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Black Paris Tour Organizer Offers Tips on City’s Must-See Black List
Kitchener, ON (BlacNews.com) - Since creating Walking The Spirit Tours that explore the African-American and Diaspora experience in Paris, Julia Browne has been dispensing advice on how to get the best of black Paris of yesterday and today. Here are some of her tested tips: found at blacknews.com August 2007 Walk it! No guidebook can rival a lively, informative guide for telling the tales of black writers, artists, and entertainers in Paris. Walking The Spirit Tours walks you back to where Richard Wright wrote his ‘Why I Chose Exile’, James Baldwin and Langston Hughes sharpened their black consciousness from 6th floor cold-water flats, Henry O. Tanner painted his Louvre-hanging work, and Josephine shimmered, inspired, and expired. These street-side lectures also paint in the links between Black Americans, Africans, West Indians and the French. Strolling through the Latin Quarter, St.Germain-des-Pres, and Montmartre visitors get to know the neighborhoods where the black expatriates lived and loved, with contemporary insights from a local-based guide. Contact: www.walkingthespirit.com Africa in Paris. The first Africans were brought to Paris as examples of Colonial-era trophies, then as soldiers and gunners in World War I, later they came to pursue higher education and work in factories rebuilding industry after World War II. Today the most visible concentration centers in the 18th district, known as La Goutte d’Or (literally, the drop of gold). A marvel of colorful outdoor market and tiny groceries, regal women in their traditional boubous with babies strapped on their backs, side streets lined with textile shops, beauty and hair suppliers, inventive discounters, and numerous community services and places of worship. Read French? - pick up the latest edition of the community newspaper at the media kiosk beside the metro, to uncover the concerns of locals, including the encroaching gentrification. Metro stops: Barbès (pronounced barb-ess) and Chateau Rouge. Riveting African Art. No where else in the city will you glimpse such magnificent yet disconcerting creativity from the African continent. Opened in 1986 and tucked away on a side street in the 16th district, the Musée Dapper displays permanent and itinerant exhibits of sculpture, masks, objets d’art, and paintings & photos that reveal African art’s significance in the world’s aesthetic heritage. Excellent bookstore and cafeteria on lower level. Museum open daily 11 am - 7 pm, except Tuesdays. Musée Dapper: 35 rue Paul Valery. Metro stop: Victor Hugo, Charles de Gaulle-Etoile or Argentine. English-language tours for groups available by advance request. www.dapper.fr. Get It Fresh! Chefs from across the capital buy their fish from the bountiful Déjean Market at Chateau Rouge in the African district and comb Belleville market for spices found no where else. Both of these markets are located in the heart of Paris’ visibly immigrant populations. While Déjean Market offers up the delicacies of Black and Arabic Africa, Belleville - in the centre-east Paris - serves its neighborhood of Algerian, Senegalese, Chinese, Orthodox Jews and the throngs of Parisians looking for rock-bottom prices and an exuberant atmosphere.
Belleville Market - Metro stop: Belleville (line 2).Tuesday and Friday 7 am-2 pm. Black music has inspired the French to both imitate it and create exemplary venues for its enjoyment. They made an icon of Sidney Bechet and his big band in the 20s and idols of Beboppers Miles Davis and Bud Powell in the 50s. Today you can bop to the finest jazz at: New Morning; the historic Bibloquet that has kept its ambiance of 1930s St.Germain-des-Pres; 7 Lézards, frequented by American jazz expat Bobby Few; the very elegant Lionel Hampton Club at the Meridien hotel, and Le Caveau de la Huchette, haven for New Orleans jazz, and dancing to swing, bebop and R&B in the cellar. Clustered around Rue des Lombards in the Chatelet-Les Halles area are Au Duc des Lombards named for Duke Ellington; Le Sunset/Sunside, downstairs for American and Euro musicians, upstairs for electro jazz and world music; and Le Baiser Salé (The Salty Kiss) offering unusual multi-ethnic blends. These same Lombard-area clubs fostered the rise of world music in the early 80s where then little-known Benin-born Angelique Kidjo got her first gigs and ran into the likes of Manu Dibango, Mory Kante, Papa Wemba and Toure Kunda.
Antilles on the Seine This is just a tip of the iceberg. If You Can Only Take One Guidebook order ‘An Insider’s Guide To Black Paris’. African-American expatriate Melinda Herron continually updates her research that ranges from where to get your hair done to the latest events. An E-guide available at www.insiderparisguides.com/guides/black.htm
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