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Bengal culture impresses Hillary

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Press Trust of India Kolkata
Last Updated : Jan 21 2013 | 4:10 AM IST

The US former first lady was visibly moved after a troupe of seven girls, who are survivors of sex trafficking, spoke at the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) complex about the plight of women through a modern Bengali song written by Mousumi Bhowmik.

City-based NGO Kolkata Sanved uses dance movement as an alternative mode of healing for the psycho-social rehabilitation of victims of violence and trafficking.

One of the dancers, who is 20 years old, said she felt delighted to have performed there as she got a pat on the back from Hillary.

After a big round of applause for the youngsters, Hillary complimented them saying, "I loved your breathing techniques ...Wonderful."

Swarna Chitrakar, a traditional painter from Pingla village of West Midnapore district, showed how the message of anti-trafficking can be spread among the rural populace by means of traditional Kalighat paintings, known as 'pata chitra' in Bengali.

In her two-minute performance, she told the story embedded in the scroll paintings in the form of a song.

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Now a dying art, the traditional form of storytelling was popular in the 19th century.

Inside the Bengal pavilion of the ICCR, Hillary went through a collection of various handicrafts, saris and other textiles from various parts of West Bengal.

She also saw a brief karate performance by a girl who lives in a red-light area of Bihar. MORE

  

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First Published: May 07 2012 | 1:05 AM IST

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