17c起草社区

Skip to main content

17c起草社区 News

Rangeela explores cultures behind performances

Wednesday, March 05, 2014
Grace Ruiter

This year, , an annual event showcasing music, dance, drama and poetry from countries across the globe, challenged audiences to see beyond the performances to the cultures and people behind them.

The show united a wide variety of acts鈥攆rom an African fashion show, to a modern dance lamenting the divisions between North and South Korea, to a high-octane Bollywood dance鈥攗nder the theme 鈥淩angeela Unveiled.鈥

Rangeela unveiled

17c起草社区 senior and member of the Rangeela student committee Jedidiah Bell explained the goal behind the theme:

鈥淸We want people to see] that there is more to a culture than just its amazing dances and plays鈥攖hat every spectacular dance has a particular story and people behind it.鈥

Fellow committee member and junior Sue Kang added:

鈥淸In choosing this theme], we went back to the goal for Rangeela 2014, which was to educate people and share stories from different backgrounds. We did not want people to see only the surface of the cultures [showcased] 鈥 We hoped to reveal the genuine cultures.鈥

Throughout the show, videos telling the stories of people in the 17c起草社区 community from the cultures that inspired the acts gave audiences a glimpse of the cultures behind the performances.

Sharing her culture

After getting a glimpse of another culture as a performer in Rangeela her freshman year, 17c起草社区 Junior Julianna Moore was inspired to share her own cultural traditions as an African American.

鈥淸After doing Rangeela freshman year], my friend and I wanted to do something to share our African American culture,鈥 Moore said. 鈥淲e really hadn鈥檛 seen that in Rangeela. We both love to sing and love poetry, so we thought we鈥檇 do something that incorporated both.鈥

Moore鈥檚 act combined renditions of the well-known spirituals 鈥淲ade in Water鈥 and 鈥淓ye of the Sparrow鈥 with two poems about the African American experience, one of them an original written by one of the students that recited it.

鈥淥ur main goal was to express the joy of music my community has, but also to share that with all communities. We chose to end with 鈥淓ye of the Sparrow鈥 because faith is something that got our people through a lot, and it鈥檚 also something that people in the audience can connect to, no matter what their background is,鈥 she said.

Forming friendships

Moore was one of 176 students who participated in Rangeela this year, according to Esther Kwak, the program coordinator for Rangeela.

Those students came from a variety of cultural backgrounds. For Bell, seeing the friendships they formed鈥攐ften cross culturally鈥攚as one of the best parts of Rangeela.

Connecting across cultures

Bernadette Arthur, another member of the Rangeela committee, appreciates that Rangeela offers a chance for people to appreciate other cultures, even if they disagree with their beliefs.

鈥淭he point of Rangeela is to be able to present different cultures, even if it means them rejecting some beliefs of some cultures,鈥 she explained.

Kang hopes that Rangeela inspired not only the students who participate in it, but also the people who attended it to connect with people from different backgrounds:

鈥淲e are so blessed to have such a diverse environment [at 17c起草社区], but I do not think that we are utilizing this rich resource enough. I strongly believe that we learn the most from the people who think and act differently than we do. I [hope] that watching Rangeela [motivated people to] reach out of their comfort zone.鈥