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Welcome to the Mesgana Dancers 2007 Millennium tour website! The Mesgana Dancers are returning for their second USA tour presented by Children of Ethiopia Education Fund (COEEF) and Ethiopia Reads. This year’s tour has been expanded to include many more cities and venues so more people can see these wonderful girls perform their stunning display of Ethiopian cultural dance and song! Many new dances have been added this year and we know that you will be dazzled by the talents of these young ladies! The tour this year will be from August to September 2007 and will include stops in Washington, DC, Columbia, MD, Evanston (Chicago), IL, Atlanta, New York City, West Orange, NJ, Denver & Boulder, CO, Salt Lake City, Murray, & St. George, UT, San Jose, Palo Alto, Ontario/Upland, and Los Angeles (San Fernando), CA.
The Mesgana Dancers are 11 girls, age 7-13, and are sponsored students in the COEEF program in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Our heartfelt thanks go to Ethiopian Airlines for providing transportation for the girls to travel from Ethiopia to the United States! Watch this website for the latest updates on the tour and a city by city report.
Click on the images to view the full picture. To navigate, mouse over the image and click on Next or Previous and Close at the right bottom of the image.
| Ethiopian Airlines is proud to once again sponsor the Mesgana Dancers for their 2007 USA Millennium Tour. |
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For Mesgana Dancers with Fox 13 Live Video Clips please click here and on the middle of the page find the "SideBar". |
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By Alicia Greenleigh
The Salt Lake Tribune
Salt Lake Tribune |
| Article Last Updated:08/27/2007 07:13:57 PM MDT |
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What do you know about Ethiopia? If you're like most people, it's probably not much. But the Mesgana Dance Group wants to change that. Mesgana, which means gratitude in Amharic, the national language of Ethiopia, is made up of 11 girls, ages 7 to 13, who are educating people across America about their culture through song and dance. The group will give three performances in northern Utah this week.
"Most kids [in Ethiopia] know traditional songs and dances because their parents taught them. It's something they do throughout generations," said Murray resident Norm Perdue, founder of the Utah-based Children of Ethiopia Education Fund.
COEEF, a non-profit organization, was started in 2001 by Perdue and his wife Ruthann after they traveled to Addis Ababa, the country's capital, with some family friends. It was then that the Perdues sponsored their first child, Kidist Bunde, when they heard her grandmother could no longer afford to send her to school. Since then, COEEF has paid tuition for more than 800 girls to attend private schools.
"We decided to only sponsor girls because they don't have the same opportunities as boys to go to school," Perdue said. "Most of the time, if a family has a boy, he becomes the priority because they think he'll become the breadwinner. And so, girls usually have to drop out in elementary [school]."
Norm, a former sports photographer for the Utah Jazz, and Ruthann, a registered nurse, both recently retired to work full time for COEEF. The couple travel to Ethiopia every three or four months. And though the program has become successful in providing girls with a means to an education, the Perdues formed the Mesgana Dance Group two years ago in the hope that it would expand and grow their efforts.
"We held tryouts [for girls in the program], choose 11 and then they started to train for eight hours a week since December, learning dances from different regions of Ethiopia," Norm Perdue said.
Last year, the Perdues took a small group of girls in the troupe on an American tour during their summer vacation. This summer, an expanded group will visit 17 cities. The troupe arrived in Utah on Tuesday and spent the next day sightseeing, swimming and enjoying a barbecue at a donor's house in Riverton.
Meskerem Tadesse, 15, is one of the program's success stories. She consistently places among the top three in her classes, speaks five languages fluently, and recently received a full scholarship to Wasatch Academy in Mt. Pleasant.
"At first I couldn't believe I could go to school and not have to work," Meskerem said. "Back home I woke up at 4 a.m. to finish my homework, and then I cleaned the house, cooked breakfast, got my [younger] cousins ready and then went to school." Meskerem's favorite subject is biology and she hopes to become a doctor.
Another dancer, Bethlehem Efirem, 11, has been in the program for two years and wants to become a flight attendant.
"I like Keffa [a dance style] best," said Bethelhem, who visited California during the troupe's tour last year. "I love Disneyland. Mickey is my favorite and Splash Mountain."
While the girls obviously love touring, the Perdues stress that the dancing and the tour is secondary to COEEF's main goal of educating girls.
"Education is the outlet for a better life for these girls," Norm Perdue said. "So our main focus is and always will be the girls' education."
The Mesgana Dance Group will perform Wednesday at 7 p.m. the Murray Park Amphitheater, 296 E. Murray Park Lane, Salt Lake City; Saturday at 7 p.m. at the Capitol Theater, 50 W. 200 South, Salt Lake City; and Sept. 4 at 7 p.m. at the Egyptian Theatre, 328 Main Street, Park City. Tickets range from $10 to $20. For details, visit www.mesgana.com. Sponsoring one year of schooling for one girl is $200; sponsorships that include medical care and personal assistance for the children's families are also available. For more information, visit www.coeef.org. |
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The children of Ethiopia form a bond with the Boulder community
by Anne Vickman (
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Ethiopia is, indeed, a distant land, and I will be the first to admit that my experiences with the country have been limited to infrequent visits to the best Ethiopian restaurant in town, Ras Kassa's. However, Boulder was given a much more significant encounter with this East African nation at Chautauqua Auditorium (900 Baseline Rd., Boulder, 303-440-7666) last Saturday night.
The Mesgana Dancers is a group of 11 young girls between the ages of 7 and 13 who are sponsored through the Children of Ethiopia Education Fund, which provides tuition money to send them to good, private schools in their home country. While I initially expected a lovely performance of African dancing (and it was!), what I saw turned out to be much less about dancing and a great deal more about opportunities for young children.
I spoke with COEEF founder Norm Perdue, who said that he and his wife, Ruthann, were inspired to create this foundation after a humanitarian trip to Ethiopia in June of 2001. During their stay, the Perdues met a girl named Kidest, who was at risk of dropping out of school due to the cost of tuition, which her family could not afford. When the Perdues learned that her annual tuition came to about $100, they immediately offered to cover the costs for two years. Kidest and her family were extremely thankful, and the Purdues were amazed at how easy it was for them to impact the lives of these children. Upon their return to their home state of Utah, the Purdues shared their story with close friends, who were then inspired to participate in their endeavor. Thus, the COEEF was born and to date has more than 800 sponsored students.
The Chautauqua event was also co-sponsored by Ethiopia Reads, a non-profit organization based out of Denver that works to promote literacy as well as provide books to Ethiopian school children. Currently, proper education materials are a rare and precious resource in Ethiopia, and many schools do not have access to them.
The mission statement of COEEF reads: "The Children of Ethiopia Education Fund exists to improve the lives and futures of girls in Ethiopia; and to allow the opportunity for people in the United States and around the world, who have been more materially blessed, to give of themselves."
In the spirit of this mission, the Mesgana Dance troupe was born. The girls worked with their choreographer, Argoye Feleke, in Ethiopia to create traditional dances from nine Ethiopian regions, and they have been performing them on their current seven-week U.S. tour. Each dance consists of tightly knit, repeated motions of the feet, legs, arms and head, as well as handmade costumes of colored satin, intricate beadwork, and delicate adornments such as cowry shells and bells.
These beautiful girls all shared another, equally important accessory: enormous smiles. It was quite clear during the show that these children were enjoying themselves immensely, and their graceful, elegant movements were an extension of the joy in their hearts.
In addition to these dances that celebrated the harvest, rivers and natural resources, the girls sang several songs in their native language of Amharic. "Africa, Africa" paid homage to the beauty and resources of the country, and "Selam, Selam" was a song literally about peace.
The enormous pleasure that the dancers took in the performance was contagious. After the first song, a gaggle of young, knee-high, Croc-wearing girls descended from their seats to bop around in front of the stage.
The dancers also decided to share something extra with the Boulder audience: a celebration of Ethiopia's millennium, which happens to be in 2007. Ethiopia uses the old Julian calendar of Europe, and, therefore, according to Gregorian dates, the New Year is on Sept. 8 through 11, successively. The girls ended the performance with a New Year song, "Ababayosh," which involved much spirited clapping, stomping, and a trip through the auditorium and around the audience.
The Mesgana Dancers put on an inspiring, energetic performance. These young ladies shared their enthusiasm for dance, as well as their gratitude for the opportunity to receive an education.
Anyone interested in sponsoring a child or making donations to COEEF can do so by visiting www.coeef.org. Rest assured that this is not a Save the Children advertisement hosted by Sally Struthers that only mildly assures that your money is going to the right place. The Perdues have spearheaded their organization based on first-hand information and experience, resulting in resonant support across the globe.
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Source: Boulder Weekly |
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