|           | 
    
Port-of-Spain, May 26 : A Bhojpuri cultural troupe is   currently touring the West Indies to celebrate the 163rd anniversary of arrival   of the first Indian settlers in the Caribbean.  Led by Majula Diwakar, who specialises in several genres of   Bhojpuri folk songs like Kaharwa, Mela, Chaiti, Jhumar, Lachari and Purvi, the   troupe has been performing to packed audiences at the India Trade Fair-2008 that   began here May 22 and will conclude June 1, as also at schools and other   venues.
 "We are elated with the responses we have received from the   multi-cultural and multi-ethnic society in Trinidad and Tobago," said Gopal   Arora, co-ordinator of the India-based Society for Global Welfare that has   organised the fair in association with Trinidad's International Business   Promotions.
 
 The troupe has been in the West Indies for almost three weeks   and has performed at Guyana's Indian Arrival Day on May 5 and in Jamaica. It   will head for Suriname June 2 en route to India.
 
 "This troupe has been   sourced from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, from where, between 1845 and 1917, in   excess of 145,000 indentured labourers came here to work on the sugar and other   agricultural plantations," said S.S. Rawat of the Indian Council for Cultural   Relations (ICCR).
 
 ICCR, in collaboration with the Indian High Commission   and the Mahatma Gandhi Centre for Cultural Co-operation here has organised the   troupe's visit.
 
 "Bhojpuri language, folk songs and dances are very   popular in countries that are home to the Indian Diaspora. The performances by   the troupe will afford the Indian Diaspora here an opportunity to further   appreciate indigenous Indian culture, art and civilisation," Rawat   said.
 
 According to Arora, the trade fair highlights the "creative and   artistic handiworks of the Indian people. All the items on sale are of the   highest quality and matched to the taste of consumers here."
 
 "We host   this fair only at the Indian Arrival Day celebrations. This tells the public   that we are not here for a quick buck but are in the business of satisfying our   customers," he added.
 
 There are 50 Indian booths and about 25 local   booths with something for everyone.
 
 "Last year, more than 50,000 people   of all social, cultural and ethnic extractions shopped at the fair and the   figures so far indicate it will be surpassed this year," Arora said.
 
 "We   have also brought custom-made items in very limited quantities - only one each   of a particular design - for brides and bride grooms," he added.
     
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
   
    
    
      |   
   |