Saturday, June 2, 2012

WHCC ON HENNA

On June 16, 2012 - World Heritage Cultural Center is having a Bollywood Day! Celebrating the mainstream Indian culture.  With that comes Bollywood dance workshops, face-painting for kids, some delicious appetizers donated by the Bollywood Bistro Restaurant in Pleasantville NY and of-course Henna!

Did you know that Henna has been used since the bronze age to dye skin, hair, fingernails, leather, silk and wool. In several parts of the world it is traditionally used in various festivals and celebrations. There is mention of henna as a hair dye in Indian court records around 400 CE, in Rome during the Roman Empire, in Spain around 711m, and Egypt 14th c
.   
Use of henna for body art has enjoyed a recent renaissance due to improvements in cultivation, processing, and the emigration of people from traditional henna-using regions.
For skin dyeing, a paste of ground henna (either prepared from a dried powder or from fresh ground leaves) is placed in contact with the skin from a few hours to overnight. Henna stains can last a few days to a month depending on the quality of the paste, individual skin type, and how long the paste is allowed to stay on the skin.


Wanted to share this awesome website I found for designing henna! Although I totally skipped the practice section and went straight to the henna cone, my first design did not come out that bad. 

Visit:  http://www.hennapage.com for details on how to become a henna artist yourself.

Teach Yourself to Henna! ~Elements of Henna Patterns ~

This section will regularly have new pattern exercises designed to help beginners become proficient henna artists, and to help experienced henna artists increase speed and accuracy. 

Once, when you were very young, you had difficulty writing.  You practiced on lined paper until you could write easily, legibly, and quickly.  Henna patterns can be created of simple elements just as words are created of letters.  If you learn the elements, you can put them together to make complex patterns.  Practice these exercises with lined paper and a pen until you can draw the figures quickly and smoothly, just as you practiced elementary school penmanship exercises.  Then practice them with a henna cone.  In time, you'll be able to build up complex henna patterns quickly and easily.  Bookmark this page and come back often for more free patterns from The Henna Page!


Click on the images below for more pictures and free patterns!

The "Bridal Henna" Series


Fooffy
1: The Fooffy:
This looptyloop is similar to the cursive letter "f."  Click on the Fooffy to see what you can do with it!

The Hump
2: The Hump:

This hump is the most frequently used element in contemporary Indian bridal henna.  Learn to love your Hump, and practice humping for speed and accuracy!  Click on the Hump to learn more about humping!

Wibble Leaf
3: The WibbleLeaf

This leaf is created with a wibble and a flick.  Henna that is naturally stringy or which has had dextrose added makes these WibbleLeaves go smooth and fast.  Wibble up, Wibble down, Wibble around a spiral!  Click on the WibbleLeaf to learn wibbling!

ZiggyZoggy2
4: The ZiggyZoggy

The ZiggyZoggy is most easily done with naturally stringy henna, or henna with added dextrose. If you have stringy paste, you only need to touch down at the apex and nadir of each angle and drape between.  North African patterns use lots of ZiggyZoggies!  In India, repeating ZiggyZoggies symbolize the rainy season, water, fertility, and abundance. Learn your ZiggyZoggy!  Click on the ZiggyZoggy to learn how!

Fishbone
5: The Fishbone

The Fishbone is most easily done with naturally stringy henna, or henna with added dextrose, so you can drape fine and straight fishbones .  Fishbones are great "filler" patterns between longer lines. Click on the Fishbone to learn how!

Mummy
6: The Mummy

The Mummy, the letter M,  is versatile and beautiful!  Have fun with your Mummy!  Click on the Mummy to learn how!

Sprout
7: The Sprout

The Sprout looks like a sprouting seed or a comma with a long tail.  Sprouts are a tasty addition to henna patterns! Click on the Sprout to learn how!

The Game
8) The Game

The Game is a depiction of a game board, symbol of merriment, leisure time, and games of strategy and chance.  This  pattern has been a favorite in Indian henna for over 100 years, and continues to be popular in contemporary bridal henna.  Click on the Game to learn how!

sss
9) The ?S?S?

This pattern is variously interpreted as a vine, meander, pot hook, or a scorpion.  As a scorpion, it may have either passionate or deadly associations ... or both!  Click on the ?S?S?S to get passionate and deadly ... or to just hang your cooking pot over the fire!

The Bud
10) The Bud

This tiny leaf or flower bud appears in henna designs all over the world as a metaphor for youth, fertility and new life.  Click on The Bud to learn to grow your own!

S
11) The Cursive S

A curvy S is a thing of beauty!  Click on The S to learn some kick S designs! 

Sloopy2
12) Sloopy

Sloopy is Foofy's cousin, from the bad part of town.  Click here or on the Sloopy to hang on ...

Tribble
13) Tribbles

The tribble is a cute little pattern.  Click here or on the tribble to begin the proliferation!

ripple
14) Ripples

This pattern represents life-giving, purifying running water.  Click here or on the ripple to dive in!

Kiss
15) The Kiss

This pattern is useful for flower petals, honeycomb fills, and other sweet things.  Click here or on the Kiss for a sweet treat!

The Knot
16) The Knot

This pattern makes lovely leaves from simple scribbles.  Click here or on the Knot to get tied up!

The Open Heart
17) The Open Heart
When you spin open hearts around in a circle, you have lovely flowers.  Click here or on the Open Heart to make the flowers bloom!

Kitty Whiskers
18) Kitty Whiskers.

Got Tuna?  Click here or on the whiskers to see whisker wonderfulness!

Pug Tails
19) Pug Tails

The Seed
20) The Seed

The "North African" Series
Introduction to "North African" style henna
Intro to North African

Triangles: Tanith, The Bride, and the Eye


Eight-Pointed Stars: Venus



Friday, June 1, 2012

Our Home Center in Thornwood New York

Dear Friends, we are very pleased to announce our Home Center at 590 Commerce Street, Thornwood NY 10594.

World Heritage Cultural Center was created in 2005, earned its not for profit status in 2007 and has lead its founders on an amazing journey since then. With a noble mission of "Creating a Common Ground where any Culture in the World can come and Celebrate their way of Life through the Arts & Food....while making a Positive impact through Knowledge & Charity," WHCC has gained a strong resume.

Read all about us at www.mywhcc.com, visit our Youtube page and FaceBook page.

After 7 years of lots of hard work and help from great friends like Teo Ricciardella
WHCC has been blessed with a home of its own in Thornwood NY.  Teo discovered his incredible natural tenor voice two years ago. Not only does he sings in Italian and English, but also in  fluent Spanish. Read more about Teo Ricciardella (click here)

WHCC is proud to include him in its World Of Colors Concert 2013!  Teo generously works with WHCC to get the Cultural Center off the ground and without his help and his wife Joanne, this would not be possible. We are forever grateful!

Come and enjoy some new art forms in dance and music, while getting fit at the same time. We are hosting a series of multicultural classes at the Center, including Zumba, birthday parties, bridal showers, baby showers, special events, artists for hire, etc. We are able host onsite or offsite. Hope you see you soon at the center and visit www.mywhcc.com to check out our new classes that are being added weekly.

Come enjoy a couple of free classes and have fun!

Please enjoy some pictures that were taken by John Gagliardi of the studio. Our space can fit up to 90 people. We also have our private office and a DJ booth, bar and dance floor.


















Thursday, July 22, 2010

World Of Colors

 A Universal Cultural Experience ~ September 25, 2010 at the Symphony Space Theater


"Music & Dance speaks what cannot be expressed, soothes the mind and gives it rest, heals the heart and makes it whole, flows from heaven to the soul"

World Heritage Cultural Center is creating a common ground where any Culture in the world can come and celebrate their way of Life through the Arts & Food.

As long as humans have walked the earth, down to each continent, to each country, to each region people have their own faith, communication, celebrations, and laws of life. The only thing that can bring us all on a common ground is "Music & Dance that speaks what cannot be expressed."

In this great colorful patchwork we call America, there is so much un-noticed beauty around us. World Of Colors is an Annual Dance & Music Festival celebrating and bringing more than 20+ cultures on one stage; breaking barriers among nations through the Arts as a diverse audience becomes one family through the magic of Music & Dance.

Cultures on stage are are diverse, of African, Indian, Dominican, Tahitian, Polynesian, Brazilian, Caribbean, Scandinavian, Irish, American(Modern & HipHop), Indonesian, Japanese, Chinese, Russian, Persian, Bolivian, Polish, Puerto Rican, Egyptian, and the list keeps growing.


To Purchase Tickets please CLICK HERE


Piel Canela Dance School (NYC) is a Platinum Sponsor of the World Of Colors Show!!

SPECIALS Call for details at 914.498.8347 or email at info@mywhcc.com:
*Buy 4 tickets for $100 (save $40 dollars) and get $150 certificate for free dance classes at Piel Canela Dance School 
*Buy 4 tickets at full price ($35) and get 2 certificates ($300 value) for free dance classes at Piel Canela Dance School
Visit our website to see details on all our sponsors.

World Heritage Cultural Center supports many charities and instead of re-inventing the wheel, we work with organizations such as Alex Lemonade Stand (pediatric cancer), American Cancer Society, Dancing at the Cross Roads (HIV) and  HomeAThon (homeless). Speakers from these organizations will  be present at the World Of Colors show.

World Heritage Cultural Center acknowledges those that make a positive impact through their work. We are proud to announce that Five Global Appreciation World Of Colors Awards will be handed out to five outstanding citizens of the world.
Zoylakha Sherzad is founder of  the School of Hope. Times Magazine calls her the only woman in luxury to make a difference in the lives of women in the Middle East.
Other honorees to be announced shortly.

World Heritage Cultural Center donated 30 tickets to the Mt. Sinai Hospital Pediatric Center for children and their families to attend the show.

Join a noble cause in making a positive impact through Knowledge & Charity as World Heritage Cultural Center with some of the most amazing talents in the United States comes together to put on a spectacular show on September 25, 2010 to raise funds to open our first Center in New York.

For videos from our past events, such at the Multicultural stage in Times Square, please go to YOUTUBE 

For any questions or concerns, please call 914.498.8347 or email at info@mywhcc.com

Saturday, June 12, 2010

WHCC in the Taste of Times Square June 7, 2010




Festival of Food and Fun at Taste of Times Square



On Monday June 7th 2010, Times Square was transformed into a rarely seen neighborhood block party when World Heritage Cultural Center (WHCC) came together with the Times Square Alliance, local restaurants and WHCC artists to showcase a festival of food and fun in New York City.

This fun festival which spanned several blocks of Times Square was one of the many events that World Heritage Cultural Center has put on in alignment with their mission in creating a common ground where any culture in the world can come and celebrate their way of life through the Arts & Food.

World Heritage Cultural Center has hosted the first Multicultural Stage in the 17th year of the Taste of Times Square, that involved restaurants selling their yummy treats to hungry eaters while WHCC’s stage kept their energy up with songs and dances from all over the world. Fashion designer Asher Jay and expert dancer Ryan Holder were the MC’s for the evening.

While international DJ Ash spinned music for the audience to dance to, and a variety of dancers took space on the stage to share dances from Hip Hop to Bollywood and Latin there was never a dull moment at this festival. Unified Dancers which were a group of high-school aged students took the audiences breathe away when they performed a mix of Micheal Jacksons music with dancers even performing his famous “moonwalk”. Bollywood Funk, Dancing Shiva and Seeta David dancers performed contemporary dance steps to Bollywood music and Ancestral Horizons & Recklez Riddimmz - African drummers/Caribbean drummers created sounds that were true to their tribal roots. Latin Sensations "Piel Canela Dancers" danced away as Heart Break Kids and Daraja (Houston) brought Hip/Hop and Rap music to live on stage. Italian Opera Singer Cristina Fontanelli made a special appearance on stage as well.
When asked a few spectators at the show about their thoughts of the event here is what they had to say: MC Asher Jay said “The performance excerpts featured this evening emphasized customs embraced by various collectives, from dated legacies to contemporary colloquialisms, only to eloquently highlight the fact that human expression can neither be bound by tense nor space."
Manoj Rajwani (Audience) “The WHCC’s show was an amazing experience. I was inspired by the talent that performed and I felt like I was part of a very special night. At the end of the night I realized the power of music, dance and the mission of WHCC. It’s about bringing us all together to appreciate the beauty that is present in all of our cultures.
Mitchell Henning (Times Square Alliance): "I'm very impressed with what you are doing, WHCC kept the crowd here and I will recommend you to everyone! I can't wait for next year!" These are just a couple of thoughts out of the many who appreciated the festivities.
Through their hard work and commitment in creating a common ground where any culture can shine and making a positive impact through knowledge & charity, both Sattie Persaud and JuanCarlos Gonzalez, the founders of World Heritage Cultural Center were able to create an amazing spectacle of festivity and learning for those lucky enough to have experience the fun at the Taste of Times Square.



View pictures on Facebook

Videos on YOUTUBE

www.mywhcc.com


Written by Laju Shah

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

WORLD PEACE MARCH IN NYC NOV 30, 2009

WORLD PEACE MARCH

World Heritage Cultural Center is bringing the noise to the World Peace March across the Brooklyn Bridge with drummers, passion, and cultural diversity! Join us for a HISTORIC Event, the very first World Peace March on Earth. Please scroll down to the section of how you can endorse this march and how you can help.


The whole 99,000 ML route of the March is divided into 6 parts:
1. New Zealand -> India
2. India -> Moscow
3. Moscow -> Rome
4. Rome -> New York
5. New York -> San Josè (Costa Rica)
6. San Josè (Costa Rica) -> Punta de Vacas (Argentina)








Why?

Because we can end world hunger with 10% of what is spent on arms. Imagine how life would be if 30-50% of the arms budget went toward improving people’s lives instead of being used for destruction.

Because eliminating wars and violence means leaving human pre-history behind and taking a giant step forward in the evolution of our species.

Because in this aspiration we are accompanied by the strength of the voices of hundreds of prior generations who suffered the consequences of war, and whose echo continues to be heard today in all those places where it continues to leave its sinister trail of dead, disappeared, disabled, refugees and displaced.

Because a “world without wars” is an image that opens the future and seeks to become reality in every corner of the planet, as violence gives way to dialogue.

The moment has come for the voiceless to be heard! Out of agonizing and urgent need, millions of human beings are crying out for an end to wars and violence.

We can make that happen by uniting all the forces of pacifism and active non-violence worldwide.

When?

The World March will begin in New Zealand on October 2, 2009, the anniversary of Gandhi’s birth, declared the “International Day of Non-Violence” by the United Nations. It will conclude in the Andes Mountains (Punta de Vacas, Aconcagua, Argentina) on January 2, 2010.

The March will last 90 days, three long months of travel. It will pass through all climates and seasons, from the hot summer of the tropics and the deserts, to the winter of Siberia.

Who is participating?

The March was initiated by “World Without Wars,” - an international organization launched by the Humanist Movement - that has been working for 15 years in the fields of pacifism and non-violence.

The World March, however, will be created and shaped by everyone. Open to any person, organization, collective, group, political party, business, etc., that shares the same aspirations and sensibility, this project is not something closed. Instead, it is a journey that will be progressively enriched as different initiatives set their contributions in motion.

That is why this is an invitation to anyone and everyone to participate freely. So that wherever the March goes, the local people can contribute their creativity in a great convergence of multiple activities. There’s space for everything the imagination is capable of conceiving.

The possible channels of participation are multiple and diverse, including virtual participation in the March through Internet.

This is a march by and for the people, with hopes of reaching most of the world’s population. For this reason we are asking all media to spread the word about this journey around the world for Peace and Non-violence.

What is going to happen?

As it passes through cities there will be all kinds of forums, conferences and events (sporting, cultural, social, etc.) that will be organised according to the local initiatives that are emerging.

At this time hundreds of projects have already been set in motion by different individuals and organizations.

What are our goals and objectives?

To denounce the dangerous world situation that is leading us closer and closer to nuclear war, which would be the greatest catastrophe in human history – a dead end.

To give a voice to the majority of world citizens who want peace. Although the majority of the human race opposes the arms race, we are not sending out a unified signal. Instead we are letting ourselves be manipulated by a powerful minority and suffering the consequences. The time has come to stand together and show our opposition. Join a multitude of others in sending a clear signal, and your voice will have to be heard!

To achieve: the worldwide eradication of nuclear weapons; the immediate withdrawal of invading troops from occupied territories; the progressive and proportional reduction of conventional weapons; the signing of non-aggression treaties among nations and the renunciation by governments of war as a way to resolve conflicts.

To expose the many other forms of violence (economic, racial, sexual, religious…) that are currently hidden or disguised by their perpetrators; and to provide a way for all who suffer such violence to be heard.

To create global awareness - as has already happened with environmental issues - of the urgent need to condemn of all forms of violence and bring about real Peace.

" WHCC Endorses the World March for Peace and Nonviolence October 2nd, 2009 and January 2nd, 2010. Help us spread the word "

HOW CAN I SUPPORT THE WORLD MARCH?
The March will consist of two parallel initiatives: 1) Between October 2nd, 2009 and January 2nd, 2010, an international team of marchers will cross the planet from New Zealand to Argentina, meeting with heads-of-state, talking to the media, and participating in large marches and rallies in cities on each continent – all the while bringing awareness to the March’s urgent proposals and gathering the stories and wishes of the people with whom they meet.

2) During this same 3-month period, as their journey progresses around the globe, thousands of nonprofit organizations, civic groups, religious congregations, students and university groups, and concerned individuals in towns and cities around the world will do their part by organizing local events that bring the message of the March to their immediate co! mmunities. These events will include local marches and peace walks, art exhibits, concerts, nonviolence workshops, film nights, theater and dance performances, community forums, murals, potluck dinners, sports events, and more. The goal is to produce a converging diversity of voices aimed at raising consciousness of peace and nonviolence and collectively building the path to get there.

It’s not too late to get involved and add your voice to the World March. Here’s how - note all this needs to be done on the worldmarchusa website and not on whcc's website:

1) Endorse the World March as an individual or organization by going to our website: www.worldmarchusa.net

2) Organize an event or action in your neighborhood, workplace, school, or community in support of the March between October 2nd and January! 2nd. We have set aside December 2nd as “World March USA Day” and are aiming to have hundreds of events organized across the country on that day.

3) If you already have an existing event scheduled during this 3-month period, consider designating it “In Support of the World March” and add it to our calendar of events. Your support can be shown by including info on the March in your program, by having a short presentation before or after the event, or by incorporating the themes of the march into the content of your event.

4) Volunteer with efforts to welcome and host the international team of marchers when they visit NY, Washington, Los Angeles and San Francisco. November 30 – December 3. We need people to help with logistics, press, publicity, graphic design, fundraising, and outreach. (info@worldmarchusa.net).

5) Spread the Word! Talk about the march with your family, friends, neighbors, co-workers and fellow students, and refer them to our website:www.worldmarchusa.net.

Thanks for joining us in the largest mobilization for peace and disarmament in history!


Sincerely, WHCC's TEAM

Thursday, October 15, 2009

WHCC Rocked the Global Beats Stage at the Javit Center in NYC October 2009

For Immediate Release:



Real Travelers Show They are Ready to Get Away



The first major travel show leading into 2010, Adventures in Travel Expo, took place this past weekend in New York City and sent a definitive message that travelers are still buying trips!



Destinations, tour operators and private sector travel providers had one question on their mind prior to show. Will travelers come out to find and book a vacation? The resounding message was “yes” with two key elements to their booking decisions – “value and authenticity.” They want to ensure they are getting great value as they spend their travel dollars, but aren’t willing to sacrifice any of the authentic aspects of their travel experience. In short – they are looking for it all!



“It is a very positive sign for the travel and tourism industry when you see thousands of qualified travelers paying to attend our event to find and book their next trip”, said John Golicz , CEO of Unicomm, organizers of Adventures in Travel Expo and Los Angeles Times Travel and Adventure Show. “As we begin our 2010 show series across the United States – it is clear that travel providers can reap big rewards by meeting qualified travelers face to face.”



Over 10,100 people attended the New York Adventures in Travel Expo this past weekend, including over 1,000 registered travel agents and press. From Europe to Asia, from the Caribbean to Latin America, hundreds of exhibitors and thousands of travel experts interacted with steady high demographic attendees all weekend.



Both returning and new exhibitors were eager to share their views of the event. Overall there was a sense of optimism seeing the audience ATE attracted over the holiday weekend.



“This is our first consumer event in quite some time – and we couldn’t be more pleased with the results this weekend”, said Paul Williams of VBT Bicycling Vacations. “Our team was busy all weekend answering very specific questions from attendees – many of whom were planning tour dates right at our booth. An added bonus was having many solo travelers approach our booth which is a significant growth area for VBT.



“This show was great!” commented Miguel Jeronimo of Brazil . “We had lots of journalists and trade, and the turnout has been fantastic. We're on the radar because of Rio and the Olympics, and there is a lot of interest. Overall, the experience has been very positive.”



A heavy on-site media presence included Fox 5 television which broadcasted live from the expo show floor on Friday morning from 5am -10am to preview the show. Destinations including Brazil , Italy , Costa Rica and Maui were interviewed by Fox 5 TV's Mike Woods and described what was unique about each destination.



Highlights of the show included:



-- The Italian Government Tourism Board’s mobile interactive display brought scores of travel agents throngs of educated travelers to hear their message.



-- The Event’s Global Beats Stage rocked with over 18 cultural performances over two days with standing room only crowds.



-- The National Geographic Adventure Theater and the Destination Theater saw over three thousand attendees listen to over two dozen Travel Luminaries

and World Explorers including: Arthur Frommer, Patricia Schultz, Jon Bowermaster, Holly Morris, and Tony Wheeler.



“ New York was our twenty-third production of the Adventures in Travel Expo series over the past six years,” added Golicz. “It is very satisfying to see the industry embrace our events as not only the leading travel shows in the USA but also the most professionally organized and consistently well attended events. Clearly these events provide travel marketers the ability to reach influential, high caliber, well educated travelers who are booking travel right now!”



Upcoming events include Adventures in Travel Expo Chicago, January 9-10, 2010 ; Washington D.C. , March 6-7, 2010 and the Los Angeles Times Travel & Adventure Show, February 13-14, 2010

Thursday, September 3, 2009

I View Film Festival - article by Sattie Persaud published on BIBIMAGAZINE

BIBIMAGAZINE

An advocate for change
Brings the Red Carpet to you on one of the hottest South-Asian Film Festivals in New York by Engendered.

“Engendered is an annual, New York-based transnational arts and human rights festival that brings together the best in contemporary South Asian cinema, visual arts and performance to explore the complex realities of gender and sexuality in modern South Asia, especially at the intersection of ritual and religion. The festival is designed not only to raise awareness, but also act as a fulcrum to enter public dialogue, break silences and impact perceptions around issues of gendered identities, stereotyping, bias and sexual choice and further, how those issues relate to affirmation or violations of human rights, health rights and women's rights. “
The third annual I View Film Festival was held on August 28th through August 30th 2009, which is becoming one of the most respected film festivals that explores gender and sexuality issues among South-Asians, but not limited to. Starting with the Red Carpet Reception on August 28th, 2009 at the prestigious Lincoln Center – Walter Reads Theatre- BIBIMAGAZINE interviewed some of the hottest stars in Bollywood and international acclaimed writers, directors, and producers. Below, is the list of artists that walked the Red carpet, had their work screened and who were on the panel of discussion at the I View Film Festival…from the eyes of BIBIMAGAZINE to you.

Arriving first, on the red carpet, is the brilliant Devika Urvashi Bhisé . At the age of seventeen, she directed the appraised documentary Hijras: The Third Gender. ” Hijras is a story about the outcastes of Indian society who live on its fringes. These eunuchs (originally only castrated males) were once employed by sultans and maharajas to guard the women in their harems. Now shunned by society, they are treated with less respect than the Dalits, or untouchables. Considered neither men nor women, Hijras have no constitutional rights. Currently, there is an ongoing debate in India regarding whether or not they should be granted the status of a third gender.”
BIBIMAGAZINE: How does it feel to be one of the youngest Directors at the I View Film Festival of 2009? And tell us how and why you choose to do a documentary on Hijras?
Devika: It’s an honor to be here today and I’m very excited. I have been travelling back and forth to India all my life and I was always curious of why people were always scared of Hijras and why they were a scorn to society. I did this short film to create awareness of this segment of society to allow their voices to be heard. I was privileged to share this community’s inner life and have tried to capture its stark reality as a friend rather than a voyeur. The filming took place from June 2008 to September 2008 in various cities and locations in India.
***

Mehreen Jabbar is the Pakistani award winning director of numerous TV-films, with her first feature 'Ramchand Pakistani' , which has already been released in Pakistan and India in 2008 and is currently playing in cinemas in the UK to critical and audience acclaim. Beauty Parlour & Tumhari Bina, 2 short films screened at the I View Film Festival. Beauty Parlour: “Four faces, four masks and four short sketches of lives, loves and desires from Pakistan, traced through visits to the beauty parlour. Two friends long for intimacies of a different kind, a to-be-bride longs for another while getting ready for her wedding, the ‘other woman’ struggles to define her existence via her relationship with her married lover and a physically challenged transvestite has dreams of a different kind. This short film explores themes that could not be expressed on mainstream Pakistan television at the time.” Tumhari Bina: This film deals with the desires of an older single woman who lives by herself in the house that she shared with her deceased brother. Her only other companion is her trusted gardener and the pleasures of the internet through which she plays her sinister games.
This film was produced as part of a series called 'Mystery Theatre" that ran on Indus Vision, a Pakistani cable channel.
BIBIMAGAZINE: How does it make you feel knowing that Engendered has created a common place for you to screen a film that explores themes that is not widely accepted in the South-Asian cultures?
Mehreen: It feels great! I’m happy to be here. I’m a very shy person, so bear with me, and I have always felt more comfortable working with middle aged women and that lead to some short films I have done, including Beauty Parlour & Tumhari Bina. When I was born they said I looked like an old soul, maybe that has something to do with it. I always challenge the traditional views of our culture, to bring awareness of the unspoken secrets in our society. I’m very happy that Beauty Parlour & Tumhari Bina will be screened at the I View Film Festival and hope everyone enjoys it.
***
MAZHAR-MOIN a talented director, features two shorts at the I View Film Festival: Burnesroad KI Nilofer & Ek Qiamat Aur. Burnesroad KI Nilofer is a short film about Nilofer is a precocious 16-year-old girl who lives with her hassled mother and disciplinarian father and eight younger siblings in a cramped flat in Karachi’s old city. Beguiled by the soaps on television, she dreams of true love but has little chance to go out and find it or even to express herself in the presence of her parents. Her only confidante is a neighbour, a young woman whose wiles her mother does not particularly approve of. When Nilofer falls for the young cable man who visits to fix her television connection, it sets in motion a series of half-com.
Ek Qiamat Aur: This is a tele-film looking at the psyche of a woman who escapes her loveless marriage and the monotony of her everyday life by weaving dreams. Soon the line between real life and dreams get blurry and threatens to jeopardize the equilibrium in her life. ic, half-tragic events that encapsulate the constricting life she lives. Mazhar: I’m very pleased to have my work screened and I View Film Festival and hope its appreciated by the viewers.
***

DOSTANA: Dostana is the first Bollywood blockbuster where mainstream, straight
actors play gay characters. Kunal and Sameer (John Abraham and Abhishek Bachan) are two straight guys who pretend to be a gay couple so as to secure a posh Miami apartment. However, the plot takes a hilarious turn when both men fall for their adorable roommate Neha, played by Priyanka Chopra. The New York Times raves the film “irreverently normalizes a topic that has been virtually absent from screens in India.” Accompanied cast of Dostana(Red Carpet and Panelists) were: TARUN MANSUKHANI, director; JOHN ABRAHAM, actor; BOMAN IRANI, actor.
BIBIMAGAZINE with Tarun M: How does it feel to have Dostana as part of the I View Film Festival?
Tarun M: It’s a good start and we are all excited to be here. We were fortunate to have an amazing cast that had great chemistry together and we brought to light a subject that is still behind closed doors, in a fun and universal way.
BIBIMAGAZINE with John A: What was your first reaction when you were approached with the script of Dostana? And what was the experience like playing a gay male and Abhishek’s lover?
John A: I was honored. It was a lot of fun and I have great chemistry with Abhishek. If it wasn’t for him, I wouldn’t have done Dostana. I view myself as an actor and I submerge myself into a character to bring them alive. I do the characters to entertain, not bringing in the social and political aspects of it into the picture.
BIBIMAGAZINE with Bowman I: A versatile actor like yourself, what have you gain from the experience with your character in Dostana ? Also, can you please tell us about your film 99?
BOWMAN I: Dostana was a great experience with a great cast and as an actor I am always a student and I always become a little better with each character I play. I’m very pleased of Dostana being the only blockbuster film at the I View Film Festival. Wow, I can’t believe you are asking my about 99. 99 is inspired by real events. Its about two men in two cities who are bound by a common feeling of always being stuck at '99'. They never make it to a century in life. It small-time crooks, conspiracies, car crashes, a briefcase full of money with a historical controversy in the background.
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Parvez Sharma Director an Indian film director. He is best known for the film A Jihad for Love, on gay and lesbian Muslims. Parvez Sharma is a New York based writer and filmmaker. His first feature, which he directed and produced, "A Jihad for Love" is an international phenomenon with more than one million viewers in 37 nations in the first year of its release. On the Red Carpet and a Panelist at the I View Film Festival,
Parvez Sharma’s highlight was that: “ I can’t wait for Bollywood to produce a gay movie that won’t make me cringe!
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SONALI GULATI
Sonali Gulati is an Assistant Professor at Virginia Commonwealth University’s Department of Photography & Film. She has an MFA in Film & Media Arts from Temple University and a BA in Critical Social Thought from Mount Holyoke College. Ms. Gulati's areas of specialization are film production and experimental filmmaking. She has made several short films that have screened at over two hundred film festivals worldwide including Canada, United States, Europe, Australia, and Asia. She has won awards and grants from foundations such as the Third Wave Foundation and the World Studio Foundation, and recently won the Theresa Pollak Award for Excellence in the Arts in Film.
I AM is a short about what parents do when they find out that their child is gay? Having lost the opportunity to tell her mother that she is a lesbian, a young Indian filmmaker in search of answers, travels across India to meet with parents of other gay and lesbian South Asians. I Am is a personal and revealing feature film that journeys to a landscape where being gay is a criminal and punishable offence. Can this documentary conversation offer any resolution for either the filmmaker or the parents she meets? With courage, determination, and humor, families share untold stories that have thus far remained in the realm of secrecy and silence.
BIBIMAGAZINE: How do you feel about having I AM at the I View Film Festival?
Sonali G: It’s great. I AM is a personal story and I am proud to have it screened at the I View Film Festival and hope it can be a learning experience for the audience.
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RAM MADHVANI
Ram Madhvani directs for Equinox Films Private Limited, amongst the leading production houses in India, in which he is also a partner.
With over a decade's experience in the profession, Ram has worked with every important advertising agency in the country to become one of the fraternity's most respected and sought-after filmmakers.
Lets Talk is a film about a woman, married for 10 years, has an extra-marital affair and gets pregnant. She debates on whether she should tell her husband and plays out various scenarios in her mind about how he will react to her confession. The film unspools from Radhika's mind as she imagines her husband's possible reactions to her predicament. The structure of alternative realities borrows from a traditional musical form, the "Thumri", where a single thought is expressed in a multiplicity of moods. While the setting is urban contemporary Mumbai, its exploration of love is based on the enduring
myths of Lord Krishna, the eternal lover and his beloved Radha, who represents the eternal seeker. Newcomer Maia Katrak and sensational theatre actor Boman Irani provide riveting performances with a realism and truth unsurpassed in modern Indian cinema.
As Ram M skipped the Red Carpet, he contributed his sense of appreciation as a panelist of the I View Film Festival breaking boundaries each year and welcoming change.
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Zoya Akthar (director) and Farhan Akthar(actor) of Luck by Chance. Luck by Chance is a biting satire and insider’s look at gender disparity in India’s highly competitive film industry. This is the story of a struggling actor who arrives in Bollywood to become a movie star. His journey to fame is juxtaposed with that of an actress, who is also his love interest. Because of blatant gender inequity in this particular microcosm of Indian society, the woman is forced to experience everything from the “casting couch” syndrome to losing lead roles because of her age and looks. The New York Times says “it might seem as if Bollywood couldn’t possibly satirize itself …but Zoya Akhtar manages the trick deftly.”
BIBIMAGAZINE with Zoya A & Farhan A: How accomplished do you feel of having Luck By Chance screened at the I View Film Festival?
Zoya A: As a director I’m very honored to have my movie screened here tomorrow and hope everyone enjoys it as much as we enjoyed making it. Thank you.
Farhan A: Its great being here and I feel very accomplished as an actor to have Lucky By Chance at the I View Film Festival.
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AYESHA SOOD
Her introduction to film was through the still camera, and she thinks it armed her with certain skills [and an eye] to apply to this highly visual medium. Somebody once said that there are only six basic tales in the world… everything else depends on how you tell it. She subscribes to this school of thought. She thinks her strength lies in being able to tell a story through her eyes. And as a director that is the most important aspect of film making – How an individual tells a story and how you use the various film making tools [camera, costume, art, dialogue etc...] to enhance the same.
Madhuri Girl Star: is a short film about a young woman, Madhuri, who broke social boundaries as a woman and is elected the youngest woman leader of their village through her determination in doing what is just.
BIBIMAGAZINE: How important is it to you that Madhuri Girl Star is being screened at the I View Film Festival?
Ayesha S: Its great. Madhuri Girl Star is a documentary of mine that brings forth my learning experience so far in Cinema and I’m thankful to be here tonight.
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Mira Nair Accomplished Film Director/Writer/Producer Mira Nair was born in Bhubaneswar, India in 1957. Educated at both Delhi University and Harvard University, Nair began her artistic career as an actor before turning her attention to film. She found incipient success as a documentary filmmaker, winning awards for So Far From India and India Cabaret. In 1988, Nair’s debut feature, Salaam Bombay!, was nominated for an Academy Award, Golden Globe, and BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It also won the Camera D'Or (for best first feature) and the Prix du Publique (for most popular entry) at the Cannes Film Festival as well as 25 other international awards.
My Own Country tells the story of an East Indian doctor who settles in Johnson City, Tennessee. The doctor's name is Abraham Verghese, and he specializes in infectious diseases. It's 1985, and AIDS is spreading from the big cities to the rural areas. Abraham takes on the AIDS crisis as his personal crusade and is soon well-known for his compassion and non-judgmental treatment. As he becomes overwhelmed with patients from the surrounding states, his work begins to put a strain on his marriage. The story explores sexuality from a hetero-normative perspective and exposes the myths and biases surrounding the disease in the early years.
BIBIMAGAZINE: From a director’s perspective, what does the accomplishment feel like in being part of a film festival that explores gender and sexuality issues?
Mira N: I don’t see it as gay or lesbian, I see it as form of art, humanizing the subject. All my films are challenging a society that has many secrets and I get high on rejection. If they say I can’t do it, or it will never make it, I do it.
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GHALIB SHIRAZ DHALLA
Los Angeles-based writer Ghalib Shiraz Dhalla was born in Mombasa, Kenya. At 13 years old, the aspiring young novelist published his first article on infertility in a national magazine VIVA. Since then he's written for various publications including Instinct, Genre, Angeleno, Detour and Details and is the Editor of the upscale lifestyle E-zine, IndulgeMagazine.com
An excerpt from Ode to Lata was featured in the award-winning anthology Contours of the Heart: South Asians Map North America (Rutgers), which went on to win the 18th Annual American Book Award. The Los Angeles Times Book Review hailed Dhalla's debut as "an achievement" (Sunday, March 24th, 2002) and Christopher Rice called it "a rare, great novel" (book jacket). Ode to Lata created milestones as the first South Asian gay novel ever to be reviewed by The Los Angeles Times Book Review and to be excerpted by Genre Magazine. It was also the first account of the South Asian gay experience from an author from the African continent. The cultural and academic impact of Dhalla's debut novel was further recognized when it was presented at the Between The Lines Festival at MIT (Boston) in 2004, and added to college syllabuses around the country. Ode to Lata was adapted for the motion picture, The Ode starring Sachin Bhatt, Wilson Cruz, and Sakina Jaffrey. Dhalla wrote the screenplay and is the Associate Producer for the film. The Ode premiered at the Oufest Film Festival on July 17th, 2008 to a sold-out audience. It was called "a beautiful portrait of the American experience for many first and second-generation Indian-Americans" (CineQueer, July 18th, 2008) and a film with performances that are "memorable" and filled with "cinematic intensity" (Planet Homo, July 19th, 2008).
Accompanied casts: Ghalib Shiraz Dhalla (writer); Anil Kumar (actor); Sachin Bhatt (actor).
BIBIMAGAZINE with Ghalib, Anil K, and Sachin B: Ode to Lata already accomplishing so much as a novel, how does it feel to be here today at the I View Film Festival?
Ghalib: Its great being here in NY and I’m always happy to share my work! It’s a personal story and I’m glad to be here with you tonight.
BIBIMAGAZINE with Anil K: It was an amazing experience playing the role I have in Ode, the cast was great and I love Ghalib…my son…for I played his father in the film. Some nights I will go home weeping, and I am very proud that the film is appreciated so much.
BIBIMAGAZINE with Sachin B: this movie was my first feature movie I auditioned for, the first feature length movie I acted in, and I’m honored have this as the starting point of my career! It was a role that opened a part of me that broke a lot of boundaries and took a lot of courage to be part of. I’m very proud to have it at the I View Film Festival.
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POPPY STOCKELL
Born in London in 1977, Poppy began her career at Sydney's 2SER FM whilst completing a degree in zoology at the University of New South Wales. She has since had extensive experience in radio as a freelance producer and program-maker, particularly for the ABC’s national youth station. Poppy made the leap to film and television in 2004, studying cinematography at North Sydney TAFE. Her camera credits since have included Walk Like a Man, Suburban Mayhem and The Silence. Her film credits as writer/director include the short Alight Touch and music video Foolscap and she is regularly commissioned to create travel vodcasts, such as Skiing in Morocco, for Lonely Planet. Most recently, Poppy worked as segment producer on ABC 2’s Good Game.
Searching for Sandeep: Despite living in one of the gay capitals of the world, 28-year-old
Sydneysider Poppy Stockell is forced to go online in her search for love. When she meets 31-year-old Anglo-Indian Sandeep Virdi, she thinks she's found the one. Unfortunately, Sandeep lives at home in the British Midlands with her conservative Sikh parents and three younger
sisters. Oh, and she's not out to any of them. Through raw, incredibly frank footage, Searching for Sandeep follows Poppy and Sandeep's tumultuous relationship across two years and three
continents.
BIBIMAGAZINE: How accomplished does it feel to be part of the I View Film Festival?
Poppy S: Its great being here. It’s a very personal story about me and my partner and we are happy to share it with the world, hoping it will help break the silence in families that are not yet open to having conversations on being gay or lesbian.
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The entertainment high light of the opening night was the beautiful Nadia Ali, who performed among her new songs the 2001 hit “Rapture” that topped dance charts all over the world.
Engendered has made un-measurable strides once more with three days consisting of Opening Night Celebrations with artists from all over the world and two days of film and documentaries screenings in exploring gender sexuality, not limiting, to societies among South-Asians. The success of the I View Film Festival was contributed to by BIBIMAGAZINE in bringing the spot light on the event.

Article by Sattie I Persaud.