logo
#

Latest news with #Sufi

Sagar Wali Qawwali on modernising qawwali to appeal to Gen Z: I present qawwali the way I understand music
Sagar Wali Qawwali on modernising qawwali to appeal to Gen Z: I present qawwali the way I understand music

Hindustan Times

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • Hindustan Times

Sagar Wali Qawwali on modernising qawwali to appeal to Gen Z: I present qawwali the way I understand music

Jun 27, 2025 12:12 PM IST Singer Sagar Bhatia aka Sagar Wali Qawwali has been touring India. He performed in Mumbai last week and will take the stage in Kolkata tomorrow (June 28). Often credited for approaching qawwali with a modern approach, is it his way of keeping the genre relevant among the youth? 'I've been into Sufi music for 15 years now, as I started out with my band Sufi Rock. I haven't consciously changed anything. I've simply followed what felt right to me. People connected with it, and that's what made it feel relevant. I'm a kid of today's generation, so I presented qawwali in the way I understand music,' says Sagar. Sagar Bhatia A fan of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Sagar is known for giving the late legend's qawwalis a rock twist. 'Qawwali has always been alive and Bollywood has played a huge role in that. From Parda Hai Parda, and Kun Faya Kun to Khwaja Mere Khwaja and Bhar Do Jholi – Qawwali has always been a part of our culture,' he adds. Talking about the kind of audience that turns up at his concerts, Sagar says, 'People from every generation connect with my music — even kids as young as 5 or 6 sing my qawwalis. I try to simplify my language. I don't know a lot of Urdu. I use more Hindi and relatable words, so even Gen Z connects with my songs.​ I remember seeing a five-year-old fan at one of my concerts, singing Biba Sada Dil Morde. He knew the lyrics by heart. It was humbling.' As someone who started out by performing at jagrans and clubs, did he ever feel he would see these days? 'I started by playing the guitar at jagrans. I even performed with Narendra Chanchal ji, but I never got the chance to sing. I learned everything from the streets, observing senior musicians, and surviving on whatever money people would shower on me during performances. I never learnt music formally. Later, I played the guitar at dance bars in Malaysia. I got my first break as a singer at a club in Chandigarh and earned ₹ 10,000. I realised qawwali was what I truly wanted to pursue. I was clear that I wanted to be a singer, and now my dream is to become a composer.'

No fair at FaguBaba's shrine asSec 163 imposed
No fair at FaguBaba's shrine asSec 163 imposed

Time of India

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Time of India

No fair at FaguBaba's shrine asSec 163 imposed

Gorakhpur: Authorities have prohibited the weekly fair at the 105-year-old Fagu Baba's shrine in Badliya village under the Itwa police station following objections raised by former BJP MLA Raghvendra Pratap Singh. The move came after Singh claimed that the site is not a Sufi dargah but the samadhi (tomb) of a Hindu man named Fagu Prasad. The former MLA alleged that occult practices and monetary exploitation were taking place at the shrine where women from outside the region would stay for extended periods. "We had informed the administration. They took the right steps and we are satisfied," Singh said, adding that they had planned to recite the Hanuman Chalisa at the site on Thursday. However, after the announcement of recital of the Hanuman Chalisa by Singh, heavy police force was deployed at the spot on Thursday morning. SDM, Dumariyaganj, Sanjeev Dixit imposed Section 163 BNSS to prevent gatherings. "Based on police and CO Itwa's reports, it was found that exorcism-like activities were being conducted regularly. The land also falls under charagah (pasture) category and legal action will be taken," Dixit stated. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Neuropatia incomodando à noite? Veja o que muitos idosos estão usando para aliviar os sintomas. A arte do herbalismo Meanwhile, sitting MLA Saiyada Khatoon strongly objected to the curb orders imposed by the administration. She said: "The shrine is a symbol of Hindu-Muslim unity. I will collect all legal documents related to the dargah and move court if required. People's faith is attached to the place, especially women, who gather here every Thursday. I will fight for their belief."

The Fugue of Tjebolang: We're here, we're queer, we're eco-erotic and we're fabulous
The Fugue of Tjebolang: We're here, we're queer, we're eco-erotic and we're fabulous

Daily Maverick

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Maverick

The Fugue of Tjebolang: We're here, we're queer, we're eco-erotic and we're fabulous

It's been described as 'a mystical journey exploring Sufi culture' and as a 'sacred tale' about young 'gender fluid people' journeying 'into themselves and the world'. Its creator and director, Rehane Abrahams, says The Fugue of Tjebolang is also full of sex — and possesses the potential to heal. 'I'm very much done excavating my pain for audiences,' says actor and theatre-maker Rehane Abrahams. Despite an extensive three-decade theatre career, Abrahams is perhaps best known for playing the villain, Wendy Newman, in the popular Showmax telenovela, Arendsvlei. Earlier this year she won a Fleur du Cap for her dual role as Mercutio and Lady Montague in last year's Maynardville production of Romeo and Juliet. Her extensive career as a creator of new work has tended to focus on theatre that is ritualistic and decolonial in nature; there is inevitably an element of transformation, a desire to shift and heal. She does not make work purely for the sake of entertainment. Abrahams says she's intentionally searching for other ways of telling stories, creating theatre that lands differently. 'I want to find a way of infusing more life and more joy into the experience,' she says. There are even more curious clues as to her interests in her Instagram bio, where she describes herself as a 'Somatic Decoloniser, Eco-Erotic liberator, Performance-Maker'. While it's no simple thing to pin her down, what's clear from talking to her is that, when she makes work, she puts her heart and soul on the line. And she wants to create work that nourishes the audience, that adds to their experience of life rather than subtracting from it. This objective has led to her latest stage creation, The Fugue of Tjebolang, which is premiering at the National Arts Festival in Makhanda on 26 June 2025. It will also travel to Stellenbosch for Woordfees later this year. It's a new play that's been centuries in the making. Conceived as an immersive, multivalent experience, it's the theatricalisation of 'Cebolang Minggat' (the Exile of Cebolang), a tale excerpted from the Serat Centhini, the great encyclopaedic Javanese literary epic written in the form of suluk, verses intended for chanting. Abrahams calls the story a 'queer Islamic epic that is erotic'; she has incorporated dance, music and visual projections to create something she hopes will jolt audiences — 'bring them to their senses' — and help liberate and heal. Serat Centhini Completed in written form in 1815, the Serat Centhini comprises 12 volumes, 4,200 pages, 722 verses, and more than 200,000 stanzas. It includes expressions, verses and allusions in Sanskrit, Arabic and the ancient Javanese language, Kawi. It forms part of the Javanese babads, an encyclopaedic literary genre dealing with historic events and covering everything from art, religion and mysticism to erotic knowledge. While it describes virtues that originate in Islam, it portrays Javanese people as sexually open and recognises eroticism as part of life, rather than as taboo. Some contemporary scholars find its explicit references to and descriptions of sexual intercourse pornographic and some of the language vulgar. Reportedly, the 'pornographic' parts were written by Pakubuwono V, crown prince and then king of Surakarta, who is said to have conducted such extensive research that he died of acute syphilis after only three years on the throne. The manuscript was kept locked away in the palace and in the state's archive for almost two centuries for fear of stirring public controversy, but Serat Centhini is now in the public domain, and was popularised by the French poet-cum-journalist Elizabeth D Inandiak, after she found Sunaryati Sutanto's French translation of the work and published it as a 466-page book in 2002. Abrahams, who lived in Bali for six years, discovered the tale of Cebolang/Tjebolang by accident. 'I walked into a theatre in Central Java and the room was dripping with sex — the audience was so turned on,' she says. 'I was like, 'Oh my god, what is happening?' On the stage was a small, grey-haired French woman, reading.' Alongside the narrator Slamet Gundono, a very large, very famous and quite avant-garde dalang, or shadow puppeteer, was performing. I was like, how in the hell is everybody so sexed up? 'I was like, how in the hell is everybody so sexed up? It was the story of Tjebolang and all of the sex in the room was the result of the words. The audience was so turned on by what they were hearing that they were almost melting from the heat of it.' Her initial encounter with the story made a huge impression, but when Abrahams read it the tale simply seemed too vast, and also 'way too ridiculous' to take on as a performance. And so it sat around for many years. 'I always felt like I had to do it,' she says, 'but I didn't know when I'd be ready — or when the world would be ready for it.' Abrahams recently completed her PhD, the focus of which was 'eco-erotic decolonisation', and in the wake of all that research she says felt ready to tackle Tjebolang. Adapting the script from Inandiak's translation, she says she pared down the original, edited out some of the 'inordinate amount' of sex. 'There is a lot of it,' she says. 'I salute him for it, but the crown prince really did a lot of research.' The Fugue of Tjebolang is set to be at once hallucinatory and erotically charged, albeit with a strong spiritual core. Abrahams says it's been the kind of project that has enabled her to rediscover the 'older magic' of her childhood, when her fascination with storytelling included writing and performing puppet shows and plays for her classmates. 'There's always been like a kind of magical thread in my storytelling,' she says. That magic pervades both the type of story Tjebolang tells and the manner of its telling. 'There is a plot,' Abrahams says. 'It's a really simple story about a young person who feels betrayed by his family and so goes on a kind of fool's journey, a quest for knowledge. Eventually, he returns to his family, and to their love. So it's like the prodigal child on a fool's quest.' That journey has elsewhere been described as a 'carnal adventure' during which the 'seductive Tjebolang' (played by the artist/activist Cheshire V) encounters an array of characters — among them prostitutes, hermits, Sufi scholars and medicine men. Narrative linearity Despite the narrative linearity,'the actors create worlds upon worlds upon worlds', Abrahams says. 'There are lapses of reason, too, so the characters do in a sense penetrate a liminal space.' The show includes choreography by Ina Wichterich, with classical Javanese dance elements. And it features not only large visual projections on three sides, but an immersive soundscape by Julia Theron and Denise Onen, whose 'epic score' does 'magical things'. Audiences will be served red ginger tea upon arrival at the show, literal nourishment before their souls are fed a different sort of balm. Abrahams says that part of the philosophical substrate of the text concerns our relationship with nature. 'There's a beautiful section in the play where one of the characters says that before you write even a single verse, you have to prostrate yourself to the forest, because in order to write trees have to be cut down. So, you have to prostrate yourself before the goddess of beauty and ask her to inhabit your poetry because you've taken from the forest in order to write.' Abrahams calls this 'eco-erotic relationality' — a way of expressing our interconnectedness with the natural realm. She describes 'eco-eroticism' as an emergent way of thinking about the world in terms of the erotic relationship of storytelling with the natural world. It's an understanding of life as a kind of erotic force that permeates the entire universe. What it boils down to is a kind of intimacy with nature, a kinship so profound that it would be impossible to consider exploiting the natural world because of an implicit respect for it. That might seem like a lot to absorb, but Abrahams says she's aware that some elements of the play will only make sense in a space of reintegration. 'As with a dream, some of the things might only land later,' she says. Besides, as you'd expect from a play about a carnal adventure, much of it is quite down to earth. 'There are moments of deep philosophical contemplation and meditation, but what is also delightful about the text is that it completely undercuts that earnestness with fart and poop jokes and ridiculousness, elements to keep reminding us that we are sacred in all our humanity. That we should not become too lost in our own mysticism and self-importance and the grandiosity of our big ideas.' It is not at all lost on Abrahams nor on her creative team that the show is being created at a pivotal moment in history, amid a global conservative uprising and mainstream attacks on queer and trans identity. She says she wants this show to help heal, help liberate, provide a balm in a time of struggle. Tragic moment 'We are in a tragic moment,' Abrahams says. 'But our response is to say, 'Look at us! We've always been queer. We've always been erotic. How many genders do mushrooms have? How many fungal genders are there? Nature is queer, it's alive, it's fucky… So please can we all just come to our senses.' Abrahams emphasises that it would not have been possible to create work of this nature at such a level without the support of the Festival Enterprise Catalyst, which has helped fund it so that it can be shown in Makhanda and Stellenbosch. 'It's been a real boon for our production because we wouldn't have been able to produce this scale of work with this many artists involved without the Festival Enterprise Catalyst lending support to our particular creative vision. Without them, we'd not have been able to create the texture that is expressive of where we feel we're at right now.' And what is the 'texture' that audiences can expect to experience? 'I want the audience to be thoroughly fed and deeply nourished. But our hope is for audiences to go on a journey with us, and discover that it is their journey too.' It is, she says, a journey of healing. DM

No weekly fair at Fagu Baba's shrine as Section 144 imposed
No weekly fair at Fagu Baba's shrine as Section 144 imposed

Time of India

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Time of India

No weekly fair at Fagu Baba's shrine as Section 144 imposed

Gorakhpur: Authorities have prohibited the weekly fair at the 105-year-old Fagu Baba's shrine in Badliya village under the Itwa police station following objections raised by former BJP MLA Raghvendra Pratap Singh. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now The move came after Singh claimed that the site is not a Sufi dargah but the samadhi (tomb) of a Hindu man named Fagu Prasad. The former MLA alleged that occult practices and monetary exploitation were taking place at the shrine where women from outside the region would stay for extended periods. "We had informed the administration. They took the right steps and we are satisfied," Singh said, adding that they had planned to recite the Hanuman Chalisa at the site on Thursday. However, after the announcement of recital of the Hanuman Chalisa by Singh, heavy police force was deployed at the spot on Thursday morning. SDM, Dumariyaganj, Sanjeev Dixit imposed to prevent gatherings. "Based on police and CO Itwa's reports, it was found that exorcism-like activities were being conducted regularly. The land also falls under charagah (pasture) category and legal action will be taken," Dixit stated. Meanwhile, sitting MLA Saiyada Khatoon strongly objected to the curb orders imposed by the administration. She said: "The shrine is a symbol of Hindu-Muslim unity. I will collect all legal documents related to the dargah and move court if required. People's faith is attached to the place, especially women, who gather here every Thursday. I will fight for their belief."

Twenty million international tourists expected in current fiscal year in India: Union Tourism Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat
Twenty million international tourists expected in current fiscal year in India: Union Tourism Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat

The Hindu

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • The Hindu

Twenty million international tourists expected in current fiscal year in India: Union Tourism Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat

Union Minister of Culture and Tourism Gajendra Singh Shekhawat on Thursday (June 26, 2025) said that 20 million international tourists are expected to visit the country in the current financial year as diversity becomes the core of India's tourism sector. Addressing the gathering after performing bhumi puja for the Godavari riverfront development project named 'Akhanda Godavari', on the banks of river Godavari in Rajamahendravaram on Thursday (June 26, 2025), Mr. Gajendra Singh has said: 'From the snow-laden Himalayas to sun-kissed beaches, from Yoga retreats to Sufi shrines, India offers a complete tourism ecosystem. Over the three years, India has moved up from 54th position to 39 on the World Economic Forum's Travel and Tourism Development Index.' 'At present, the country's tourism landscape is being reshaped with various flagship schemes such as Swadesh Darshan 2.0, PRASAD, Community Based Eco-Tourism and the projects being undertaken through these schemes are revitalising economies,' said Mr. Gajendra Singh. 'Tourism in India is no more about monuments and memories. It is about livelihoods and legacy,' asserted Mr. Gajendra Singh.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store