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The Kuumba Singers of Harvard College

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Harvard showed an unwelcoming hand to those that it admitted during these times. Yet, despite Harvard's isolating environment, the tides of Black Pride and Black Power pushed Black students on campus to fight for institutional structures that would allow students of African descent a space to commune with their culture in a way that held them accountable to their past and present as Black members of society. The products of this fight were a Department of Afro-American Studies, an Afro-American Cultural Center, and creative cultural groups including the Kuumba Singers. What was so powerful about the Kuumba Singers was the connection it created between Black culture and Black
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every emotion. Moreover, Black music helps sustain and direct our culture.” Reminding the Black community of its past, informing it of its present, and giving it hope and guidance for the future, the Kuumba Singers—through song, dance, poetry, and other forms of artistic expression—have always sought to leave the space called Harvard, and its surrounding community, better than when we found it. The choir's current racial and ethnic diversity is both a remarkable testimony to, and a relentless test of, that noble and enduring ideal.
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Harvard's Memorial Church and is free to the public. This concert celebrates to the true meaning of Christmas and the birth of Jesus, with infusions of music and performance from the African diaspora throughout the concert. The spring concert, dedicated to Dean Archie C. Epps in remembrance of his spirited resistance to the organization, is held on one night towards the end of the spring semester. This concert takes place in Harvard University's
38:. With concerts held during both the winter and the spring of each year, along with many other performances and a spring tour, the Kuumba Singers of Harvard College are committed to celebrating Black culture and providing a sense of unity and safety for its members. Through its music and performance, the Kuumba Singers of Harvard College strives to fulfill its mission of leaving a space better than it was found in the true meaning of kuumba. 30:(founded in 1970) is the oldest existing Black organization at Harvard College. Formed during a time of high political turmoil, the purpose of the Kuumba Singers is to express Black creativity and spirituality to create a safe space for Black students. In existence for over 50 years, the Kuumba Singers of Harvard College, or simply Kuumba, has served the Boston-Cambridge community as well as the national community through songs ranging from 47: 17: 229:, the Dr. Walter J. Leonard Black Arts Festival is a celebration that features various workshops, performances, and displays of many forms of artwork including film, spoken word, short plays, and dance. The Black Arts Festival serves to highlight the creative contributions of talented and distinguished artists and to pay homage to the 233:.” Since the time of its founding, the festival has expanded to encompass Black art created not only by Harvard students but also by artists in the Boston and Cambridge community. By working with the general community, the festival strives to showcase the talents of Black creative culture and to perpetuate the goals of the 105: 157:
Kuumba continues to distinguish itself as more than a singing group. While the political climate of the organization has changed on Harvard's campus, the organization maintains its role as a safe space for Black students on campus, responding to inequality issues as they arise. For instance, in 2002,
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Kuumba’s founders chose the name “Ku’umba” over the original more constrictive name, “Harvard-Radcliffe Gospel Choir” because it allowed for all modes of Diasporic expression. In Swahili, Ku’umba roughly means creativity , though the literal meaning is subtler: it is the creativity of leaving a space
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and the 1969 Harvard Strike, the choir emerged as a source of community, spiritual inspiration, political motivation and cultural stimulation among the small but growing number of Black students at Harvard. Inspired by the History of Black Music class taught by Professor Hubert Walters in the spring
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During the political times of the 70s, Kuumba was found at many political demonstrations, supporting the rights of Black people locally as well as globally. In fact, it was these political tensions of the global arena that caused Mr. Hubert Walters, the first director of the choir (who was succeeded
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The 1970s saw the creation of the annual Weekend of Black Spirituality, a celebration of the end of Kuumba's performance year and featured guest choirs, culminating in Kuumba's spring concert. This tradition continued through the 70s under the leadership of Robert Winfrey, the beloved father-figure
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In 2009, the Alumni of the Kuumba Singers of Harvard College was founded under the leadership of Linda Sowell ’73 as a Shared Interest Group of the Harvard Alumni Association. This association works to support the current Kuumba members as well as to create a way for past Kuumba members to stay in
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for “creativity”) because it best captured the choir's intent to reflect the creative genius of Black people through the rich diversity of Diasporic music and cultural expression. As written in the organization's constitution, “Black music is a manifestation of the Black spirit – it speaks to our
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The Kuumba Singers hold a large concert at the end of each academic semester. The winter concert is dedicated to Dr. S. Allen Counter, the executive director of the Harvard Foundation and a strong supporter and advocate for Kuumba throughout Kuumba's history. This concert occurs on two nights in
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The late 1960s and early 1970s found Black students at Harvard to be few in number, and as such alienated from much of that institution. With curriculum that did not foster the perspective of the Black experience and a campus that was at times even hostile to the presence of its Black students,
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members of Kuumba Singers protested comments made by a Harvard professor concerning the term of ebonics. While the organization is not exclusively Black in its membership, the mission of expressing Black creativity and spirituality remains at the center of all that the group does.
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It was not easy for Black students to “sing the Lord’s song” in the “strange land” of Harvard during this period of racial tension and campus unrest. Yet, Kuumba not only provided spiritual inspiration—it was also a source of unity and strength. The group chose the name “Kuumba”
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to join. The organization wished for diversity that would unify the African American community across boundaries of class, gender, denomination, age, and other institutional road-blocks. With that, members from neighboring colleges found a home on Harvard's campus with Kuumba.
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317 to assist in planning and publicizing the first rehearsal. The Kuumba Singers were officially born in November 1970 when students from the classes of 1971 -1974 gathered for the first time one evening after dinner in a second floor lounge of the old
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of 1970, the choir concept was conceived that summer as an outgrowth of a project on Black music conducted by Dennis and Fred and supported by the newly established Department of African and African American Studies and African American Cultural Center.
145:,” a freedom song of South Africa later to be the South African national anthem. With voices tied both to Black creativity and spirituality, Kuumba remained a source of hope for many of the changes that were occurring in those tumultuous of times. 241:, a Ghanaian symbol roughly translated to mean “go back and take.” The Black Arts Festival of 2011 (Chair: Hannah Joy Habte) was created with the theme of "How It Feels to be Colored Me," named after and inspired by the famous 182:. Other unrequested gigs that are put on by the organization itself include its own concerts, the Black Arts Festival performance showcase, and the Harvard-Yale Body & Soul Showcase run by Kuumba on the years in which the 79:, now known as the Barker Center. Following that initial meeting, Walters would assume responsibility as the choir's first director. The first spring concert, entitled “An Evening of Black Spirituality,” was held in 95:
Since those early years, the torch has been carried forward by only two additional directors, Mr. Robert Winfrey and Mr. Sheldon K.X. Reid (College ’96, GSE ’98), and by more than 1,000 Kuumba members and alumni.
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Kuumba (pronounced koo-oom-bah) was founded in 1970 by Dennis Wiley and Fred Lucas, two African American undergraduates of the Harvard class of 1972. In an era of “
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Each year, the group participates several gigs throughout both on and off campus. In recent times, those gigs have included singing at the presentation of
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essay. In 2012 (Chair: Jowanna Malone), the festival was called "Living for More than Just Me." In this endeavor, the Kuumba Singers partnered with
217:. During tour, Kuumba sings at a variety of locations, including colleges, middle and high schools, churches, and community centers in the area. 116:
Thus, the mission of Kuumba is to express the creativity and spirituality of Black people in a way that leaves a space better than it was found.
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Yet more than just for Harvard students, Kuumba in the 70s was designed to be a space for Black students from all over
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by Robert Winfrey when Walters's contract was not renewed by the College), to implement the tradition of singing “
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Each spring break, the Kuumba Singers go on tour. Several of the most recent tours have taken place in
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better than you found it; it is the spirit of positively impacting through modes of creativity.
67: 31: 230: 202: 88: 129:. The group helped fill-in a gap that had been missing for many of its members at Harvard. 443: 364: 345: 191: 80: 26: 237:. The Black Arts Festival of 2010 (Chair: Bolaji Ogunsola) was created with the theme of 171: 455: 214: 76: 198: 126: 167: 55: 357: 58:” and Black pride, immediately following the 1968 assassination of the Rev. 436: 338: 238: 210: 206: 133: 104: 46: 16: 424: 250: 246: 179: 103: 45: 15: 329:, Kuumba Board 2002-2003. "Kuumba Helpful Info." Pamphlet 2002. 326: 314: 317:, The Constitution of the Kuumba Singers of Harvard College. 446:, The Alumni of the Kuumba Singers of Harvard College. 178:, along with participating in the benefit concert for 427:, Dr. Walter J. Leonard Black Arts Festival Website. 415:(Cambridge, MA). 2004-12-17. Retrieved 2010-09-06. 399:(Cambridge, MA). 2010-02-03. Retrieved 2010-09-06. 383:(Cambridge, MA). 2002-12-13. Retrieved 2010-09-06. 305:(Cambridge, MA). 2000-05-01. Retrieved 2010-09-06. 289:(Cambridge, MA). 2010-04-20. Retrieved 2010-09-06. 348:, Dennis Wiley, Kuumba co-Founder, Reflections. 149:director that stayed with Kuumba for 25 years. 8: 409:Concert Review - Kuumba's Behold That Star 20:The Kuumba Singers in Spring Concert 2009 278: 276: 274: 270: 119: 462:University choirs in the United States 50:The Kuumba Singers on tour in Atlanta 7: 377:Kuumba Protests Professor's Comments 66:The next fall, Marilynn Sasportas, 472:Musical groups established in 1970 14: 477:Harvard University musical groups 170:Honorary Degree, performing with 162:Performances, Concerts, and Tours 120:Kuumba's Early Political Climate 367:, Article by Hubert E. Walters. 186:takes place on Harvard's soil. 70:Class of 1974, joined them in 1: 393:Student concert to aid Haiti 253:in Roxbury, Massachusetts. 493: 299:Kuumba Celebrates 30 Years 184:Harvard-Yale football game 60:Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 437:Kuumba Alumni Association 262:contact with each other. 83:on Sunday, May 16, 1971. 467:Choirs in Massachusetts 358:Kuumba: The Early Years 100:Kuumba Name and Mission 283:Kuumba Celebrates 40th 251:Tobin Community Center 143:Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika 108: 51: 25:The Kuumba Singers of 21: 107: 49: 19: 425:Black Arts Festival 315:Kuumba Constitution 235:Black Arts Movement 225:Founded in 1998 by 221:Black Arts Festival 36:Contemporary Gospel 442:2010-09-28 at the 363:2010-08-10 at the 344:2010-09-28 at the 257:Alumni Association 243:Zora Neale Hurston 227:Phillip Atiba Goff 109: 52: 22: 484: 447: 434: 428: 422: 416: 406: 400: 390: 384: 374: 368: 355: 349: 336: 330: 324: 318: 312: 306: 296: 290: 280: 247:Teen Empowerment 231:African Diaspora 203:Washington, D.C. 32:Negro Spirituals 492: 491: 487: 486: 485: 483: 482: 481: 452: 451: 450: 444:Wayback Machine 435: 431: 423: 419: 407: 403: 397:Harvard Gazette 391: 387: 375: 371: 365:Wayback Machine 356: 352: 346:Wayback Machine 337: 333: 325: 321: 313: 309: 297: 293: 281: 272: 268: 259: 223: 192:Sanders Theater 164: 155: 122: 115: 102: 81:Sanders Theater 44: 27:Harvard College 12: 11: 5: 490: 488: 480: 479: 474: 469: 464: 454: 453: 449: 448: 429: 417: 401: 385: 369: 350: 331: 327:Kuumba History 319: 307: 291: 269: 267: 264: 258: 255: 222: 219: 172:Bobby McFerrin 163: 160: 154: 151: 121: 118: 101: 98: 77:Freshman Union 43: 40: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 489: 478: 475: 473: 470: 468: 465: 463: 460: 459: 457: 445: 441: 438: 433: 430: 426: 421: 418: 414: 410: 405: 402: 398: 394: 389: 386: 382: 378: 373: 370: 366: 362: 359: 354: 351: 347: 343: 340: 339:Kuumba Alumni 335: 332: 328: 323: 320: 316: 311: 308: 304: 300: 295: 292: 288: 284: 279: 277: 275: 271: 265: 263: 256: 254: 252: 248: 244: 240: 236: 232: 228: 220: 218: 216: 215:New York City 212: 208: 204: 200: 195: 193: 187: 185: 181: 177: 176:Symphony Hall 173: 169: 168:Ted Kennedy's 161: 159: 152: 150: 146: 144: 138: 135: 130: 128: 117: 113: 106: 99: 97: 93: 90: 84: 82: 78: 73: 69: 64: 61: 57: 48: 41: 39: 37: 33: 29: 28: 18: 432: 420: 412: 404: 396: 388: 380: 372: 353: 334: 322: 310: 302: 294: 286: 260: 224: 199:Philadelphia 196: 188: 174:at Boston's 165: 156: 147: 139: 131: 127:spirituality 123: 114: 110: 94: 85: 65: 53: 42:About Kuumba 24: 23: 413:The Crimson 381:The Crimson 303:The Crimson 287:The Crimson 56:Black Power 456:Categories 266:References 153:Kuumba Now 68:Radcliffe 440:Archived 361:Archived 342:Archived 239:Sankofa 211:Bermuda 207:Atlanta 89:Swahili 213:, and 134:Boston 72:Quincy 180:Haiti 34:to 458:: 411:, 395:, 379:, 301:, 285:, 273:^ 209:, 205:, 201:, 194:. 87:(

Index


Harvard College
Negro Spirituals
Contemporary Gospel

Black Power
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Radcliffe
Quincy
Freshman Union
Sanders Theater
Swahili

spirituality
Boston
Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika
Ted Kennedy's
Bobby McFerrin
Symphony Hall
Haiti
Harvard-Yale football game
Sanders Theater
Philadelphia
Washington, D.C.
Atlanta
Bermuda
New York City
Phillip Atiba Goff
African Diaspora
Black Arts Movement

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