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Yoruba Village Drum Festival honours Bertrand Toby, Shian Lewis - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

The annual celebration of the drum and tribute to the ancestors and fathers of the Yoruba Village community (East Port of Spain) will take place on June 15 at the Yoruba Village Square, Piccadilly Street, Port of Spain (opposite the police station).

The Yoruba Village Drum Festival is one of the major events of the annual Pan African FestivalTT (PAFTT) commemorating Emancipation.

The Yoruba, who were rescued from the ships of British, France and Spanish plunderers, following the abolition of the Slave Trade, were brought to that part of Port of Spain, where they resided as free men and women. They came originally, mainly from Nigeria, Ghana, Benin and Togo.

A media release said, "Today, the only semblance of the town’s history and existence is the Yoruba Village Square. However, in spite of the persistent, calculated and prolonged efforts to deculturalise the community, many of the rich customs and tradition of the Yoruba, remain in the Yoruba Village, which is synonymous with what is called East Port of Spain and include, Belmont, Gonzales, Morvant and Laventille. Indeed, it is from within the bowels of this community of highly spiritual and inventive Yoruba people that the steelband, calypso and many other aspects of our cultural traditions originated."

The Yoruba Village Drum Festival brings artistes, parents and children of the community and Trinidad and Tobago together at this African Heritage site. The drum festival highlights the significance of the history and contribution to the development of East Port of Spain of the Yoruba and other African peoples who lived in this community, the release said.

[caption id="attachment_1089700" align="alignnone" width="696"] Shian Lewis, a student at Success Laventille Secondary school, will receive an award for her outstanding achievement in sport. Lewis has earned the title Track Princess because of her success in both netball and track and field.[/caption]

At this year’s drum festival Bertrand Toby will be the recipient of the 2024 Keeper of the Tradition Award which is given annually to someone who has worked diligently to preserve and develop African cultural traditions, the release said.

Toby grew up in a musical family which was heavily involved in the local cultural arts, many of his relatives were singers, instrumentalists, or both. He began performing at nine years, making his debut at the annual Prime Minister’s Best Village Competition. His introduction to tamboo bamboo came when he started to play at wakes of relatives and neighbours. Since then, he has remained committed and diligent in his efforts to continue the tradition and ensure the art of playing tamboo bamboo is passed on to the next generation. He is currently the leader of the well-known Claxton Bay Tamboo Bamboo, and under his stewardship the group has performed annually at the Emancipation Support Committee of TT (ESCTT) events and at Carnival and Afro-Caribbean religious events.

Each year young people of the Yoruba village community are also recognised and awarded for their ac

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