Nyodema fundraiser for The Gambia

  • Saturday 19th November 2011
  • Aldwick Baptist Church
    Gossamer Lane, Aldwick, Bognor Regis PO21 3DD
  • from 7pm
  • FREE entry but you will be asked to make a donation and your seat must be booked in advance on 07974 472137

I will be singing and drumming with the Nyodema World Community Choir and the Nyodema West African Drummers so if you are in the area please do come along and support us. All proceeds will go towards Nyodema’s health and education projects in The Gambia. Visit Nyodema’s website for more details.

The Nyodema West African Drummers

Photograph copyright The Bognor Regis Observer

Gambian kora player Sura Susso in Hove tonight!

Just found out that African Night Fever will be hosting Gambian kora player Sura Susso and his manding trio band.
DATE Friday 28th October
VENUE The View, Kings Way, Hove
DOORS 9pm

As with most kora players Sura, (Surahata), was born into a family of Gambian ‘griots’, the cultural figures in society across West Africa who carry the knowledge and identity of the region’s people. This hereditary legacy stretches back hundreds of years, and traditionally the knowledge and history surrounding the kora are passed on from father to son. Griots are orators, lyricists and musicians who are also respected as a source of advice and spiritual guidance.

Sura started his lifelong study of the African harp, called the kora, and a range of other percussion instruments at the age of four. The family household was constantly filled with music.

Sura came to the UK at the age of seventeen and began to tour with his brother’s band The Seckou Keita Quintet. His thanks and gratitude are expressed on one particular track of his debut album, ‘Jalikunda’. 

Fighting Poverty with Music

As well as being a graphic designer for The Gambia Experience I help run the community group Nyodema based in Bognor Regis. This year’s annual festival will be another fantastic day of live music, workshops and much, much more. Headliners Planetman and The Internationalz make a welcome return having played at our first ever festival in 2007. Their infectious roots reggae sound is bound to get everyone on their feet.

Nyodema would like to thank The Gambia Experience for sponsoring the festival which is free, however, you will have ever opportunity to make a donation to Nyodema’s health and education projects in The Gambia.

Nyodema World Music & Arts Festival

  • Saturday 20th August 2011
  • The Waverley, Marine Drive West, Bognor Regis, West Sussex
  • 1pm to 10.30pm
  • FREE

Live music and art from around the world in a wonderful pub by the Sussex seaside plus workshops, craft stalls and a few surprises!

Headliners Planetman and the Internationalz make a welcome return to Nyodema having played at our first ever festival 2007. Their infectious roots reggae is guaranteed to get everyone on their feet.

The festival opens with the lively rock n roll of Slim Jim and the Wildcards. Other delights include the weird and the wonderful world of Rattlin Bone, the amazing medieval/Spanish guitar playing of Claude Bourbon, flamenco and belly-dancing from Morgana Villen Castro, the authentic delta blues guitar of Slim Lightfoot and the outstanding local singer Daisy Mouatt. The line-up would not be complete with out the Nyodema Drummers bringing you traditional rhythms from West Africa and the Nyodema World Community Choir with songs from Africa, Europe and America including gospel and a spine tingling chant from deep in the Congo.

For further information and updates on the line-up please visit our website www.nyodema.org.

Me playing with the Nyodema Drummers

Erin Poirier: Two feet, one heartbeat = Change

Today we have a guest post from Erin Poirier. In June, Erin will be running across The Gambia, a distance of some 400km in 17 days, and in heat approaching 40 degrees. She is doing this for the Nova Scotia Gambia Association or NSGA, a charity based in Halifax, Nova Scotia in Canada. It’s a charity that seeks to educate children into the dangers of HIV and to teach them how to disseminate this message amongst their friends and families, but in the last two years the charity has run into financial difficulties, which is where Erin comes in… Her run will hopefully raise enough money to keep the charity solvent and allow it to continue to carry out its vital and ennobling work. We wish Erin (and her co-runner Ashley and the rest of her support team) all the luck in the world with this, and urge you to visit Love4Gambia where you can find out more.

Erin Poirier and Ashley Sharpe in The Gambia

Erin Poirier and Ashley Sharpe in The Gambia

Two feet, one heartbeat = Change.
By Erin Poirier

On my third day in The Gambia I looked down at my key chain thermometer, yanked it from the hook on my gym bag, and threw it in the trash.

It read a blazing 38 degrees and I was realizing the hard way that temperature is irrelevant on the shores of West Africa – there was only hot or hotter. “Hot” means you’re squirming in a small pool of wetness under your clothes and your coffee-colored hair feels hot to the touch. “Hotter” means your bra and underwear are saturated in sweat and your hair just won’t seem to dry after your shower.

I was there during a scorching summer in 2007 when I worked as a nurse with the Nova Scotia-Gambia Association (a registered Canadian Charity)’s Gender Equity and Youth Leadership through Health and Human Rights Education project. Big project name, big ambition: to keep kids alive through HIV and malaria education.

This July, I’ll once again brave the heat of The Gambia to lace up my sneakers in an attempt to run all the way across the country in support of the same cause. Over my 430km route, I’ll be raising money for the Nova Scotia-Gambia Association (NSGA).

In 2007, I went through a life-changing experience when I taught youth to be peer health educators. These kids returned to their schools to share HIV prevention messages with youth in their communities.

In a country that does not offer sexual health in school, the role these kids play in preventing HIV is vital. It’s not something we often think about in a country where health care is readily available and going to school is a right, not a privilege.

But when I returned home to Nova Scotia, Canada, I couldn’t get The Gambia out of my mind. I thought about how my teenage students, some as old as 19 years, would sit three to a two-person desk, often with their arms around each other in affection. I thought about how they valued education in a way that you can only understand if 50 per cent of your peers can’t afford school fees.

Erin Poirier in The Gambia

Erin Poirier in The Gambia

I thought about the answer I got when I once asked my class: “How do you help somebody with HIV stay healthy?”

“They need love and caring and understanding,” they said, “They need hope for the future, and a positive attitude.”   I joined the NSGA board of directors and this year, after 25 years of operation, NSGA began to run into financial problems.

We had endured two years of financial loss and were looking at a third. Like many other charities, our donor base was down and some board members felt that we may have reached the end of the organization.

I thought about my Gambian youth and couldn’t reconcile their thoughts. I wanted to do something.
Then I thought about running. I’ve had lots of success racing. The Gambia is a small country. It would be possible to run all the way across The Gambia.

So this is what I’m doing. I’ve called my campaign Love4Gambia. I’ll begin my mission on July 4, and over 17 days, I will run 430km (that’s a half marathon each day) from Basse, near the Senegalese border, to Banjul on the Atlantic coast.

Four support people will join me. My friend and fellow NSGA volunteer nurse, Ashley Sharpe, will be my medical support. Two members of our NSGA staff in The Gambia will also accompany us.
Sure it’s going to be tough. The heat will present my biggest challenge because I know that no matter what length of time I spend in Africa, I’ll never acclimatise to it.

So I am trying to prepare my body for the heat by going to hot yoga at Halifax Yoga Studio. Sometimes in the studio, I feel like I’ve become one with the melting air. Other times, I think: “Gentle Lord! It’s 37 degrees in here!” I look like I just got out of a swimming pool and this is average temperature I’ll be running in.

On these days, the preparation isn’t so productive.

Right now, my marathon training with coach Cliff Matthews is geared toward my third Boston Marathon. I’m running 85 km-plus per week, fitness that will carry well onto my plane to Africa.
Running is the easy part. Cliff dictates my training plan and I do exactly what he says.  It’s hard work, but it’s something I love.

Erin Poirier on MacDonald Bridge

Erin Poirier on MacDonald Bridge

The really brutal part is doing the extra things I need to do to stay healthy in this long training cycle. I’m piling food into my body like I’ll never eat again. I’m forcing myself to strength training.

I have chiropractor Dr. Jason Gray working with me for free- his contribution to Love4Gambia. Weekly treatment keeps me healthy and he sets my strength-training program. I’m lucky for this.

The sidewalks have been in poor condition during this wicked winter we’ve endured on the East Coast of Canada. The wind freezes my cheeks and sometimes my contact lenses, blurring my vision.

The “nicest” place to run outdoors in the entire city has become the MacDonald Bridge sidewalk deck where plowing and salting are thorough. The Halifax Ocean Terminal at Marginal Road, with its bright lighting and quality snow removal service for transport trucks and trains, has also been kind to winter runners.

An average training week for me is 6 days and looks like this:

  • Monday- easy 6-8km + hot yoga
  • Tuesday- track workout with Cliff- often short and fast intervals, such as 10 x 800m, total 14-17km with warm-up and cool-down
  • Wednesday- recovery 12km + strength training
  • Thursday- track workout with Cliff- often long intervals close to marathon pace, such as 3 x 15 minutes, total 14-17km
  • Friday- recovery or easy 12 km
  • Saturday- long run 2-2.5 hours including quality speed segment every 2nd week.
  • Sunday- rest + strength training

So yes, it’s going to be tough. I knew that when I said I’d do this. But it’s worth it.

While volunteering in The Gambia, I saw how the NSGA’s programs directly impacted the youth. When the NSGA ran into trouble, I knew I needed to do something to help these programs continue. And that’s what I’m going to do.

To support my Love4Gambia campaign and to follow my progress as I prepare for and run across The Gambia in July, visit me at www.love4gambia.com