Welcome back as we continue exploring what a Music Care Community will look like. The Room 217 Foundation team was thrilled to see how well the Music Care Blog was received and we are encouraged by your comments both on the blog site and via email. Allow me to share my thoughts on key elements of the Music Care Community. The Music Care Community has three essential components:
Music of refugee camps isn’t founded upon social harmony. Rather music is a technique for harmonizing, a strategy for survival: transmitting social values, restoring individual and collective balance. Music – expressing the inexpressible in human experience – is catharsis and consolation. Music creates connections, fosters reconciliations, builds communities transcending ethnic difference. Music empowers, raising consciousness beyond necessities of subsistence. Music helps people forget their pain, remember themselves and re-imagine their futures. Music critiques power, protests injustice, instills hope and fortitude. Such music can be a progressive force for social change.
Check out this University of Alberta action research project “Giving Voice to Hope: Music of Liberian Refugees” centering on popular music produced by residents of Ghana’s Buduburam Refugee Camp.
I anticipate that as we share expertise, experiences, and resourcefulness with each other, care for our loved ones, clients, residents, students and neighbourhoods will improve. And my hope is that as musicians and carers we will feel supported, inspired and empowered in who we are and what we do. So let’s begin. Share today by posting a comment below or email me at info@room217.ca
Bev Foster Executive Director Room 217 Foundation
Charitable Registration #85728 5092 RR0001 • Room 217 Foundation™
Box 145 Port Perry, ON, L9L 1A2 • 844.985.0217