Thursday, September 26, 2013

On the ROAD* to SLOVENIA*



Check out the vídeo for a little preview of my upcoming SAIIDI WORKSHOP (in Slovenia).

And...On the Road again* :) Always rolling, growing, surprising myself and feeling the FIRE of so much to be born (in me and around me).

NEXT STOP:
Workshops, Show and Lecture in Slovenia! Can´t wait to meet everyone, share THE GOODIES
and DANCE/LIVE!

On the Road* (to Slovenia)

 
On the Road* :)
Workshops, Show and Lecture in Slovenia! Can´t wait to meet everyone, share THE GOODIES
and DANCE/LIVE!


Back to "ALMARABE" FESTIVAL (Malaga, Spain) next May!

 
Happy Bunny I am: announcing my return to the FABULOUS "ALMARABE" FESTIVAL (in Malaga, Spain) organized by Esalim BellyDance.
Returning to one of the favorite places in the whole world: my beloved (childhood) ANDALUZIA.
Pablito: here I come!
Thankful and blessed for sharing my Vision of Oriental Dance with the whole WORLD*.




Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Joana Saahirah LONDON NEW GROUP: welcome, beautiful Souls*!

 
 
First came my upcoming  WORKSHOP "STAR MAKER"
 (17th November, London town!);
NOW my NEW GROUP that opens a brand new Journey through England.
 
Still hot from the oven, this is a Sacred Space for SHARING everything that expands us, as well as my NEWS in London and everything that will makes us all better Dancers and Human Beings.
 
The Ride is OPEN to everyone who comes with an open mind and heart. Join us at:

 
Let´s do IT*, baby!


Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Fascination*

Life´s such a (beautiful) GAME*: feeling, creating and breathing between opposites, light and darkness, fragility and strenghth, fear and LOVE.
Limited & expanded by the FREEDOM of BEING MYSELF - both at the same time. Even FREEDOM can be limiting and limitations can free you. How weird and fascinating is that?!

Monday, September 16, 2013

Libido - ليبيدو (Short Documentary)



BIG time LOL (and so true). Straight to the point - with sense of humour and intelligence.
How much did I laugh while watching this vídeo?! 

OH, MY GOD.

 Some of the main reasons why Egypt is plagued with a sexual harassment and a general mentality that sees the BODY, WOMEN, ORIENTAL DANCE and any other PLEASUREABLE thing in life as "haram" ("forbidden by God").
A MUST see - "bravo alleikum, ya shebab"!

(Thanks for sharing this vídeo, Simone Gerstgrasser)

Friday, September 13, 2013

Passionate WORKING MODE: World, here I come!


GOING - always*.



 
 
Teaching and performing in PARIS at
CAIRO BY NIGHT FESTIVAL!

 
 
 
Workshop BINT il BALAD in LISBON, this 21st September!



Thanks to Plesna for this beautiful photo montage.
Oh, YES.

 
Follow the links for more infos on my upcoming trip to SLOVENIA this September:
 
 
&
 
 

 
Back to (my beloved)  Russia, baby!
Teaching and performing in Samara this November. Can´t wait.:)
 
 
Back to LONDON town: STAR MAKER WORKSHOP on the 17th November :)
 

On the (old, misunderstood) theme of Sensuality & Vulnerability Magic*



Here are two CENTRAL - and misunderstood - themes to ORIENTAL DANCE:
* Sensuality & Vulnerability (or, in other words, the courage* of total Openness-Honesty).

Still...the world hasn´t caught up (yet) with these REALITIES but I can see* we´re arriving There*.
Check the vídeo and re-think how you see yourself, your body and your SEXUALITY-SENSUALITY - in dance as in life (you already know my motto).
How you perceive Sensuality in Oriental Dance? Is it in the cloths, make-up and hair you wear or in the exposure of specific (suggestive) body parts or is it somewhere else? For a change, I will not offer an answer but let you - reader, dancer, curious soul - try to find yours.

On Vulnerability and its incredible Magic* (also a forgotten treat for Dancers and people in general): follow this brilliant link:
http://candychang.com/confessions/

Monday, September 9, 2013

Note to the Soul*


Doubt arrives; it sneaks from under the carpet - consistent and persistant as Winter.
It pokes me, enerves me, makes me shake in my roots and stop for a second of death

("can I do it? Maybe I can´t...").
Stay and watch me - I tell Doubt. As these words abandon my mouth, I can see doubt vanishing, mixed in the incense smoke that protects the room (my heart).
See you tomorrow, dear companion: see you TOMORROW.

Alain Laboile photo*

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Joana Saahira @ Eilat festival 2013 Openning party



One more "souvenir" from Eilat. Although this was not MY orchestra, I still managed to have a blast and to bring my joy to everyone in the room.
Next EILAT FESTIVAL is not far: join us for the Biggest Festival on Earth this February of 2014!

Joana Saahirah of Cairo Workshop - Om Kolthoum


Here´s a little piece of a choreography I taught in Barcelona, Spain. The music is "Baed annak" (Om Kolthoum) and the Love and Respect I put in it cannot fit inside words.
Enjoy*.

Friday, September 6, 2013

Want to hire an Oriental Dancer? Be careful with what you ask for...

One thing is for sure: any Oriental Dancer who has professionally worked in her field for a good couple of years has many - how can I put it? - exotic tales to tell. It´s not a common profession, although - for me - it´s as natural as breathing. You also don´t need to work in Egypt or any Middle Eastern country to have a taste of the still victorious ignorance related to our craft.

Thanks God, the cases of "I want to kill you so badly but, instead, I will only tell you to check if I´m around the corner selling potatoes" have drastically dropped with me. The number of clients requesting "exotic, streap-tease" like performances and the comments about the supposed spicy (???) flavour of my work have been replaced by a great deal of appreciation and respect - thanks to the professionalism and love I always put in everything I do and a slow - but firm - change of the mentalities (thanks to many Dancers who are REALLY making an effort and always reaching for Excellence).

Nevertheless, the world is still a crazy place and Oriental Dancers are juicy victims of all kinds of perverts and sexually frustrated creatures.
So, for the sake of truth, social change and also laughs, here´s a common story (in images) that many dancers will recognize as their own:

WHAT (SOME) CLIENTS EXPECT OF ORIENTAL DANCERS WHEN THEY HIRE THEM TO PERFORM:


WHAT THEY MAY GET IN RETURN:




 
 
 
 
 
If you, like me, have a wicked sense of humor, then there´s so much more that you can add to this picture: like pushing a smart ass from the audience - the one who was yelling out loud how great my ass is - to dance FOR ME on stage with a cute coin belt on his hips, no excuses allowed.



THE CLIENT´S FACE WHEN HE (IT´S USUALLY A "HE" :(  ) FINDS OUT WE´RE NOT THE CHEAP VEILED STREAPERS THEY IMAGINED:

 
WE MAY KEEP SMILING AND DANCING BUT HERE´S WHAT WE´RE REALLY THINKING ABOUT THAT DISAPPOINTED CLIENT WHO HIRED US:

 
 
 
AND, FINALLY, "LA PIÈCE DE RESISTANCE":
WHAT WE REALLY MEAN (AS A STATEMENT) WITH OUR DANCE, DIRECTLY TO THE IGNORANT CAVE MEN WHO STILL INSIST ORIENTAL DANCE IS AN EXOTIC BULLSHIT AIMING TO SEDUCE THE SULTANS:

 
 

The other side of the Egyptian Dance glamour



I´ve often been accused of speaking too much and too honestly about the REALITY of Dance in Egypt. The only side most people seem to want to see is the glamour of the dream: DANCING in EGYPT - as if this was a sacred seal that assures a dancer´s quality. It can be and it may be not. For me, Egypt is MY SCHOOL, the place where I remembered what my Soul had forgotten; for other dancers, Egypt is nothing but an empty name they add to their real name for marketing purposes. Nothing more.


Although I owe the knowledge of my craft to almost 10 years of living and performing with my men (aka orchestra) in Egypt, I am not blind. Or, better said, it is exactly because I had that* experience that I am not blind. Seen too much, lived too much, also know too much (for my own good).

The world of the women you see in this vídeo seems very far from the world I lived in Egypt while performing under contract in the best venues of the country. I may fairly say I was treated like an ARTIST half of the time and like a prostitute the other half. The passion I have for this dance balanced it all.
Not even the fancy cloths, orchestra, stages, well earned fame and glitter could erase the MENTALITY that still pervades in the country, the same mentality that sees every dancer as a prostitute that one may love to seeing dance but would never admit in the family (not as a wife, not as a daughter, not as a mother, not as a sister). This is the truth, darlings.


The double standards of the way I was always treated bothered me for a while but only until my skin got thick. VERY thick. From sexual harassment on a daily basis to bosses who presumed I was their servant; from ex-boyfriends trying to stop me from working ( "my woman cannot be a dancer: that´s shameful for me") or even trying to kill me; from other dancers sending me the police under false accusations (illegality, depravity on stage and even drug´s possession); from, from, from. I´ve seen it and been through it all.


From all the people I dealt with, MY MUSICIANS were - perhaps - the ones who most respected me. They SAW me kicking men´s ass when they offered me jewels, Money and fancy marriage proposals in Exchange for Stardom and material comfort; they saw me handling (by myself and with lots of snakes around me trying to bite my legs off) the whole artistic machine, music, shows, clients and all the headaches that working in Egypt includes and admired me for the way I did it; they KNEW how honest and proud I am and how I never sold myself in exchange for favours or career opportunities. They KNOW ME very well.
Aside from my musicians and even when the package was shinning and the heads bowed to me I KNEW what everybody REALLY thought about me after the show, the lights and the glamour was gone by the end of the night.

I didn´t mind. I truly LOVE Oriental Dance, you see...more than LOVING IT, I KNOW IT and that* makes all the difference. Even if most of the people around me did not respect what I do, I DID. That´s the point*.


When I see this documentary (check out part II and III) I cannot stop myself from crying. I´ve seen these girls; I´ve watched them at street weddings I insisted to attend, brought by the hands of my musicians. Although we never worked in the same places, I occasionaly saw my path crossing the path of one of these girls and the shock of their condition never left me indifferent. More than a disrespect towards Oriental Dance, they represent a disrespect towards WOMEN. I´ve said it and will repeat it a billion times: Oriental Dance will not be understood and appreciated as it deserves until Women are not understood and appreciated as they deserve. These are two sides of the same coin.

I sigh. I feel sorry for these women because they are also ME. The only thing that separate us is circumstance: they were born within a very poor egyptian family. I was not. That´s all.

Some tears roll down my face - they are inevitable.
Then I breath and know* - with a renewed conviction* - that there is a GREAT JOB to be done.
NOW*********************