Sunday evening was “Cultural Evening”. A mixture of Gambian and Scottish Music, Dance, Song and Food.
The evening started with presentations to Abdoulie Bah - for his fantastic efforts and energy over the past 25yrs in developing The Presidents International Award Scheme and developing the Skills Centre. Presentations were also made to the people who completed the Duke of Edinburgh / Presidents Award Gold standard expedition. 4 days of heat, dust, walking mixed in with great experiences of the local people and culture. The six were Emma, Jade, Mairi, Maimuna Joof, Binta Danpha and Saidou Jallow. Alasana and Sadibou also escorted the group so a big thanks to them for their help. The presentations were made by Alexander Cummings, the Deputy Director of Duke of Edinburgh Scotland who is visiting and providing some training for local field officers.
Next on the agenda was a dance and drama presentation from a local performance group they performed a mixture of traditional and modern dance, song and drama. At times fast, energetic and fun – at times thought provoking.
Neil, Mary and others did a great job cooking up the meal. Chicken Benechin, Gambian vegetables, Spaghetti Bolognese, Cous Cous, Salad, onions and gravy with specially imported Haggis! A great combination.
After the food Mairi played a number of Scottish songs on the Violin and piano (talented girl and a photo model – ask Ruth), some accompanied by Andrew on the African drum and his guitar.
Alex and Shona then did a fantastic job getting everyone up and teaching the whole group (maybe 50 people) a selection of Scottish Country Dances, can’t remember what they were called but we finished with Stripping the Willow. A wonderfully enthusiastic, chaotic, energetic 8 minutes and everyone managed to go down the hall doing it right!
Throughout most of the evening the slideshow was running of pictures from 25 years ago at Penyem and pictures taken by John from the current visit. Solomon and Sid haven’t changed a bit – same can’t be said for the rest of us (hair loss for some of us!!). Soloman sorted the music system in true Solomon style!
A quote from Sadibou is: “It was fantastic, interesting, full of Culture and very educational” – couldn’t agree more.
The evening closed with thanks – the visiting Gambian dancers were really elated with learning the Scottish dances and meeting us all. But of cause this was absolutely wonderful for us….the hard work and jollities continue….