The Masthead

Page 42

Arts & Culture

Celebrate Diwali at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich

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rom live music to light shows, the Diwali: Shine Your Light festival promises to be a treat for the senses at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich. Every year, the museum hosts a free familyfriendly celebration featuring live music, workshops, art displays, light shows and more. The museum has teamed up with Mehala Ford, founder of south Asian arts collective, COMMONGROUNDS, to curate this year’s Diwali celebrations, which will be held on Saturday 11th November from 11.30am to 5pm. “Diwali is a festival that celebrates new beginnings, wealth and prosperity and the triumph of good over evil and light over darkness,” explains Mehala. “It is observed around the world by Hindus, Sikhs and Jains. “Shared rituals and ceremonies, such as those that take place at Diwali, can offer us a sense of belonging. New rituals and ceremonies are emerging and old ones are being revised to include people who do not identify themselves as traditionally religious, bringing people together based on a sense of community, rather than shared religious beliefs.” This year’s theme is ‘Shine Your Light’, a chance “to celebrate the light within all of us, highlighting creativity, joy and wellbeing”.

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THAMESMEAD FESTIVAL 2023

Thamesmead’s talented youth shone at the annual, community-powered festival.

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ance, music, poetry, community stalls, family activities, food and drink and the annual dog show all featured at this year’s Thamesmead Festival, which is organised by local residents and showcases talent from one of London’s most creative neighbourhoods.

This year’s celebration, which took place on Saturday 12 August was expanded to spotlight young talent with the new Wanderlust Hill Stage, entirely programmed and co-produced by local youth collective The South East Way. Over six months, eleven 14–16-year-olds, brought together by community arts project Three Rivers, learned about every aspect of putting on a show, from prop making and set-building to DJing and programming the young local acts. The stage was a major success on the day with acts including young talent Jabz, four-piece rockers Everything in Mono, alternative hip hop artist Lavs, singer-songwriter HURU, UK-based K-Pop dance group Paradox, soul songstress Taite Imogen and pop-punk band Breakup Haircut, all of whom performed against a beautiful, Alice in Wonderland-inspired backdrop, designed, and created by the teenagers. Speaking to ITV News on the day of the festival Everything in Mono who “play rock music loudly” and range in age from 15-18 said: “When we were growing up in the area there weren’t opportunities to perform other than in the pub down the road. To get the opportunity to perform on a stage like this is a big deal”. Speaking with Robert Elms about the Wanderlust Hill Stage on BBC Radio London, South East Way member Lola Holdstock-Supersad said: “That’s our bit. We’re proud of it. It’s our stage. We’ve designed the stage; we’ve picked the acts. Thamesmead and Abbey Wood have a big youth culture. Wanderlust Hill is by the youth, for the youth.” On the Park Stage the House Gospel Choir brought the festival to a soulful finale, with a

rapturous repertoire of club anthems and gospel classics paired with uplifting vocals that filled Southmere Park with euphoric vibes. Jerusha Ujanga of the Festival Production Group, made up of local residents, said "The festival is all about community involvement, community unity and diversity. We want everyone to come here and feel represented". Funded by Peabody, which is putting culture at the heart of its long-term regeneration of Thamesmead, this free, family-friendly festival is co-produced by local residents in partnership with event producers Serious. The entire festival is programmed and led by the Festival Production Group, made up of 14 residents’ representative of Thamesmead’s diverse cultures and neighbourhoods. Dance and performance are woven into the rhythm of life at Thamesmead, which is home to several dance companies including Greenwich Dance, The London College of Performing Arts and Dynamix Dance School. On the Southmere Stage dance performances included hip hop, Afrobeat and street dance from Dynamix; competitive cheerleading from Utopia Cheer; and Thamesmead-born TikTok dance sensation Dancer Ras. Performer and choreographer Melissa Rayne and her dancers invited audience members to join in with a creative dance workshop, and 14-year-old Ruky Star whose debut single Watch Me Now was released to raise awareness about brittle bone disease, gave a special performance. Lisa Drew, Peabody’s Cultural Programme Manager said: “This year’s festival felt like the best one yet, with great young bands performing on our new Wanderlust Hill Stage, lots of local talent showing their work on and off stage and the House Gospel Choir finishing the day with a brilliant all-singing, all-dancing set! Putting this on is a real community effort and would not be possible without all the hard work from our residents in the Festival Production Group, the South East Way and my colleagues at Peabody.”


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And finally...

1min
page 50

Get wise on preventing workplace back pain

2min
page 47

Carers in Your Workforce

2min
page 46

Councillors have celebrated the final concrete pour on a 100% affordable development of 304 apartments and houses in Woolwich

3min
page 45

New arts and culture activity for local communities

2min
pages 43-44

THAMESMEAD FESTIVAL 2023

2min
page 42

Celebrate

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page 42

Industry experts join Croydon’s Design Review Panel

2min
page 41

HAVE YOUR SAY on the future of Lewisham

1min
page 40

SELCC Virtual AGM 2023

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page 39

SELCC Charity Quiz Night

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page 38

Bromley Office Drinks At Thackray Williams

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page 38

Evening at Davy’s Vintners Yard

2min
page 37

Making the right connections

1min
page 36

LONDON STANDS TALL as a global city making positive change across the world

4min
pages 34-35

Celebrating the success of our outstanding pupils

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page 33

EMPLOYER BOARDS LAUNCHED to help create green and digital jobs across Local London

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page 33

Recruitment firm’s focus on going the extra mile – and even have the wheels to get you there!

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pages 30-32

Later Life Planning... where to start

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pages 26-29

The Peninsula Ballroom

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pages 24-25

Why employer partnerships are no longer enough to tackle the skills crisis

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page 23

Learning environment that blends hands-on technical learning with knowledge and professional work experience

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pages 22-23

Ask the Expert

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pages 19-21

JS Resilience and Leadership Advisory

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page 18

It’s going to be a Catastrophe…

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pages 16-17

PARTNER with Shooters Hill Sixth Form College

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page 15

Bexley Business & Employment launches ‘Talking Business’ programme

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page 14

Recycling locally to reduce our carbon footprint

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page 14

Bromley’s libraries are getting a refresh

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page 13

Focus on Greenwich

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pages 11-12

Croydon a place of opportunity

3min
pages 9-10

Lewisham agrees new dockless bike partnership with Lime

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page 8

Lewisham Council announces £930k funding to increase affordable workspace across the borough

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page 8

Fixing people problem is key to tackling inflation

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pages 6-8

Boroughs welcome devolution push in UK Urban Futures Commission report

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page 4
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