm, tickets are £8.00 (£4.00 students) from here. 

At 6.30pm the Institute of International Visual arts (INIVA) presents Ingredients for Debate? At INIVA, 1 Rivington Place,EC2A 3BA in which author, playwright and memoirist Gillian Slovo will be in conversation with Tamar Garb (UCL) about how she has drawn on personal  history and experience to debate South African politics Tickets are £6.00 although concessions available from here.

Friday 8th February

At 6.00pm we have Mutsa Mutsaa Fashion and Beauty Cocktail Party at the 5* Doubletree Hilton Courthouse Hotel, 19-21 Great Marlborough Street, W1F 7HL. This pre London Fashion Week Extravaganza will involve fashion shows, pampering and beauty, samples, discount shopping vouchers, live music and DJ’s and cocktails, 3% of all ticket sales will be donated to AMREF UKs Stand up for Africa campaign. Tickets are £10.00 earlybird or £15.00 standard from here.


Proud to be Nigerian
At 6.30pm the Olusegun Obasanjo Foundation will be holding its Launch Gala at Grosvenor House Hotel, The Great Room, 86-90 Park Lane, W1K 7TN. Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo will be launching his foundation aiming to promote the advancement of human security for the most disadvantaged in Africa, hosted by Richard Attias (Richard Attias and Associates) The keynote speech will be by Sir Bob Geldof (Musician), followed by a conversation with President Obasanjo moderated by Lord Peter Mandelson and then a Presidential panel moderated by Makhtar Diop (Vice President, World Bank, an Investment and NGO panel introduced by Strive Masiyiwa (Founder, Econet Wireles) and moderated by Robert Guest (The Economist) with Subodh Agrawal (Euromax Capital), Oby Ezekwesili (Open Society Foundation) and Cecilia Attias (Cecilia Attias Foundation for Women). This is a FREE formal invitation only event, please register here.

At 7.00pm we have Afro 360 Upstairs at the Ritzy, Brixton Oval, Coldharbour Lane, Brixton, SW2 1JG, where you can experience music, fashion, dance, art and culture from Africa from every angle. There will be fashion shows by BOT I LAM, music by Oya Bun and Bogossy. Admission is £7.00 in advance and £10.00 on the door

From 8.00pm to 3.00am is the Lyrically Challenged 3rd Birthday Celebration of Love at Passing Clouds, 1 Richmond Road, Dalston E8 4AA. Downstairs will be hip hop Cypher open to all conscious MC’s, with Nonadic Souls (street dancers), SBG (freedom to mankind), M9, Bass6, Lyrically Challenged Collective and the Lyrically Challenged House Band, MC Angel, Shay D, Sonority, Sirena Reynolds, Emma Prior, Mr T12Bs and DJ Shorty. Upstairs you’ll get DJ Baby Blu, Laura Steel, Antarma and live graffiti from Pixie. There are also 8 Open mic spoken word slots available. £5.00 before 10.00pm, £8.00 thereafter.

Saturday 9th February

Born in the UK Made in Jamaica
From 5.00pm to 9.30pm INAPP is hosting General Peoples Assembly towards a National Black Peoples Day of Action 2013 at Queen Mother Moore School, Clapham Methodist Church Hall, Nelsons Row, SW4 7JR aiming to bring together all peoples from the African diaspora in a consultation process about issues affecting the black community Check the website for more details of this FREE event. 

At 6.00pm UCL African- Caribbean Society presents Panafrik 2013 at Logan Hall, Institute of Education, 20 Bedford Way, WC1H 0AL. This show will involve dance, fashion, poetry, singing and drama all tying into a fun and eclectic mix of African Caribbean culture and heritage. Tickets are £10.00 (regular) and £16.00 (VIP) from here

At 8.00pm Numbi presents A Night of Afropunk at Rich Mix, 35-47 Bethnal Green Road, Shoreditch, E1 6LA. With chanteuse Miryam Solomon, afrobeat Bronzehead, Zena Edwards, Malika Booker, resident poets Dorothea Smartt, Sai MuRai and Elmi Ali along with dancer/ choreographer  Funmi Adewole  all hosted by writer and artist Diriye Osman. DJ Zhao will be on decks. Tickets are £10.00 in advance, £5.00 (concs) and £12.00 on the door. More details here

Sunday 10th February

From 2.00pm to 5.30pm Family Matters will be hosting Positive Conversations between Generations at Global Cooperation House, 65-69 Pound Lane, NW10 2HH. This intergenerational event for ages 12 and up, will involve professionals, family members (both nuclear and extended) in an interactive event on bridging the communication gap between generations. Speakers will include father and artist Liam de Souza-Thompson, Myriam Cotret (Educator), Jennifer Lewis (100Black Men of London) and Paul Lawrence (Life Skills Training Consultancy). This is a FREE event



From 6.00pm to 10.00pm the Igbo Cultural and Support Network will be holding its Valentine’s Day Special meeting at The Fleetwood, 36 Wilson Street, Moorgate, EC2M 2TE. Themed Ahuru m gi n’anya (literally means ‘I look in your eyes’ in Igbo i.e. I love you), there will be a special presentation, open mic, mini speed dating, blind date and secret admirer box. All good fun for just £5.00! More details here 

At 10.00pm we have Basketmouth and D’African Kings of Comedy at the indigoO2, The O2, Peninsula Square, Greenwich, SE10 0DX, the line up so far consists of Bovi (Nigeria), Ndumiso (South Africa), Daliso (Malawi), Kojo (Ghana), Eddie Kadi (Congo), with music by Timaya (Nigeria), more to be confirmed. Tickets range from £25.00 - £75.00 and they are selling out fast from here.