Remember Kolaveri? music director Anirudh stops by Toronto for concert

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Anirudh Ravichander, South Indian music director of Kolaveri fame is coming to Toronto (Brampton) for a concert, Saturday, Dec. 12. Check out our list of other events happening in and around Toronto in December.

Anirudh Ravichander, South Indian music director of Kolaveri fame, is coming to Toronto (Brampton) for a concert, Saturday, Dec. 12. Check out our list of other events happening in and around Toronto in December.

Wednesday, Dec. 2
Event: Red and White Gala
Details: Canadian South Asians Supporting Independent Living (C-SASIL) is hosting its annual Red and White Gala at Shingar Banquet Hall, 2084 Steeles Ave. E. Tickets cost $60/person.
Contact: Harvinder Bajwa, 905-799-7274.

Friday, Dec. 11
Event: Brown Canadian
Details: Council of Agencies serving South Asians (CASSA) will be hosting its 2nd annual Brown Canadian 2020 Summit from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at York University (Founders College Assembly Hall), 4700 Keele St. in Toronto. The purpose of the conference is to understand: Where South Asians are at in Canada and secondly to formulate a plan to respond to the needs of the community.
Contact: Gloria Kim, email: gloria@cassa.on.ca or call 416-932-1359 (ext. 12)

Saturday, Dec. 12
Event: Anirudh Concert
Details: Arya Canada will present Anirudh Live at Brampton’s Powerade Centre, 7575 Kennedy Rd. S. at 6 p.m. Anirudh Ravichander is a film composer/singer whose song Why this Kolaveri Di went viral on YouTube with 100 million views. He’s the nephew of Rajnikanth and is part of a band called Zinx.
Contact: Tickets can be purchased here

Event: Chill 2015
Details: The Canadian Malayalee Association (CMA) is hosting its CMA Chill 2015 Meet and Greet at Payal Banquet Hall, 3410 Semenyk Crt. in Mississauga at 6 p.m.
Contact: Here

Wednesday, Dec. 16
Event: Dance Competition
Details: Love Birds 2016 dance competition auditions are taking place at ONEROOF Studios, 2244 Drew Rd. Unit 6 in Mississauga. The grand finale will happen, Feb. 5, 2016.
Contact: dancewithlovebirds@gmail.com or call 647-897-7210

Event: My Room Music Video
Details: Mukta Advertising will host the world premiere of Sirens of Shanti’s music video, My Room, at Lula Lounge, Toronto, Ontario M6J 1T9, 1585 Dundas St. W. in Toronto at 7 p.m. Juno Award nominee Tony Singh aka Punjabi By Nature will also be there
Contact: Here

Saturday, Dec. 19
Event: Bollywood music
Details: Chinguacousy Secondary School, 1370 Williams Pkwy. in Brampton will host Bollywood Musical Night at 5 p.m. There will be live music. Deepak Gandhi and Orchestra will provide live entertainment. Music includes old and new Bollywood hits.

Friday, Dec. 25
Event: Nawaabi Shaam
Details: Ajaay Modi Entertainment is bringing Nawaabi Shaam: Sharab, kabab and shabab ke naam featuring royal gharanas of Lucknow & Hydrabad with the Jhankaar of ghungroos, mehak of the gajras. Sounds interesting.
Interested? Show up in ethnic (serwanis, Jodhpuris, Achkans and kurta pyajamas.
Contact: Here

Dec. 31
Event: New Year Dhamaka
Details: There are so many happening in and around the GTA it just wasn’t possible for me to list them all. Pick your venue. Have fun.

Professor Surinder Singh’s music brings forgotten notes to life

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Prof. Surinder Singh (in the centre) delights the audience with sounds from forgotten musical instruments that defined Sikh spirituality. Photo courtesy of Harbiz Inc.

Prof. Surinder Singh (in the centre) delights the audience with sounds from forgotten musical instruments that defined Sikh spirituality.
Photo courtesy of Harbirz Inc.

The singing Sikh

When a regal looking Sikh in an azure blue Sherwani began to play few bars of music on the Saranda, it was powerful and emotional experience.

The Saranda, an ancient Indian instrument, dating some 500 years or more, had all but disappeared from our society. The string and skin instruments such as rabab, Jori (a tabla-type drum), taus, and dilruba were an integral part of the Kirtans sessions delivered by Sikh spiritual leaders like Guru Arjun, Guru Gobind Singh and others. Their pure notes travelled across the room in perfect resonance. Remember, it was an era devoid of mics, expensive sound systems and amplifiers.

Music and prayer went hand-in-hand and an enlightened soul was the byproduct of this union.

Slowly, over the years, the ubiquitous harmonium, nudged these vessels of sublime sounds out. A few of instruments from the bygone era found their way into British museums where they languished in anonymity until a musician on a quest to decipher the meaning of the Sikh Shabds (scriptures) stumbled upon them.

Surinder Singh, popularly known as Prof. Surinder Singh, founder, director of Raj Academy, a United Kingdom (U.K.)-based organization, with branches here in Toronto, has devoted his life to the revival of the Sikh musical heritage. His students learn Gurmat Sangeet and Naad (sound) yoga.

The spirit of music

Prof. Surinder Singh seen here playing the saranda. The ancient musical instrument which had faded into obscurity has been revived by Surinder Singh. Photo courtesy, Harbirz Inc.

Prof. Surinder Singh seen here playing the saranda. The ancient musical instrument which had faded into obscurity has been revived by Surinder Singh.
Photo courtesy, Harbirz Inc.

When Surinder saw the beautiful instruments tucked away in museums, he thought it was sacrilege that “his music was in prison.” So, he liberated them.

At 13, while learning Indian classical music, a young Surinder questioned his gurus – Pandits Kharaiti Lal Tahim and Mahant Ajit Singh, on the underlying meanings of the raagas and scriptures and how they mattered.

His wise teachers told him to embrace meditation or else, they said he would have to make room for medication. Those words didn’t hit home, until an accident at 19 incapacitated him physically and psychologically. It was then he understood music’s power to heal the body.

“My spiritual yearning and my curiosity led me to ask my gurus the meaning behind the Shabds or a particular raga and how they were relevant to me daily life,” Singh said. “As I looked deeper and deeper into ancient India’s science of sound, I followed the path and the footprints led me to England.”

Surinder Singh searched and found two individuals in India that could carve wood to perfection and install natural gut strings into rababs and sarandas. much like the way other craftsmen did more than 500 years ago.

When coaxed, the instruments, under a skilled musician’s fingers or the tanti saaj as the people that master the Gurumat Sangeet are known, produce sounds that soothe the restless mind create a spiritual awakening.

“In the Western world (England, Russia, U.S. Canada and others) there are 3,000 musicians today that are playing the music and applying the science behind them,” he explained. “So many of them have experienced the healing power of the music and found relief from diseases. This is what pulled me in. I am honestly telling you, I am the happiest and healthiest person walking…there’s no question. This is what music gave me.”

Sublime, surreal and sacred

Singh says listening to the tanti saaj deliver the ragas can transport a soul into a state of bliss. I can attest to that. I heard few bars and felt the tension seep away as the music percolated my psyche.

“The instrument is known as the shadow of your voice,” Surinder Singh said. “There’s this guy, Raj who makes these old Sikh instruments and his father was a third-generation artist who taught him to study the wood and the temperament of music, the string and how to measure those…when I approached this guy, he agreed to make the instruments and the ones he made are identical to the ones I saw in the museum.”

Students of Raj Academy showcase ancient musical instruments that defined Sikh spirituality. Photo by Harbriz Inc.

Students of Raj Academy showcase ancient musical instruments that defined Sikh spirituality.
Photo by Harbriz Inc.

The student and her story

Jasvir Kaur, a student of the Raj Academy and a rabab player, said music became her salvation when the death of her brother pushed her into an abyss of misery.

The Sikh rabab or Firandia rabab is a lute-like instrument and is a precursor to the Sarangi. It has a deep, soulful tempo. It was the choice instrument of Guru Nanak or the “singing guru” as Jasvir calls him.

“One can connect with the philosophy of Guru Nanak through music,” Jasvir, 32, told Toronto Desi Diaries. “His message was universal and beyond the constraints of religion. It didn’t have boundaries. I wanted to connect with the energy, so I started to learn music from “professor ji” (Surinder Singh). When I started, I learned dilruba, another string instrument that’s played with a bow after four years of training with that, I moved to the rabab.”

“For me, this is who I am. My music is not separate from me,” she continued. “The raagas used within Sikh music are there for very specific reason – to help you tune your mind and soul, so that you can learn to communicate with yourself. When you’re at peace, you can share and project that with the outside world. In some of my more difficult days, this was my lifeline.”

For a sample of the music, watch the video below. You will be lifted. I guarantee.

Let the records show, Toronto sure knows how to make a noise for Diwali

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Nrithyakshetra Dance Academy

Dancers from Nrithyakshetra Dance Academy are among those that will be part in the Diwali festival celebrations at the Living Arts Centre in Mississauga. Deewa, the Festival of Lights is hosted by Maple Diversity Foundation, Nov. 14.

Here’s a list of desi events happening in and around Toronto, November, 2015

Friday, Nov. 6sacred sounds
Event: Sacred sounds of Ancient India
Details: Prof. Surinder Singh, founder of Raj Academy, and students of the school are promising the audience a spectacular journey through time with soulful acoustic sounds from traditional Indian Instruments. Concert is taking place at Lester B. Pearson Theatre, 150 Central Park Dr. Brampton from 7-9 p.m.
Contact: Karanjeet Singh, 416-899-0843 or email: karanjeet@rajacademy.com.

Friday, Nov. 6 to Sunday, Nov. 8
BCC DiwaliFestEvent: Canada Dry DiwaliFest
Details: Stop by the Bramalea City Centre, 25 Peel Centre Dr. for exciting live performances, a dance competition, a glamorous fashion show, family friendly activities, mascots, photo booth, free samples giveaways and a chance to win fabulous prizes from our festival lucky draw.
Contact: Here

Saturday, Nov. 7Bihar-Diaries-Poster-1
Event: Bihar Diaries – A Tale of Lies
Details: PGI International and Yaar Entertainment are hosting a play Bihar Diaries, a slice-of-life story about the dysfunctional folks including the fictional mayor of Bihar, his daughter Baby and wife Jalebi. Directed by Vaibhav Parashar, the play will unfold at Michael Power St. Joseph School, 105 Eringate Dr. Etobicoke. Show starts at 3 p.m. Tickets cost $15/person.
Contact: For tickets and other information, contact here.

Saturday, Nov. 14
Arjun sunset photo IMG_6566ARJUN2015Event: Deewa – The Festival of Lights
Details: Maple Diversity Foundation, a Mississauga not-for-profit, will host award-winning R&B artist Arjun from U.K. who’s headlining the festival, Saturday, Nov. 14 at the Living Arts Centre from 1 p.m. onwards.
The day-long event has plenty of activities for the whole family, a fashion show by Satya Paul Canada, performances by Sanskriti Arts & Entertainment and more
Contact: Here

Saturday, Nov. 14
Event: Mha PujaMha Puja
Details: Nepalis from the GTA are coming together to celebrate Mha Puja and Nepal Sambat (New Year). Mha Puja is a cultural event of purification, strengthening and understanding of oneself, and man’s relationship with nature and cosmos. The event by Canadian New Guthi will take place at Brampton Tower Hall, 85 Charolais Blvd. Brampton from 4:30 p.m. onwards. Cost of admission is $25/person (adults) and $15/person (Children 12 and below and seniors).
Contact: Bimal Man Shrestha, 416-705-6672

Wednesday, Nov. 18
nirbhayaEvent: Nirbhaya (play)
Details: Based on the horrific event Dec. 16. 2012 when a medical student was brutally raped and killed, Nirbhaya became a catchphrase in India and elsewhere. Montreal-based writer and director Yaël Farbe and Nightwood Theatre are bringing a riveting play adapted from the real-life events. Play runs from Nov. 18- 29 at the Harbourfront Centre, 235 Queens Quay W. Toronto and stars Priyanka Bose, Poorna Jagannathan, Sneha Jawale, Rukhsar Kabir, Japjit Kaur, Pamela Mala Sinha and Ankur Vikal.
Contact: For tickets, contact here.

Thursday, Nov. 26
Event: Spirit of IndiaSpirit-of-India-Web
Details: Rahis Bharti and the Bollywood Masala Orchestra and Dancers of India invite you on a lively musical journey from Rajasthan to Mumbai. Spirit of India, a musical will happen at The Rose Theatre, 1 Theatre Ln. Brampton at 8 p.m.
Contact: For tickets, contact here.

 

Oct. ’15 brings Krishna, the musical, garba, garba and more garbaa

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Malayali film actress Shobana is bringing a visual treat Krishna, a musical to Oakville, Sunday, Oct. 4. Check out other desi events happening in the GTA, October 2015.

filmi21Thursday, Oct. 1

Event: Filmi Toronto
Details: FILMI is an annual Toronto film festival that showcases the best in South Asian cinema from Canada and the rest of the world. This year, the festival will celebrate its 16th anniversary with a full schedule of screenings and industry workshops from Oct. 1 – 4.
Contact: For listings, schedule and more, contact here.

Garba-dance3Saturday, Oct. 3
Event: Dandiya Raas Garba
Details: Sur Prem Entertainers are bringing a dandiya event to Brampton Soccer Centre, 1495 Sandalwood Pkwy. E. at 7:30 p.m.
Contact: For tickets contact here.

Event: Hindustani Classical MusicKomkali
Details: Raag-Mala Music Society of Toronto and the Centre for South Asian Civilizations UTM are hosting Bhuvanesh Komkali at 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 3 at the MiST Theatre, U of T Mississauga Campus, 3359 Mississauga Road, Mississauga.
Bhuvanesh a Hindustani classical singer from the Gwalior gharana is the grandson of legendary gayak Kumar Gandharva. He will be accompanied by Sanjay Deshpande (tabla) and Vyasmurti Katti (harmonium). Tickets cost $30/person.
Contact: Here
sargamEvent: Concert
Details: Sadhana Sargam and Jubin Shah will perform at the Armenian Youth Centre, 50 Hallcrown Pl. in North York (Victoria Park and Sheppard) at 6:30 p.m. Event hosted by Toronto Indian Youth Cultural Association (TIYC) Canada.
Contact: 416-998-0582

Sunday, Oct. 4

Event: Shobana’s Krishna12049635_961990323857837_1338590592335995599_n
Details: Blue Sapphire Entertainment Inc. is bringing Krishna, a visual tapestry of dance/drama by Shobana, well-known Malayalam actor/dancer/choreographer. The show will take place at The Meeting House, 2700 Bristol House in Oakville at 6:30 p.m. The English version of Krishna was conceived and created by Shobana after years of rigorous research, and practice. The doe-eyed beauty plays Krishna and will be accompanied by a troupe of 16 artists including her daughter Narayani.
Contact: For tickets visit here of contact here.

Saturday, Oct. 10

Sukvinder_kanikaEvent:  Concert
Details: Sukvinder Singh and Kanika Kapoor, two Bollywood playback singers, whose pipes have been wowing filmgoers, will be performing a concert at the Sony Centre of performing arts, 1 Front St. E. at 6:30 p.m.
Contact: For tickets, visit here.

Sunday, Oct. 11

Event: Raas Garbadandiya sticks
Details: Power of Kirtan will be presenting an interactive Raas Garba with Premash Nandi and group at Harold M. Brathwaite Secondary School, 415 Great Lakes Dr. from 7 p.m. onwards. A free vegetarian meal will be served.
Contact: For tickets and information, visit here.

Saturday, Oct. 17

Event: GarbaDMG garba
Details: Dhamalmasti Group (DMG) is hosting a garba with Gitanajli Group at the Hershey Centre, 5600 Rose Cherry Place, Mississauga at 7 p.m.
Contact: Here.

Canada’s “Bajrangi Behen” brings her magical chants to Toronto

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Canada's Bajrangi Behen Brenda McMorrow seen here with a ascetic on the banks of Ganges. Brenda is a mantra music artist whose music bridges the spiritualism of east with the west. Supplied photo.

Canada’s Bajrangi Behen Brenda McMorrow seen here with a ascetic on the banks of Ganges. Brenda is a mantra music artist whose music bridges the spiritualism of east with the west. Supplied photo.

Years ago, I stumbled upon the haunting sounds of Gregorian Chants and felt a wave of tranquility wash over me, but I did not however set off in the pursuit of mastering the complex Latin verses. Once the moment passed, the memory too fled.

So, when I heard about how Brenda McMorrow began to pursue mantra music after listening to some shlokas few years ago, I simply had to know the why? When? What-on-the-earth for?

Who knew I would have the pleasure of unveiling the identity of Canada’s bona fide Bajrangi Behen.

Good news: you can catch Brenda at a kirtan concert happening in our wonderful city. British Columbia native Brenda McMorrow is the real deal. She can, not only recite the Hanuman Chalisa and other Vedic chants, but can speak about their meaning and relevance.

(For those unfamiliar with Bollywood: In the Hindi blockbuster Bajrangi Bhaijaan, the main character played by Salman Khan is shown as an endearing and ardent devotee of Hanuman aka Bajrangbali).

Brenda’s rendition of the mantra music is upbeat and infused with western influences. But that’s not all. When Brenda is paying homage to the verses, her face radiates with inner peace. Little wonder then that, this Canuck describes herself as a “true bhakt walking along the devotional path of yoga”.

Canadian artist Brenda McMorrow performs at kirtan concerts across the world. Supplied photo

Canadian artist Brenda McMorrow performs at kirtan concerts across the world. Supplied photo

You are probably wondering what would compel a white woman to dedicate herself into learning a dead language (Sanskrit) and gain mastery over it so much so she’s guided through some force of nature to compose, sing, cut records and host Kirtans around the world?

Before her serendipitous introduction to the shlokas, Brenda was rock/folk/bluegrass artist. Then, in 2004, she heard some Sanskrit chants during a yoga workshop. She had no clue what they were, but they stirred something in her.

“The first time I heard mantra chanting, I knew at every level, that that was what I

was meant to do,” she says.

Three years ago, she recorded her version of the Hanuman Chalisa and has since performed it in cities across Europe, Asia, North and South America. In fact, Brenda has recorded two versions of the Chalisa: the windblown and heart version.

Last year, Brenda travelled to Varanasi and was invited to sing the Chalisa on the banks of the Ganges at Tulsi Ghat before the evening’s aarti and later at the Sankat Mochan temple.

“Little did we know that this would be the most enthusiastically participated in rendition of the Windblown Hanuman Chalisa, ever,” she writes about that experience. “Perhaps it had something to do with the fact that we were playing right below Tulsi Das’ residence (the writer of the Hanuman Chalisa).”

On Friday, Sept. 25 Brenda will hosting a kirtan concert at the St. George’s Anglican Church at 410 College St. (one block east of Bathurst) at 8 p.m. Tickets cost S25/person and $35/person (premium).

Also, Brenda’s new album My Heart Bows Down to You, by White Swan Records will be released Sept. 18.

Tickets to the concert can be bought online and via Pay Pal or through www.anahatatimes.com.

Artist takes elements of Rangoli and boy, does he run with it

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Canadian artist Praksh Shirke fills in the snout of a grizzly bear with coloured sand. Prakash has taken the ancient Indian art of Rangoli and transformed it.

Canadian artist Praksh Shirke fills in the snout of a grizzly bear with coloured sand. Prakash has taken the ancient Indian art of Rangoli and transformed it.

I am no stranger to Kolam or Rangoli as it’s more popularly known. Many of you will know it as Aripana, Madana and Chowkpurna.

Growing up, most mornings, my Mom would wash the courtyard and then do a quick geometric design with powdered rice flour. On special occasions, she would mix the powder in water and do a wet Kolam. That’s the thing with culture; there are always elements that are common to people irrespective of which part of India you come from.

So, when I heard about a Rangoli exhibition by Prakash Shirke, a Canadian artist, I imagined a more elaborate and intricate version of Amma’s kolam.

I was mistaken.

Narendra Modi and Abdul Kalam shared the room with a fierce Grizzly bear and a resplendent sunset or was it sunrise and at the far end was Guru Gobind Singhji? The colourful pieces had photograph-like clarity.

Prakash captures the serenity of Shri Guru Gobind with stunning results. The image was created using powdered sand.

Prakash captures the serenity of Shri Guru Gobind Singhji with stunning results. The image was created using powdered sand.

Prakash is showcasing his stunning sand-art or Rangoli until Saturday, Sept. 13 at 75 Clarence St. in Brampton in a plaza near Kennedy Road and Queen Street. If you have time, check it out. Show hours are: Mon-Fri: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. and on the weekend (Sat-Sun), you can watch Prakash draw the Rangoli, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.

The artist’s eye for details was astounding: He captures the skin tones, the texture of wavy locks of Abdul Kalam’s hair and the predatory gleam on the grizzly’s eyes, not with paint, but sand.

The work was not only intricate, but it required Prakash to spend some 12 hours daily inside a stuffy room (the air conditioner was on fritz) creating art pieces that should ideally be preserved for posterity. Next week, when the exhibit closes, the floor will be Hoovered and wet-mopped leaving no traces of the work that was created there.

“I don’t mind that my art is temporary,” Prakash said. “This means, I can do this again and again…”

That’s an awesome philosophy to hold, especially considering how we humans cling on to everything knowing everything is transient.

Prakash came to Canada some 10 years ago armed with a fine arts degree from Vadodara. We all know, “the struggling artist” is not an oxymoron.

After some odd jobs, Prakash and his wife Vaishali settled down in the GTA, but when a great job opportunity came up in Michigan, Prakash decided to relocate there. He now works as a 3-D animator.

The exhibition had no sponsors or corporate backing. Prakash paid for the supplies, rent for the hall and other expenses out of his pocket.

This was made using coloured sand. Bet, even NaMo will be stumped by the photograph-like effect.

This was made using coloured sand. Bet, even NaMo will be stumped by this photograph-like effect.

Interesting thing: Prakash was initially planning to create a Polar bear, but the white sand, he ordered from India got stuck in customs or some bureaucratic red tape on account of it being white and a powder! So he changed his plans and ended up making a grizzly catching a fish.

“I have done this back home many times, but realized no one has done anything like this here in Canada,” he said. “Many people here don’t even know all this can be done with Rangoli.”

It all starts with Prakash choosing a subject. The idea is to choose a newsmaker that’s relevant and current. Then he powers his laptop and searches for an image or a photograph to replicate with sand. With his laptop perched beside him, the artist then sets outlines the broad strokes and then slowly_pinch by pinch– he starts filling in the form. Like most artists, Prakash is adept at mixing different hues and colours of sands to get the right shade.

Hours of backbreaking work and two weeks later, poof! it’s all gone into the bowels on a vacuum cleaner. But since I am not an artist, I wouldn’t understand, would I?

 

September ’15 brings something for the Mallus, Punjabis and the rest

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Gurdas Maan, the Punjabi super singing sensation will be performing in a concert in Toronto, Saturday, Sept. 12. Supplied photo

Gurdas Maan, the Punjabi super singing sensation will be performing in a concert in Toronto, Saturday, Sept. 12. Supplied photo

Saturday, Sept. 5jayaram
Event: Jairam Show
Details: This is one of the most awaited shows for Malayalis in Toronto. Yester year heart throb Jairam (maybe he still is) is coming to town. The show by Keralite Art Lovers Association (KALA) is taking place at the Meeting House, 2700 Bristol Cir, Oakville. At 6:30 p.m. Cost of tickets range from $20 to $500.

fusionSaturday, Sept. 12
Event: Concert
Details: Badshah of comedy Umer Shareef, Bollywood/Pakistani Bhangra sensation Abrar Ul Haq, Bollywood playback singer: Mustafa Zahid and Saima Myssah Khan are performing in this fall concert at Powerade Centre, 7575 Kennedy Rd. S. Tickets cost $20/person.
Contact: Emaad Siddiqui, 416-409-4341 or visit: Here

Event: ConcertGurdas Maan
Details: The legend of Punjabi music Gurdas Maan will be stopping by the Hershey Centre as part of his Canadian concert: The Eternal Jogi Tour. Tickets can be purchased at Ticketmaster.
Contact: 647-970-5503

SampradayaSaturday, Sept. 19
Event: MACArts Festival
Details: Come to Celebration Square in Mississauga for a medley of food vendors, visual art exhibits, readings, lectures, craftwork, interactive and live performing arts will showcase the emerging, established and multicultural talent in Mississauga. Event runs 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Show is hosted by Mississauga Arts Council (MAC) and will feature Glen Chipkar, Swing Shift Big Band and Sampradya Dance Creations are the headliners.
Contact: Anupama Vittal, 905-615-4215

Saturday, Sept. 26salim- sulaiman
Event: Concert
Details: Bollywood duo Salim-Sulaiman Merchant are expected to rock the town as part of their Live Concert. The Merchants are one of Bollywood’s royalty composers. They have scored in some 100 films such as Saif Ali starrer Kurbaan, Shah Ruk Khan’s Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi, Fashion, Band Baaja Baraat and more. Concert is taking place at 45 Manitoba Dr. in Toronto. Cost of tickets is $45/person to $250/person.
Contact: Here

Suhaag showSunday, Sept. 27
Event: Suhaag Show
Details: Bridezillas not welcome here. The 18th annual Suhaag Show in association with TD Bank will be held in Sept. 27 at the Toronto Congress Centre (650 Dixon Rd. Toronto) from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Fashion shows taking place at 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tickets are $8/person and available at the door. Parking is free.
Contact: Here

Phir bhi dil hai Hindustani/Canadian eh? Jake

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Jake Dheer, a prominent desi and well-liked community member. Supplied photo

Jake Dheer, a prominent desi and well-liked community member. Supplied photo

Ladies and gentlemen, that’s right. Welcome to this edition of Toronto Desi Diaries (TDD) where we shine the strobe lights (drum roll, please)— on the well-liked and well-known Jake Dheer, Senior Operations Manager for Rogers Television (Cable 10).

Jake talked about his childhood, spirituality, love of his life (hint: he has more than one), relevance of hyper-local news, success and more. In the interest of space, I have just picked a few.

Some months ago, Jake, one of his colleagues and I were the sole occupants of a media table at a gala event. Our table was wedged between the sound system and the back wall.

At one point during a tedious speech, Jake nonchalantly broke into a song (fortunately, no one could hear his rendition of the slightly off-key Hindi song). Suffice to say, the evening was anything but boring.

Then dinner was served and our table became the VIP one because Jake knew the banquet manager, the wait-staff and everyone else that actually mattered. Dessert was this gooey mouthwatering chocolatey concoction Jake refused because the sweet was garnished with a mound of marshmallows (ingredients include animal protein) him being the staunch vegetarian.

So, let’s rewind the film on Jake’s life, shall we?

 

Jake Dheer, senior operations manager, Rogers TV seen here with former Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion. Supplied photo.

Jake Dheer, senior operations manager, Rogers TV seen here with former Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion. Supplied photo.

Childhood: The celluloid version
Jake’s parents, Ramesh and Gulab, moved to Uganda from Moga (Punjab) shortly after Jake was born however he stayed in India with his grandparents and joined them when he was eight years old. In the early ‘70s when Idi Amin, the dictator, imposed his economic war agenda, the Dheers fled and arrived in Kitchener, Ont.

Jake’s father, a civil engineer, was a visionary businessman. He purchased a theatre and screened Hindi movies on weekends.

“Since my parents were busy eking a livelihood, they did not have time to enroll me in swimming or guitar lessons,” he said. “We children basically fended for ourselves and developed a sense of independence that included me taking on a paper route.”

Kitchener was where the filmmaking bug bit him. Since the theatre was a family affair, Jake was privy to the world of celluloid through osmosis. He wrote and created posters, cleaned halls, manned the concession stand and occasionally became a projectionist.

That theatre also allowed him to get front-row seats to cinema and watch Dev Anand cavorting around trees and Amitabh Bachchan single-handedly beat the bad guys into a pulp.

“I saw how films brought the people and community together,” he said. “I also learned some invaluable business lessons and life lessons from my father. Things like art of persuasion and people management that one can’t learn in any management school.”

Besides Bollywood, Hollywood giants like Steven Spielberg and Francis Coppola influenced the teenager who happily straddled desi and Canadian cultures with ease.

Spirituality: When karma met dharma
When video killed the theatre, Jake joined a national video chain and managed their store. That was his first real job. This led to other sales gigs like selling ads, water filtration system, managing a restaurant and more. All jobs required people skills, something that Jake has in spades. He was hardworking and a quick learner. So, he steadily rose up the ranks.

Then, in 1990, after the restaurant franchise he worked for closed shop, Jake decided to visit India. He had not been to the country of his birth for 21 years. He travelled to the foothills of the Himalayas and lived with his grandparents in a remote village.

“God puts people in your life so you can learn from them,” Jake says of his visit. “The village where I lived had no access roads and it was in a deep valley. Having nothing much to do, I began to read the Bhagvat Geeta (an ancient Indian spiritual text). I had so many ‘aha’ moments. “As I read and understood the words, many things fell in place. It all made sense. I realized your karma is important and once I do my karma, I have to leave the rest to God.”

Jake reads the sacred Hindu text every week. Not just that, he incorporates the principles in his personal and professional life.

Love: What a feelin’
The other equally significant “Geeta” in Jake’s life is his wife of 22 years.

Jake and Geeta’s love story is filmi to boot. So as the story goes, Jake’s parents wanted him to get married and on their trip to India checking out potential candidates, they met the youngest daughter of a family friend they liked and hoped Jake would too.

So, Gulab and Ramesh shot some video footage of the girl and mailed it to their son for approval. When the cassette arrived, Jake set the unopened envelope beside the figure of a deity in a temple in their home.

A month later, the would-be groom, flew to India for his arranged marriage. In India, during a rainy monsoon July, Jake recalls travelling in a palanquin (usually reserved for the bride) through the Himalayan foothills to reach Geeta’s house for the wedding.

Decked in wedding finery and weighed down by a heavy garland with a pendant of Lord Krishna that reached mid-thigh, Jake’s procession set-off. A few kilometres down the road, the groom desperately needed to pee. He whispered his dilemma to a cousin who led him behind an outcrop of rocks and asked him to do his business.

The task was easier said than done because the pajama (chudidar) Jake was wearing had drawstrings that needed some expert maneuvering. Then, the hapless chap had to hold the heavy garland and lift it out of the way of the stream of urine. And above everything, there was the fear of passersby chancing upon the odd sight of an awkward groom trying to relieve himself!

BTW: This incident was way funnier when Jake described it.

Anyway, when Jake finally laid eyes on Geeta—during the ceremonial exchange of garlands — he was smitten. With a wink and thumbs up to his father, he continued to perform the rest of the rituals with a happy grin.

Jake fell hook, line and sinker with his bride with whom he had not exchanged a single word.Jake and Sonia

“I was overwhelmed by the fact that here was a girl who was willing to travel thousands of miles to be with a man she didn’t know and to live with him in an unfamiliar world purely based on the act of simple faith,” Jake said. “I knew then that this woman would stand by me thick and thin. I remember thinking; who am I to judge anyone’s outer beauty when their inner beauty is so pure and radiant?”

Note: Jake teared up when he spoke about Geeta. Jake incidentally has another love – Canada. He loves the country to bits. “Where else can you get the best of both worlds—India and Canada and embrace both,” he asks. “This country allows you to do both, I love Canada for that.”

Over the years, Jake has received many awards, accolades and recognition for his role in media and his  extensive community activism. He was the Mississauga Citizen of the Year in 2005.

Jake lives in Mississauga with his parents, Geeta and their two children, Sonia, 20 and Arjun, 14.

 

 

 

It’s hot, hot. August turns the heat on desi festivals and shows in Toronto

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Whew! This is quite a line-up of celebrations in August.

The TD Festival of South Asia kicks-off at Little India (1426 Gerrard St. E. Toronto) from 12 noon to 11 p.m. Check out these Desi festivals and concerts in Toronto, August 2015.

The TD Festival of South Asia kicks-off at Little India (1426 Gerrard St. E. Toronto) from 12 noon to 11 p.m. Check out these Desi festivals and concerts in Toronto, August 2015.

Saturday, Aug. 1 and Sunday, Aug. 2
Event: MuslimFestMuslimFest_2015_Flyer-1024x690
Details: August kicks off with the popular MuslimFest, a celebration of Muslim arts, culture, humour, cuisine and more. Festival runs Aug. 1-2 at Celebration Square in Mississauga. Performers include: include Florida’s Yasemin Kanar, aka Yaz, Canadian Writer and Artist Boonaa Mohammed, Hip-hop and R&B trio Native Deen, The band, Joshua Salaam, Abdul-Malik Ahmad and Naeem Muhammad. Stand-up performance by Preacher Moss is also a must-see.
Contact: www.muslimfest.com


Saturday, Aug. 1
-2015-5-26-11-19-42Event: Chaar Laina with Surender Sharma and Sampat Saral
Details: Surrender Sharma was the king of deadpan delivery and master of humour few decades ago. Guess what? He’s performing at The Rose Theatre, 1 Theatre Ln. in Brampton at 5:30 p.m. courtesy, Indo-Canada Arts Council. Tickets cost $20/person and upwards.
Contact: Here

Friday, Aug. 7 and Saturday, Aug. 8
Event: Bollywood Monster MashupBollywood Mashap
Details: The 5th annual Bollywood Monster Mashup is back bigger, better and earlier. Organizer are calling on desis to party at the largest South Asian festival in Canada taking place at where else? Mississauga Celebration Square.
This year features: Bollywood star Jonita Gandhi who’s the headline performer on Friday, August 7. Saturday, Aug. 8 will see the first-ever Canadian performance by Ash King.
According to Artistic Director Vikas Kohli, “This year there will be special Pan American fusion acts, a bigger KidsZone, more singers, musicians, dancers and more interactive Bollywood dance lessons”.
Contact: Here

Saturday, Aug. 8
Viva goaEvent: Viva Goa
Details: The Croatian Recreational Park (Father Kamber), 4525 Mississauga Rd. will come alive with all things Goan as part of World Goa Day. Live entertainment, food and music are on the agenda. Action takes take place from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tickets cost $7/person. Free for children under 12. First 200 guests will get free Chourico Pao.
Contact: http://www.goatoronto.com/

Sunday, Aug. 9
Event: Masala Masti Boat Cruisemasala cruise
Details: Omni Promotions Canada & PGA International Inc. are presenting a Masala Masti Boat Cruise IV: a fun-filled family event. Put your dancing shoes on. Cash bar. Boarding time is 12 noon at 242 Cherry St. in Toronto and cruising will happen from 1-5 p.m. Tickets cost $50/person (adults) and $45/person (for a group of 10).
Contact: Here (http://www.pgaii.com/)

MISAFF15+posterEvent: Dhanak (premiere)
Details: Mosaic: South Asian Film Festival of Mississauga (MISAFF) 15 is presenting Nagesh Kukunoor’s film Dhanak. Premiere will feature a talk with the director. Dhanak is the road adventure of an orphan brother and sister pair in search of their dream to meet Shahrukh Khan. The event is taking place at Cineplex Cinemas, 309 Rathburn Rd. W. in Mississauga at 1 p.m. Cost of tickets is $10/person (adults) and $8/child (under 13).
Contact: Here

Friday, Aug. 14 to Saturday, Aug. 15
Event: TD Mosaic 2015Mosaic
Details: Mosaic, an arts festival, has more than 150 artists in over 16 hours of live stage performances, showcasing well-known local and international artists and super stars. The festival is happening at Celebration Square in Mississauga at 6 p.m.
Contact: Here

Saturday, Aug. 15
TD Festival of SAEvent: TD Festival of South Asia
Details: Considered a unique street festival, celebrations will take place at Little India, 1426 Gerrard St. E. Toronto from 12 noon to 11 p.m. Check out exotic cuisines, live entertainment, fashion show, arts & crafts display, fun family activities and much more.
Contact: Here

 

 

Happy birthday Canada! July 2015 brings Baby Doll to the GTA, IGNITE Bollywood and Rath Yatra

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Photo supplied by MonstrARTity

IGNITE Bollywood, a variety show hosted by MonstrARTity, will take place Saturday, July 11 at the Rose Theatre in Brampton from 5 p.m. onwards. Photo supplied by MonstrARTity.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 1Canada-Day-2015-Artists
Event: Canada Day
Details: Global News’ Liza Fromer, Antony Robart, Farah Nasser along with ET Canada’s Entertainment Reporter Sangita Patel will host the grand Canada Day celebrations with Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie at 4 p.m. at Celebration Square in Mississauga.
Performers include: The city’s very own DJ: Starting From Scratch, Peter Katz, electric violinist Kytami, pop heart throb Scott Helman and headliner, international recording hip hop artist Kardinal Offishall. Cost is free.
Contact: Here

ThaalamSATURDAY, JULY 4
Event: Thaalam 2015
Details: Canadian Tamil Youth Association will present Thaalam 2015, the ultimate gaana/dance competition at The Rose Theatre, 1 Theatre Ln. Brampton at 5 p.m.
Contact:  Here

 

SUNDAY, JULY 5
Event: Pan Am/Para Pan Flame
Details: The Aga Khan Park will host the Pan Am flame as part of Reflections – Celebrating our Cultures and Communities, at the Aga Khan Park and Aga Khan Museum, 77 Wynford Dr. Toronto at 4 p.m. Activities include: lantern-making, dance, poetry, music, a souk bazaar and more. At 8:15 p.m. the Pan Am flame will arrive at the park, carried by Leila Keshavjee, a young member.
Contact: Here

 

SATURDAY, JULY 11MonstrARTity
Event: IGNITE Bollywood
Details: MonstARTity Creative Community (MCC) will be hosting an IGNITE Bollywood event at the Rose Theatre, 1 Theatre Ln. from 5 p.m. onwards to celebrate the Pan Am and Parapan Am Games. IGNITE Bollywood brings together world-class performers for a spectacular variety show featuring live music, dance and comedy acts and a free KidZone. Performers include Lopa Sarkar and Divine Heritage Artistry, Ferzana, Himanshu Merchant, Kim Chalovich and What’s On? TAP! Nick Reynoldson, Ernie Vicente, Preeti Torul and Nelu Handa (Burn Notice). Tickets cost $30/person (adult) and $10/child.
Contact: www.IGNITEBollywood.ca

Event: MahotsavaMahotsava
Details: Mahotsava is a summer South Asian event that’s taking place at International Centre (Hall # 5) 6900 Airport Rd. Mississauga starting at 1-11 p.m. Events include activities for the family, food and entertainment. Kanika Kapoot, the Bollywood singer behind super hits like Chittiyan Kalayian and Baby Doll will perform. Tickets cost $5/person (general admission) and between $20-$50 for the concert.
Contact: Here

SATURDAY, JULY 18 Festival of India
Event: 43rd Festival of India
Details: The Festival of India, a summer staple and a vegetarian foodie’s absolute delight is taking place July 18-19. Highlights include: A Rath Yatra or a parade that will wind down Yonge Street (Starting at Bloor Street and continuing south on Queens Quay. The action will then move to Centre Island where revelers can sample free vegetarian fare. Some 4,000 people are expected to attend.
Contact: For more information, visit here