GUYANA FOLK
FESTIVAL 2010
Come to
My Kwe-Kwe
Kwe Kwe
Night
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER
3, 2010
8.00 p.m. - 1.00 a.m. Venue: St Peter Claver
Gymnasium
13 Jefferson Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
(Corner of Jefferson & Claver)
Entrance on Jefferson
ADULTS ONLY $20

Kwe-Kwe !
a
uniquely Guyanese pre-wedding ceremony from the
African-Guyanese tradition, providing Guyanese or wanna--be-Guyanese
the opportunity to have a celebration before the wedding.
...... it's an
evening of singing, dancing, eating and drinking.
..... an opportunity for the two families to get to know
each other,
...... and, traditionally to provide instructional and
psychological preparation
to the bride and groom for married life.
Show Meh Yuh Science, science ay!
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Kwe Kwe takes place on the
night before the marriage of an African-Guyanese couple. It
is an evening of singing, dance, eating and drinking. The
purpose of the Kwe Kwe is jollification, emphasizing new
relationships created by the union, and, traditionally, to
provide instructional and psychological preparation to the
bride and groom for married life.
At the start of Kwe Kwe,
participants arrange themselves in the house or outside on a
specially made wooden floor and the Leader sings the solo
parts of the songs which are sung in a call-and-response
pattern. A song continues until someone shouts "bato-bato".
This is a signal to stop and change a song. A new song can
be introduced by any member of the group but it is the
Leader who raises the tune.
The main purposes of
marriage in the society were and continue to be the
continuation of the lineage and the granting of legitimacy
to sexual relations.
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In the communities from which African
Guyanese claim their ancestry and traditions, the ability by
the mothers or grooms, variously, was much prized and admired. But
virginity on the part of the brides was even more prized giving rise to
such songs in the tradition of the Guyanese Kwe Kwe as:
Woman
lie down and the man can't function
Wu kinda man laika da, laika da
Take yuh calabash, wash yuh bembe
Na me shame a yuh Muma shame.
Although the Kwe Kwe dance is no
longer as socially significant as it used to be, the songs provide an
important insight into the customs, beliefs, practices and the highly
creative ability of older generations of people of African descent for
adapting to their new environment, releasing their tensions, and dealing
with the problems of everyday life.
Kwe Kwe is still a celebration not
only in the secular sense of village unity but in the larger "Guyanese"
sense by the incorporation and binding of elements that are African,
East Indian and European. |