© Kingsley Roberts
Yurumein: Homeland
Resistance, Rupture and Repair: The Caribs of St. Vincent in the Caribbean
Special offer for members of the Center for Black Music Research
Use promo code CSAEB1 to receive 15% off your order when purchasing Yurumein:
Homeland between now and January 31, 2015
The CBMR Library and Archives is the repository of field notes, interviews, production notes, and film/video footage for Leland’s documentaries, including Garifuna Journey, Jamesie, Yurumein, and others.
About the film
Yurumein
is a 50-minute documentary that tells a unique
story deserving of a
place in the annals of the African Diaspora: that of the Carib/Garifuna
resistance to slavery in St. Vincent. Yurumein recounts the
heroic yet painful past of Vincentian Caribs, which culminated in the
extermination of scores of their ancestors at the hands of the British
in 1797. Those Caribs who were not killed were exiled to the coast of
Central America where, for the last two centuries, the Garifuna culture
has been kept vibrant and alive.
The
film offers an intimate portrait of the burgeoning
movement among
Carib/Garifuna communities in St.
Vincent to learn from their Central
American brethren—
for the very first time—the traditional language,
music,
dance, spirituality, and history of their ancestors. As people
who have faced colonial powers, genocide, disenfranchisement, and
cultural hegemony, the Garifuna men and women featured in Yurumein are a testament to the incredible perseverance and strength of the human spirit.
I hope you’ll consider adding Yurumein: Homeland
to your library!
Best regards,
Andrea Leland, director
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