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“Strength, Spirit and Dignity, Portraits of Haiti” by Thomas Plaut

plauthaiti.jpgHosted by the Lyda Moore Merrick Gallery

July 5 – September 30, 2008

The Lyda Moore Merrick Gallery at Hayti Heritage Center continues its mission of community education with a exhibition of portraits of the Haitian people, Strength, Spirit and Dignity: Portraits of Haiti by Thomas Plaut. The exhibition will run through September 30, at the center’s gallery at 804 Old Fayetteville Street, Durham, NC.

“These photographs are extraordinary, powerful images,” said V. Dianne Pledger, President/CEO. “They provide not only the quality of artistic expression we seek at the Foundation’s gallery, but provide important insights into the Haitian people.”

The portraits were taken in Montrouis, a coastal area some 60 miles north of the capital, Port-au-Prince in March 2006, by Thomas Plaut, Ph.D. He is a photographer and sociologist who recently retired from teaching at Mars Hill College after 34 years of university teaching. In Haiti, Plaut worked with a medical team of three physicians, three nurses and three other volunteers traveled from Asheville, treating 1,035 children in five days of clinics organized by Haitian counterparts in three coastal and two mountain communities. In between measuring kids’ heights and weights, he photographed the clinics and the communities that hosted them.

Instead of the violence and political instability, which appears to be the mainstay of press reports about Haiti, Plaut said he found “strength and dignity in hard-working people living in an impoverished and environmentally devastated region. African Americans know all too well the experience of being stereotyped. In Haiti, the difference between myth and reality is equally, if not more extreme. This exhibit seeks to portray the people of Montrouis as we encountered them in their everyday lives.”

“Americans should know more about Haiti’s history,” Plaut said. “Not only is Haiti the first Black Republic. It is the second oldest republic in the western hemisphere. The Haitians’ successful fight for independence against France led to Napoleon giving up his dream of a western empire, which made the Louisiana Purchase possible. Americans owe a huge debt of thanks to Haiti, but very few of them know it!”

“Americans also should know about the health crisis that kills thousands of Haitian children each year (30,000 in 2004),” Plaut said. “Asheville’s Mission Manna program is an eight year-old effort to help children in one area of the country. Twice each year its medical teams return with nutritional foods, multi-vitamins, anti-biotic and other medicines. It also has acquired land and has started the construction of a small clinic for malnourished children—but construction has stopped for want of funds.”

To learn more about St. Joseph’s Historic Foundation/Hayti Heritage Center programs, call (919) 683-1709 to schedule a tour. Gallery hours are Monday – Friday from 10am – 5pm and Saturday 10 am – 3pm

Come Experience Some of the Best Poets in the Carolina’s

All events are held at the Hayti Heritage Center located at 804 Old Fayetteville Street, Durham, NC 27701Hosted By: Dasan Ahanu
Doors open at 7:30, Featured artist will begin PROMPTLY at 8:30pm
$10 general public, $5 for student
Participating Poets Are FREE!
Poets must be signed up by 8:30pm cut off is (12) poets
(Please the Rules & Regulations page)

MATURE CONTENT!
Nov. 14th, 2008 @ 9pm (Later time – this date only!)
Dec. 19th, 2008
Jan, 30th, 2009
Feb. 20th, 2009@ Midnight (Erotic Poetry Slam)-Doors open at 11:30pm
Mar. 27th, 2009
Apr. 24th, 2009
May 29th, 2009
Southern Fried Poetry Slam – June 4-6, 2009

WINNERS RECEIVE:
Cash prize
Photo and short bio Bull City Slam Team Myspace page http://www.myspace.com/bullcityslam

Automatic invitation to finals held in April
Opportunity to be on one of the TOP 25 RANKING TEAMS IN THE COUNTRY!!!!!!!

For more information please call the Hayti Heritage Center at (919) 683-1709 ext 28.
To learn more about slam go to http://www.poetryslam.com/.

Blues in the Schools- September 15-18

scotternie2.jpgThe Blues In The Schools (BITS) program is a one-week residency in which noted blues professionals conduct lecture- demonstrations and performances for a variety of audiences, public education programs K-12, after school programs and private, charter and home school programs. The focus of the residency is to educate and enlighten our youth and community on the Blues and the Piedmont style, known to have been developed and performed in the Durham and cities across North Carolina.

The goals of the Blues in the School program are:

  • Share the Blues with children. Change any preconceived ideas of what the Blues are about and spark an interest in the music.
  • Promote cultural awareness through self-awareness.
  • Broaden the historical prospective of how Blues relates to rock music and other modern music.
  • Focus on blues music as a part of American culture and acquire a better understand of the African–American heritage.

The strategic mission and goals of the Blues in the Schools programming intertwine with the mission of the Festival thus creating a wholesome program plan. As a promoter of the blues it is only proper and a fitting evolution of cultural programming that the Blues in the Schools programs be integrated into the yearly program mission of the Foundation.

MISSION: The Bull Durham Blues Festival is a program of the St. Joseph’s Historic Foundation, Inc. produced to serve multiple purposes; to provide an increased awareness and appreciation for the BLUES as a unique African American art form that is reflective of the African American experience; and for Durham’s rich musical heritage in the BLUES, particularly as a showplace for the Piedmont/Carolina blues styles made popular in this part of the southeast; and to provide financial resources.

Goals:

  • To enhance the local audience, particularly within the African American communities in the region, for the Blues which is often more popular overseas that in the United States.
  • To become a national showcase for the finest in contemporary and traditional blues artists from North Carolina and the rest of the United States.
  • To provide educational outreach programs for the community in particular the youth of the community to become knowledgeable of the rich heritage of Blues music.

scotternie1.jpgThe BITS program has been designed for middle and high school students. Students who are currently enrolled in music appreciation class will be engaged in the lecture demonstration portion of the residency. School assembly format are encouraged. It is estimated that over 3,500 youth will be engaged in the residency during the week activities.

The BITS Program, which will take place September 15-18, 2008, will feature blues artists Scott Ainslie and Ernie Hawkins and the MSG Acoustic Trio. Additional local blues artists will participate in the residency so that the Foundation can reach a large audience specifically in the public school setting. These artists will be selected in collaboration with the Triangle Blues Society.

In Actin“ Up, Scott Ainslie and Ernie Hawkins bring Delta and Ragtime Blues to the stage in a spirited tour of hot ragtime instrumentals, passionate singing, slide guitar, stories and songs. Lifelong students of Ragtime-Piedmont Blues and Mississippi Delta Blues, Hawkins and Ainslie bring more than seven decades of experience with them to the stage. Their long apprenticeships with known and unknown traditional players from all around the country have lined their pockets with music, personal anecdotes, and history riches that we hear jingle as they tap their feet.

Ernie Hawkins has been called ’an important link in the unbroken chain of Blues and Gospel artists. In 1965, at the age of eighteen, he moved to New York City to find Rev. Gary Davis. A generous and inspired player and teacher, Ernie has five solo recordings. He also has instructional video/DVDs on the music of Lightnin’ Hopkins, Blind Willie McTell, Mance Lipscomb, Reverend Gary Davis, and on guitar theory. He has been featured in SingOUT!, Acoustic Guitar and Dirty Linen magazines, and has appeared on “A Prairie Home Companion”, “Mountain Stage”, “Woodsongs Old-Time Radio Hour”, and XM Radio.

Scott Ainslie took up guitar after hearing Virginia Bluesman (and gravedigger) John Jackson in 1967. With deep roots in Appalachian as well as traditional Gospel and Blues music, Scott has one recording of old-time fiddle and banjo music, and four CDs of Delta and Piedmont Blues, and literally �wrote the book” on the music of Mississippi Blues legend Robert Johnson. Ainslie has a teaching DVD on Johnson’s music as well. Ainslie has provided music for video and film, and has numerous grants and awards for performing and preserving traditional music.

Schedule TBA.

No Payne. No Gain. Health Screening Promotion at a Glance

houseofpayne.jpg

Time Warner Raleigh/Durham

What: No Payne. No Gain. FREE Health Screening Event at the Hayti Heritage Center

When: Friday, June 13, 2008, NOON – 6 PM (Indoors)
Saturday, June 14, 2008, NOON – 6 PM (Outdoors)

Where: Hayti Heritage Center, 804 Old Fayetteville Street

Highlights:

  • Health screenings by medical personnel, including glucose tests, blood pressure and measurement of correct height-to-weight ratios
    Health screening offered both days
  • Educational materials, including branded health pamphlets, about diabetes, obesity and heart disease
  • Direct sales table to showcase your products
  • Enter-to-win an HDTV sweepstakes with entry forms including survey questions
  • Gift bags with water bottles, pedometers a customizable hang tag designed to feature your logo, contact information and an offer
  • Community outreach
  • Entertainment

Click here to view the flyer.

The 4th Annual Durham Juneteenth Celebration & Unity March will hold a Health Fair on Friday and Saturday, June 13th and 14th from 12 pm to 6 pm at Hayti Heritage Center (804 Old Fayetteville Street). The Health Fair, “No Payne, No Gain”, is sponsored by Time Warner Cable and TBS’ Tyler Perry House of Payne and will include free screenings for diabetes, blood pressure, height/weight ratios and more. There will be giveaways and a chance to win a HDTV. The Dept of Health and Human Services and the Center for Disease Control will offer free glaucoma testing done by Duke Eye Center doctors both days from 12 pm to 4 pm. On Saturday, June 14th, the Unity March, from NCCU to Hayti, starts at 11am. The Celebration runs from 12 – 6 pm on Saturday with food, entertainment, vendors, children’s activities and more. www.durhamjuneteenth.com or call 919-680-0465 or Hayti Heritage Center @ (919) 683-1709.

“Forever Free” Celebration

Saturday, June 14, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.
Live music, costumed performers, storytellers, wagon rides and arts and crafts.
Historic Stagville, 5828 Old Oxford Hwy. On site parking.
For more information, call (919) 620-0120.

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