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January 22, 2021HVCC’s Cultural Affairs Program offers free access to Step AFRIKA’s “Stono,” Feb. 1-14
STEP AFRIKA!’s “Stono” honors” the spirit of peaceful resistance and activism that remains a critical part of American freedom. During Black History Month, Hudson Valley Community College Cultural Affairs program offers an extended screening opportunity to the public from Feb. 1 through 14. Information to gain free access to the 33-minute film is available at www.hvcc.edu/culture.
On Sept. 9, 1739, an insurrection of enslaved Africans took place in South Carolina on the banks of the Stono River. Twenty Africans marched south toward a promised freedom in Spanish Florida, waving flags, beating drums, and shouting “liberty!” This extraordinary act of rebellion against British rule in Colonial America predates the Boston Tea Party of 1773. Although the Stono Rebellion was suppressed, this little-known event in American history forever changed African- American life and culture. When Africans lost the right to use their drums under The Negro Act of 1740, they began to use their bodies as percussive instruments. Those who practiced this new mode of survival and activism earned the name of “Drumfolk.” Their percussive movement gave rise to some of Black culture’s most distinctive art forms, including stepping, tap, hambone and the ring shout. (Hambone or Juba Dance involves stomping, as well as slapping and patting the arms, legs, chest, and cheeks. The Ring Shout is a transcendent religious ritual – shuffling, stomping and shouting while moving in a circle.)
STEP AFRIKA! combines African and modern dance to perpetuate the style known as stepping – a high-energy art form, punctuated with claps, kicks, stomps and chants. Based in Washington D.C., STEP AFRIKA! tours