WYD Panama: Malawian music
taking Panamanian stages
Alleluya Band Malawi poses in Panama. |
Amongst the pilgrims from all over the world visiting Panama
for World Youth Day is the Alleluya Band Malawi, who have come bearing gifts
and sharing their music.
By Francesca Merlo
Every year, for the past 7 years, Coss Chiwalo has
represented Malawi at World Youth Days around the world. And every year he
learns a lesson that he takes back to other young Catholics on the African
continent.
A first for all
So far, says Coss, Panama 2019 has been “very fantastic”.
What he is particularly happy about is the fact that Panama seems even further
away from his hometown than Europe. He’s been to Italy numerous times but it is
the “first time people of Panama will be able to experience our culture”, he
says, the Malawian culture.
To love to learn
Lessons given and lessons learnt, it seems Coss loves to
teach and loves to learn. Perhaps he has the love for teaching that every
teacher should have: the kind that makes the student want to learn. And perhaps
that is why one year ago, when Coss Chiwalo visited the Vatican with his
African drum, Pope Francis asked Coss to teach him “how to play African drums”.
This personal encounter Coss had with the Pope, he says, is
what makes him “always very happy, to be here with Pope Francesco”, he says,
having picked up the Pope’s Italian name on one of his many trips to the
Vatican.
Intangible memories
Blessings, another young Malawian travelling with Coss, also
loves the lessons that come from human interactions. His greatest memory so far
(and there is still a long way to go before reaching the end) is that he has
“interacted with so many people”. He emphasises that it is, in fact, “very,
very important to interract with people”. Travelling, knowing each other, and
exchanging “ways of God, so that we can improve our spiritual lives”.
These pilgrims exchange thoughts and feelings, and not only
the usual material memories, the gifts that the pilgrim tradition calls for.
Their gift to this correspondent were two CDs of their own music, recognisable
by both Blessing’s and Coss’ faces on the cover of one album, and the face of
Pope Francis playing Coss’ African drum as he looks him in the eyes on the
other. Perhaps this music is the best way to share both their beloved thoughts
and feelings that come from human interraction and the tradition of their
beloved country.
Alleluya Band Malawi
This music, so beautifully recorded by Alleluya Band Malawi,
is yet another wonder that these young Malawians have brought to Panama. They
perform it in the traditional dress that Coss says “attracts so much attention”
in Panama’s Parco Bazzara on Wednesday evening.
Young Africans, wearing animal skins and carrying bows and
arrows as they sing original African, Catholic hymns, is surely something new
to the Panamanian stages and the thousands of pilgrims who have travelled from
all around the world. Another day, another lesson.
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