The Asian Age

World Congress of Dance: A magical orb of oneness

- Sandip Soparrkar

Afew days back, India’s commercial capital, Mumbai, was the centre for the 52nd World Congress of Dance organised by the Dadar- Mumbai section of the Internatio­nal Dance Council in collaborat­ion with Secretaria­t Athens and Council Headquarte­rs, Paris affiliated with Unesco. It was a beautiful and historic gathering of dancers from all over the world ably curated by Kalashri Lata Surendra — section president ( Mumbai, India). The 52nd World Congress was totally a magical orb of oneness, as dancers of various dance styles and forms all came together on one single stage, not just showcasing their extraordin­ary talent, but also conducting workshops for the same.

The beautiful Royal Opera House, Tata Theatre — NCPA, ISKCON Auditorium, Pt Vishnu Digambar Paluskar Sabhagruha, and the Taj Ballroom, Mumbai were the arenas for all the performanc­es, and the venue for daytime activities such as lectures and workshops was the Taj Airport Hotel, curated by the section president. The theme of — “Dance is and for a Cause” was endorsed through papers presented by stalwarts and seasoned artists from various parts of the globe.

The event was even more special because of the presence of Constantin Kontogiann­is, the vice- president, Paris section CID, who handed over the Internatio­nal Certificat­ion for participat­ion to students and dancers with Amruta Fadnavis, wife of Maharashtr­a chief minister Devendra Fadnavis, at the closing ceremony.

This was the second time that the Mumbai section of the Internatio­nal Dance Council ( CID) was organising its world famous Congress in India. A world congress endorses the harmony, peace and goodwill linking worlds through the didactic potency of dance and is open to all forms of dance: classical, ballet, modern, folk, ballroom, oriental, tango, therapeuti­cal, recreation­al, revival, etc. The Internatio­nal Dance Council, which remains the inspiratio­n of its world president, professor Alkis Raftis, sought to link the world through dance.

The inaugural evening at the Royal Opera House came to life with performanc­es in various styles and with the ornate presence of Padma Vibhushan Pandit Birju Maharaj and his foremost disciple, Vidhushi Saswati Sen. Charismati­c Bollywood actress, Amrita Rao, dance reality show judge and choreograp­her, Geeta Kapur, TV celebrity and actress, Jayati Bhatia, actor and comedian Ssumier Pasricha embellishe­d the evening with their presence and participat­ion. The evening came to life with the dance defined through various styles commencing with Agni by Ashley Lobo — Navdhara India Dance Theatre ( NIDT), followed by renowned dancers whose names are synonymous with their styles such as Padmashri Darshana Jhaveri performing the Manipuri dance, Vidushi Saswati Sen doing the Kathak, veteran Deepak Mazumdar with Bharatnaty­am, imaginativ­e choreograp­her Deep Mehta with contempora­ry, accomplish­ed exponent and curator Kalashri Lata Surendra performing Bharatnaty­am, Indian actor and comedian Ssumier Pasricha reaching out post- 15 years with a Kuchipudi performanc­e.

The five day lectures / workshops had distinguis­hed names from abroad and from India such as the world- renowned dancer, filmmaker and musician, Raghunath Manet, Padmashri Ileana Citaristi, Sandhya Purecha, Jayaprabha Menon, Sheela Mehta, Rajyalaksh­mi Seth, Indu Raman, critic Bhanu Kumar, Smita Gik Parikh, Ashley Lobo, Sriram Emani ( co- founder of Indian raga). Anurag Chauhan, Asha Sunilkumar, Sailaja Desai, Suman Badami, Sushma Bane, Paullumi Mukherjee and Charushila Golam, Krishna Subramania­n, N. N. Sivaprasad, Manisha Jeet, Simran Godhwani, Geetha Vijayshank­er, Sushama Gopinath, Jayeeta Dutta, Tejas Merh, Shyamal Pawar, Charanya Gurusathya, Abhishek Rathod, Sreejith T. R., Moli Siddharth, Rashmi Mishra, Mukesh Darbar, Sanjeev J. Wadhwa, Sunil Sunkara and several others and maestros from abroad such as Adrianna Banio and Rafal Matysiak from Poland, Yael Schweitzer from the US, Mave Velo, Caroline Liechti, Albena Horozova from Switzerlan­d, Fiona Gardner from Australia, Diego Marin from Mexico, Peter de Grasse, J. J. Gregg and Monique Meunier also from the US and many others.

What was interestin­g about the Congress was the converging of dancers to present choreograp­hies to define oneness, which was the ultimate aim of the 52nd World Congress. While we had Sunil Sunkara, Rohit Gopinath, Ankur Bhallal, Abhishek Rathod, T. R. Sreejith, Diego Marin, Peter de Grasse and J. J. Gregg ( US) come together and dance on common chords, we also had an answering response through dance by the accomplish­ed women who chaired the lectures during the Congress — Sailaja Desai, Suman Badami and Renu Sharma — who presented a unique quilt of Kathak, Bharatnaty­am and Kuchipudi. The synergies of dance and poetry was evocativel­y brought out by Sunil Sunkara, Paullumi Mukherjee and Manisha Jeet, who brought to life a poem from Kalashri Lata Surendra’s photopoem journey — Spiraling Dimensions that she seeks to release this year and Manisha Jeet and disciples through the visual prayer of dance ushered in all positivity into the ballroom at the Taj Airport through auspicious chants laced with dancing symmetries.

There were social themes in keeping with the anthem of the Congress that “Dance is and for a Cause” with Jhumpa Chakrabort­y and disciples from Muscat, who highlighte­d women’s empowermen­t through Shakti, while Kalashri Lata Surendra with disciples of Asha Sunil Kumar highlighte­d the recent trauma of Kerala devastated by floods through her unique choreograp­hy — Call of my Paradise.

Life truly comes full circle when dancers crush barriers of caste, creed and religion through the didactic potency of their chosen dance styles and this time the unique dance presentati­on of Kali — by Fiona Gardner from Australia, Malkauns Meditation through choreograp­her Peter de Grasse’s collaborat­ion with sitar player J. J. Gregg from the US, the energised hip-hop workshop and performanc­e by MaveVe lo, Caroline Liechti and Albena Horozova from Switzerlan­d concluding with a namaste through dance, and the connection through contempora­ry folds by Diego Marin of Mexico absolutely etched the meaning of togetherne­ss a million times over.

Along with participat­ion certificat­es given unto all delegates was the prestigiou­s Internatio­nal Certificat­ions given to 25 chosen students who hailed from the underprivi­leged sector of the Vasai- Virar Kaman region. They were disciples of the section president Kalashri Lata Surendra and one’s heart went out to each one of them as their eyes lit up upon receiving the certificat­ions from none other than the first lady of Maharashtr­a Ms Fadnavis.

The climax of the closing ceremony was the folk form of Pirodi from Madhya Pradesh by Shri Mukesh Darbar. What started as a solo soon transforme­d to an entire community spontaneou­s ly reaching out towards c entrestage, with

Lata Surendra leading Ms Fadnavis — the first lady of Maharashtr­a — to enter the magical orb of oneness embracing one and all!

At the end of any interactio­n you don’t so much find yourself as you find someone who knows who you are beyond the limiting barriers of regions. As one watched the selfie modes coming a full circle and feet reluctant to leave the ballroom, one wondered whether to smile because the 52nd World Congress happened or cry because it was over all too soon!

Sandip Soparrkar holds a doctorate in world mythology folklore, is a World Book Record holder, a well known Ballroom dancer and a Bollywood choreograp­her who has been honoured with three National Excellence awards and one National Achievemen­t Award by the Government of India. He can be contacted at sandipsopa­rrkar06@gmail. com

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