How A Traditional Indian Dance Form Found A Home In American Colleges
. “Bhangra is the thing, I
think, that keeps me sane,” one student says
A dozen
college students dressed in every color, their long kurtas studded with tiny
light-catching mirrors, assembled in the wings at Columbia University’s Roone
Arledge Auditorium in New York. They swayed nervously from foot to foot, going
over the steps of their traditional Indian folk dance routine in their heads, before
a loud drum beat rang out.
With
large smiles fixed on their faces, the dancers poured out onto the lit stage.
The crowd began to whistle and cheer for their friends as they kicked up their
legs and created the mesmerizing formations that are part of a bhangra dance
performance.
“There’s something
just magnetic about [bhangra] and something just really inclusive that really
drew me towards it,” said Gurnoor Tucker, a sophomore who dances for Columbia University Bhangra. “You start with barely any skill at all, you build up,
and you get inspired.”
Tucker
is one of thousands of students in America enjoying the hugely popular bhangra
dance form, which comes from India and includes variations of folk dances
from the Punjab region of South Asia. Halftime performances, assemblies and
culture shows have helped bhangra become a more visible fixture on university
campuses.
Dancers
perform bhangra in a traditional multicolored layered outfit topped with a
pleated turban for men and a gauzy scarf for women. They jump into elaborate
formations and perform stunts during the rapid-fire eight minutes that make up
a standard routine.
Legs
crooked at 90-degree angles, arms raised high above shoulder-level, bass-heavy
music and an undefinable sense of energy and grace known as “nakhra“characterize the dance form itself.
How
Bhangra Came To America
Bhangra
dance and music traveled to the West in the suitcases of South Asian immigrants
in the 1970s and 1990s. When it first reached American shores, it wasn’t the
full-fledged college staple it is today — instead, it gained popularity through
something called Bhangra Remix. Young second-generation South Asians
living in the U.S. mixed Punjabi riffs into their music and danced a type
of bhangra in club basements.
“Bhangra emerged along with a need for a kind of cultural
space in that generation, as they were expanding in the 90s with greater
immigration and coming of age,” said Sunaina Maira, a professor of
Asian-American studies at University of California, Davis, and author of the
book Desis in the
House: Indian American Youth Culture In New York City.
Today,
bhangra is still a crucial way for young Indian-American college students to
carve out a space to socialize and explore their culture. Many dancers said
that joining a bhangra dance team allowed them to connect more to their roots —
something they won’t compromise, though they have heavy course loads and
practices can be as often as six days a week.
“I
prioritize bhangra after school. I’m also an RA [resident assistant], so that
takes precedence, but then it’s bhangra,” said CU Bhangra dancer and pre-med
student Manini Desai. “Bhangra is the thing, I think, that keeps me
sane.”
“You would see the same people at competitions, whether
you’re traveling [on the] East Coast, West Coast or Midwest,” said Saleem
Malkana, founder of the Bhangra Teams’ Forum and a
former captain for Cornell
Bhangra. “These are friendships, and you have such a
common bond — like, say, dancing in the parking lot at midnight after a
competition or something like that. These are really strong bonds that create
friendships that continue for years.”
Where
Is Bhangra Headed?
Now that dancers can easily access competition videos
through the Bhangra Teams’ Forum and YouTube, bhangra has expanded beyond
college campuses. Because there is no official college conference for bhangra,
non-college teams comprised of alumni or teams from abroad also participate in
the same competitions. Last year, a British team named Josh
Valaithian Da won first place at World’s
Best Bhangra Crew — one of the most selective and
elite competitions in the world — signaling a sea change for bhangra dancers
everywhere.
“The
circuit has become less collegiate, and I think it’s become geared more toward
independent teams now,” said Naina Sahrawat, a CU Bhangra dancer. “So placing
is part two of your accomplishments, getting into the competition is part one.
They’re so competitive now, especially with U.K. and Australian teams coming
in. The pool is just increasing tenfold from what it used to be.”
“Being a collegiate team, a lot of the time
we’re not in the position to take risks or we just don’t have those
perspectives, because you need the stability of an independent team both in
terms of talent and credibility to go after something more daring,” said
Akshaya Nataraj, another CU Bhangra dancer.
But
that doesn’t mean college bhangra is going away. Bhangra has always adopted and
remixed different influences and music genres, and college teams are evolving
to accommodate these changes.
“[Bhangra]
has helped dancers form a unique identity around being an Indian-American or a
Pakistani-American, or even for people not of South Asian origin, to be a part
of this community and have a really unique identity. That didn’t exist before,”
said Joy Dhar, a bhangra dancer and one of the organizers of Bhangra Blowout,
an intercollegiate bhangra competition that began in 1993.
“We’re
trying to reignite the fire, focus on creativity and really bring it back to
just the fun that bhangra still is.”
DAMON DAHLEN/HUFFINGTON POST
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/college-bhangra-indian-dance_us_56e32d44e4b0b25c9181f1e0?section=india&utm_hp_ref=arts
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