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Mestre Jurundir, Resume
Mestre
Jurandir has dedicated 26 years to the cause and promotion of Capoeira
Angola. He was one of the pioneers of the Group of Capoeira Angola Pelourinho
(G.C.A.P.), which played a prominent role in the present revival of the
art form. In 1990, he started the N'golo Angola group in Minas Gerais,
Brazil, which is presently affiliated with the International Capoeira
Angola Foundation (I.C.A.F., of which he is the president).
He is one of three mestres in the ICAF family, also including Mestre Cobra
Mansa and Mestre Valmir. Based in Oakland, Mestre Jurandir travels regularly
to Los Angeles.
As part of his duties with the N'golo Angola group, Mestre Jurandir has
organized various events with the objective of promoting Capoeira Angola;
these include movement and music workshops for children at the Minas Gerais
Public Library, participation in a national campaign combating AIDS, and
various public demonstrations of the art form, such as at the Festival
of Black Art (F.A.N.). He has also given multiple seminars on the importance
of Capoeira Angola to Afro-Brazilian culture and history, as well as on
the strength of the art form as a pedagogical tool.
Mestre Jurandir has conducted various workshops at college campuses throughout
the United States as
part of the F.I.C.A.'s international cultural exchange program: at George
Washington University, Howard University, The University of the District
of Columbia (U.D.C.), Evergreen State College, and at Concord University
in Canada. He has given workshops to people interested in Capoeira in
Austin, TX, Okland, CA, Philadelphia, PA, Seattle, WA, Portland, WA, Washington,
DC, Atlanta, GA and Montreal Canada. In August of 1997 he helped organize
and participated in F.I.C.A.'s third International Capoeira Angola Encounter,
taking place in both the cities of Salvador and Belo Horizonte in Brazil.
One of Mestre Jurandir's principle interests has been the promotion and
teaching of Capoeira Angola to children. Through the art form, he seeks
to instill in such children not only the mental and physical discipline
to perform the complex movements of the game, but also an understanding
of the music accompanying the art form and the cultural and historical
significance of its lyrics. The art form is uniquely suited to stimulate
neuro-muscular control, self-confidence, and interactive social skills
in children through play. Capoeira Angola teaches children to respect
the art form's rich African heritage, through
singing. the game and stories told afterwards about the art form's legendary
past.
Mestre Jurandir's group began working with the Nucleus of Pedagogic support
(N.A.P.) in the municipality of Belo Horizontes's Miguilin Project to
support and educate abandoned children in 1996. The same year, he also
started a project with differently abled children at the Municipal School
for Exceptional Children. In 1997, the group became a co-participant in
the 'Children in the Park' project for underprivileged children of the
impoverished community surrounding the Mangabeira Park in Belo Horizonte,
M.G. Brazil.
Adapted from the ICAF-Seattle
Website.
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