Poetry Friday: Holi with Poetry Pie

Friday, March 13th, 2009

British-Indian poet Debjani Chatterjee emailed me the other day to let me know that CBeebies (the BBC’s children’s channel) were going to be featuring her poetry on their Poetry Pie programme – I caught up with the episodes, from Wednesday and Thursday, on-line and think it’s a delight!

The episodes are only available for a few days after the broadcast so hurry and watch them – with your little ones! Debjani’s poem for Holi is brought alive by, of all things, a hamster!

The programmes are only a few minutes long – but what a great way to get small children into poetry in this multi-media age!

***Update! I hadn’t realised that the links would only be available in the UK… so if you’re seeing this from within the UK, you can go ahead and watch. And for everyone else, Debjani has very kindly given permission for us to reproduce Holi – so here it is, in trusted back and white! Thank you, Debjani.

COLOURS OF HOLI

Waters splash!
Colours flash!
Holi’s here -
a thrilling time of year!
Red, blue, orange and green,
happy splashes can be seen
on my cheeks and on my clothes,
on my hands and on my nose.
Holi’s here -
a thrilling time of year!

Sitars strum,
Tablas drum!
Holi’s here -
a thrilling time of year!
Red, blue, orange and green,
sparkling powders can be seen
on the streets and marketplace,
in my hair and on my face.
Holi’s here -
a thrilling time of year!

© Debjani Chatterjee

This week’s Poetry Friday is over at The Miss Rumphius Effect… Happy Holi, everyone.

Books at Bedtime: celebrations!

Monday, March 24th, 2008

This year, unusually, feast days from many of the world’s religions have fallen around these last few days – so, as Time put it:

unlike some holy days — say, Christmas, which some non-Christians in the U.S. observe informally by going to a movie and ordering Chinese food — on this particular Friday, March 21, it seems almost no believer of any sort will be left without his or her own holiday…

Today I focus on two books, which each in their own way explore the celebration of one of these religious festivals against a different cultural background.

Mina’s Spring of ColorsMina’s Spring of Colors is a very special story about a young Indian girl who, although she now lives in Canada, is determined to throw a Holi party for her school-friends and neighbors: they won’t just watch the celebrations but participate in them. The book is aimed at 8-11 year olds, though younger children could enjoy having it read to them. It will certainly fill their heads with ideas about how to throw their own Holi party. The author Rachna Gilmore said in an interview with PaperTigers:

I have wonderful memories of Holi – memories of the physical excitement and dread and anticipation of getting others with coloured powders and water and also trying to dodge them in return, the shrieking, hysterical laughter and the wild delight. I don’t know of any readers who have put on a Holi party for themselves, but oh, I do hope some have. Kids love the idea and I know it would be an absolute blast. In one of the libraries I have visited to do a reading, the librarian was very keen on the idea, but of course, we couldn’t use coloured water and powder, so instead, we sprinkled each other with sparklies and squirted those cans that spurt multicoloured streamers. It was great fun.

There are some great pictures from this year’s celebrations in India here (and I can’t resist these from a couple of years ago too!); and you can find out more about Holi here.

Charlotte chose Amelia Lau Carling’s gorgeous, autobiographical picture-book Sawdust Carpets/Alfombras de aserrín Sawdust Carpetsas the subject of her first post for the PaperTigers blog, back in May last year; and it’s well worth pointing it out now as a special book for Easter. It exemplifies a harmony of both diversity and fusion of cultures, as we learn about the celebration of Holy Week in Guatemala through the eyes of a young Amelia. Her parents had fled China during the Second World War and had made their new home in Guatemala, as described in Carling’s first book, Mama and Papa Have a Store. As well as insight into her family’s participation in the festivities, we learn about the incredible carpets made of dyed sawdust and millions of flower petals, which everyone joins in making to celebrate Easter:

They are offered up as a sacrifice in anticipation of the procession that will destroy them by marching through the painstaking and fantastic creations.

So whatever you may have been celebrating these last few days, we send you best wishes – do tell us about any special traditions you have, from whatever part of the world you come from; and if you have any favorite books to recommend…