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J02127 Summary:

BILL NOJ02127
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
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J02127 Text:

 
Senate Resolution No. 2127
 
BY: Senator PARKER
 
        COMMENDING  the Brooklyn Academy of Music upon the
        occasion of  hosting  its  49th  Annual  DanceAfrica
        Festival from May 16-28, 2026
 
  WHEREAS,  It  is the sense of this Legislative Body to recognize and
pay  tribute  to  those  institutions  of  high   purpose   and   worthy
accomplishment   whose   enduring  commitment  to  artistic  excellence,
cultural preservation, and the celebration of the African  diaspora  has
enriched the civic and cultural life of the State of New York; and
 
  WHEREAS,  Attendant  to  such  concern,  and in full accord with its
long-standing traditions, this  Legislative  Body  is  justly  proud  to
commend  the  Brooklyn Academy of Music upon the occasion of hosting its
49th Annual DanceAfrica Festival from May 16-28, 2026, with  main  stage
performances  held  May  22-25  at  the  Howard  Gilman  Opera  House in
Brooklyn, New York; and
 
  WHEREAS, DanceAfrica is the nation's largest festival  dedicated  to
African  and  diasporic  dance  and  music,  and  stands as the Brooklyn
Academy of Music's longest-running program; born in Brooklyn  and  grown
into  a  national  institution,  DanceAfrica has for nearly five decades
transformed BAM and the surrounding  Fort  Greene  neighborhood  into  a
living  gathering  place  for  African,  Caribbean, and African American
artistic traditions, welcoming artists, audiences, and community members
from across the world in a celebration that is at  once  a  festival,  a
homecoming, and an act of cultural affirmation; and
 
  WHEREAS,  The  49th  Annual  DanceAfrica  Festival unfolds under the
theme "Uganda: Umoja/Mirembe/Obulungi - Unity, Peace, Beauty,"  honoring
the  East  African nation's past, celebrating its present, and rejoicing
in its future, a theme that resonates deeply within a Brooklyn community
whose cultural ties to the African continent and its diaspora are  woven
into the very fabric of our borough's identity; and
 
  WHEREAS,  The  festival  is  anchored  by  the  triumphant return of
Uganda's Ndere Troupe, one of Africa's most celebrated dance  and  music
ensembles, performing on BAM's main stage for the first time since 2007,
joined  by  Asase  Yaa African American Dance Theater, celebrating their
own 25th anniversary with a newly revamped presentation,  alongside  the
DanceAfrica  Spirit  Walkers  and  the Billie's Youth Arts Academy Dance
Ensemble, now in its 30th consecutive year as part of the festival; and
 
  WHEREAS, In keeping with the sacred tradition that has opened  every
DanceAfrica  since  its  founding,  a libation ceremony will precede the
opening performance on May 22, conducted by the DanceAfrica  Council  of
Elders  on  the  steps of BAM's Peter Jay Sharp Building, honoring those
who have passed to the ancestral grounds and grounding the  festival  in
the spiritual continuity that connects past, present, and future; and
 
  WHEREAS,  DanceAfrica  2026  extends  far  beyond  the  main  stage,
encompassing FilmAfrica screenings curated by the African Film Festival,
dance classes co-presented with the Mark Morris Dance Center, visual art
installations, and community programming developed in  partnership  with
 
the  Billie  Holiday  Theatre  at Restoration Plaza, Weeksville Heritage
Center, the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts (MoCADA),  and
the Fort Greene Park Conservancy, ensuring that the festival's gifts are
shared across every corner of our borough; and
 
  WHEREAS,  The  beloved  DanceAfrica  Bazaar  returns  to the streets
surrounding BAM on May 23-25, transforming Fort Greene  into  a  vibrant
open-air  marketplace  featuring  more  than 150 African, Caribbean, and
African  American  artisans,  designers,   chefs,   and   entrepreneurs,
embodying  the  festival's  vision  of cultural celebration as an act of
community and economic empowerment; and
 
  WHEREAS, DanceAfrica has always understood that the preservation and
transmission of African diasporic culture  is  not  merely  an  artistic
endeavor  but  a political and spiritual one; an insistence, in the face
of erasure, that the traditions, stories, and movement  vocabularies  of
the  African  world  are  worthy  of  the  grandest  stages, the deepest
reverence, and the widest audiences; and
 
  WHEREAS, This  Legislative  Body  is  proudly  moved  to  honor  the
Brooklyn  Academy  of  Music,  its leadership, its artists, its cultural
partners, and the community of Brooklyn that has  made  DanceAfrica  its
own for 49 extraordinary years; now, therefore, be it
 
  RESOLVED,  That  this Legislative Body pause in its deliberations to
commend the Brooklyn Academy of Music upon the occasion of  hosting  its
49th  Annual  DanceAfrica  Festival  from May 16-28, 2026, and to extend
congratulations to all  artists,  performers,  vendors,  educators,  and
community  members who make this annual celebration of African diasporic
culture one of the great cultural institutions of our State and  Nation;
and be it further
 
  RESOLVED,  That  copies  of  this Resolution, suitably engrossed, be
transmitted to President Tamara McCaw and  the  staff  of  the  Brooklyn
Academy  of  Music, and to the artists and cultural partners of the 49th
Annual DanceAfrica  Festival,  in  recognition  of  their  profound  and
enduring  contribution  to  the cultural life of Brooklyn, New York, and
the African diaspora.
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