DanceAfrica Brings Cameroon to Brooklyn
![](https://trikarpurnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/danceafrica-brings-cameroon-to-brooklyn-OLyTOBYG-780x470.jpg)
Summer Fridays
A guide to enjoying the best of the city every weekend.
![](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2024/05/24/nyregion/24nytoday-BAM-01/24nytoday-BAM-01-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale)
Credit…Brooklyn Academy of Music
DanceAfrica Brings Cameroon to Brooklyn
![](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/02/16/multimedia/author-james-barron/author-james-barron-thumbLarge-v2.png)
By James Barron
Good morning. It’s Friday. Today, and on Fridays through the summer, we’ll focus on things to do in New York over the weekend.
It’s a tradition: Every year, DanceAfrica at the Brooklyn Academy of Music focuses on a different country and its dance traditions.
When Abdel Salaam, the festival’s artistic director, was casting about for a country to spotlight this year, he realized that his many trips to Africa had never taken him to Cameroon.
He booked his tickets and was mesmerized — and not just by the dancers he saw and met. He called the trip “a life-changing encounter,” despite muddy roads and fire ants along the way.
And so Cameroon became the focus for the DanceAfrica Festival 2024, the nation’s largest festival of African dance — and, BAM likes to say, Brooklyn’s unofficial start to summer. Performances, under the overall title of “The Origin of Communities: A Calabash of Cultures,” begin tonight at 7:30 p.m. and continue through the weekend.
The festival is an exploration of Central African history, as symbolized by the calabash — a vessel with both mystical and practical significance in African culture. There will also be classes and dance workshops starting tomorrow. FilmAfrica, a companion festival, will include a conversation with the director Jean-Pierre Dikongué-Pipa on Saturday at 2 p.m. His film “Muna Moto” was credited with bringing Cameroonian cinema to global audience in the 1970s.