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Arts & Culture AMERICAN MOSAIC - July 5, 2002:
Folklife Festival - Silk Road
3 Jul 2002 19:07 UTC
HOST:
Welcome to AMERICAN MOSAIC - VOA's radio magazine
in Special English.
(THEME)
This is Doug Johnson. On our program today we
present a special report about a festival now taking place on the Mall
in Washington, D.C. It honors the people who lived and worked along
the ancient Silk Road between Europe and Asia.
Silk Road Visit
HOST:
Each year, the Smithsonian Institution holds
a Folklife Festival in Washington, D.C. on the Mall between the Capital
building and the Washington Monument. This year the festival is called
"The Silk Road: Connecting Cultures, Creating Trust."
Traders in the ancient world used the Silk Road
to transport goods across Asia to Europe. They carried goods from Japan
to Italy and to all of the countries in between.
World famous musician Yo-Yo Ma created the Silk
Road Project to teach people about the nations and people of the Silk
Road today. He joined with the Smithsonian Institution to honor the
people and the countries of the Silk Road at the festival in Washington.
Yo-Yo Ma says the ancient Silk Road was very
much like the modern computer communications system called the Internet.
It permitted the exchange of ideas, music, food, technology and culture.
During the Silk Road Folklife Festival, visitors
are meeting people from many countries and learning about their cultures.
The countries include Japan, China, India, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Turkey,
Russia, and the city of Venice, Italy.
Visitors can hear Chinese storytellers. They
can watch men from Mongolia demonstrate their sport of wrestling. They
can eat Japanese food while listening to music from Afghanistan. They
can watch artists make Indian and Syrian jewelry.
Best of all, they can talk to the people who
do this beautiful work -- people like Ahmet Sahin of Kutahya, Turkey.
Mister Sahin makes ceramic dishes and wall hangings. He trained with
his grandfather, also named Ahmet Sahin. Grandfather Ahmet Sahin is
considered the greatest master of Islamic ceramics of the twentieth
century. The Sahins traveled to Washington, D.C to take part in the
festival. They sell their ceramics and urge people to visit Turkey.
The Silk Road Folklife Festival celebrates the
living traditions of the ancient Silk Road lands. It is presenting more
than three-hundred artists and crafts people, musicians and dancers
from more than twenty countries. And, for the two weeks of the festival,
these people of the Silk Road are sharing their many different cultures
with one another and more than one-million visitors.
Food on the Silk Road
HOST:
An important part of the yearly Smithsonian
Folklife Festival is the food. This is especially true at the Silk Road
festival. Visitors can buy foods from Japan, China, Afghanistan and
Italy. And cooks from Azerbaijan, Afghanistan, Italy, India and Uzbekistan
show how to prepare the foods from their countries. Mary Tillotson tells
us more about food and the Silk Road.
ANNCR:
People along the trade paths exchanged vegetables,
fruits, and spices that would influence the kinds of food they prepared.
Each country on the Silk Road has its own kind of cooking, yet is linked
to all the others.
Bread is one example. People eat flat bread
in India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan and much of China. Rice
has become an important part of cooking all over the world. Noodles
are also found in many countries. For many years, people believed that
the Italian explorer Marco Polo brought noodles, or pasta, from China
to Italy in the thirteenth century.
But food history experts say that is probably
not true. They say that pasta probably was created first in Iran. An
Arab cook book written in the tenth century describes the first food
made of pasta, and says it was invented by a Persian king. Food history
experts say the Arabs probably first brought pasta and the wheat needed
to make it to Italy in the ninth century.
No one knows how the Chinese learned to make
pasta. But the names of some Chinese foods made of noodles are similar
to those in other countries along the Silk Road. For example, "mantou"
is the Chinese name for a sweet food similar to bread. In Japan, a steamed
bread is called "manzu." In Korea, pasta filled with meat
is called "mandu." In Tibet, people eat stuffed dumplings
and call them "momo." And countries of central Asia prepare
a steamed filled pasta called "manti."
Smithsonian experts say that the link among
all these foods and their names is a sign of early communication among
the cultures of the Silk Road. In this way, food traditions traveled
along the ancient Silk Road and are still influencing cultures all over
the world today.
Music of the Silk Road
HOST:
Music is an important part of the cultures of
people who live along the ancient trading paths that went from East
Asia to Europe. It also is an important part of the Silk Road Folklife
Festival. Shep O'Neal tells about some of the kinds of traditional music
being played at the Festival.
ANNCR:
Music is often said to be a bridge between cultures.
This is a strong belief of the organizers of this year's Silk Road Folklife
Festival. So during the festival visitors can enjoy live performances
of unusual music from many areas of the world. There are throat singers
from Khakasia, Russia. The Beijing Opera. Music from the Pamir Mountains
in Tajikistan. Venetian folk music from Italy.
To continue this musical exchange, Smithsonian
Folkways Recordings has produced a two-CD set called "The Silk
Road: a Musical Caravan." It contains examples of the different
kinds of music being performed at the Festival. It gives a taste of
the rich musical life that exists today in the lands of the Silk Road.
And it shows how musical instruments and sounds were exchanged.
This Armenian song is played on a kind of clarinet
called a duduk and a kind of drum called a dhol. The song is called
"Dance of Tamir Agha."
((CUT ONE: Dance of Tamir Agha))
The Khakas live in the republic of Khakasia
in southern Siberia. Their rich musical traditional includes throat
singing called Khai. Here, a Khaka sings a Khai while playing a stringed
instrument.
((CUT TWO: Khai))
We leave the Silk Road now with a traditional
piece from the Uyghurs of Xinjiang, China. It shows the influence of
Chinese, Middle Eastern, Indian, Arab and Persian music.
((CUT THREE: Chabbiyat Tazi Marghul))
HOST:
This is Doug Johnson. I hope you enjoyed our
program today. And I hope you will join us again next week for AMERICAN
MOSAIC - VOA's radio magazine in Special English.
This AMERICAN MOSAIC program was written by
Marilyn Christiano, Nancy Steinbach and Paul Thompson. Our studio engineer
was Al Allerby. And our producer was Paul Thompson.
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