Armidale must be one of the most multicultural places in the whole of Australia judging by the festival we attended last Saturday. And this covers both ethnic origins of people and the fact that our community is highly welcoming of people from around the world.
To celebrate this multiculturalism, the Armidale Regional Council, coupled with the University of New England (UNE) sponsored a three-day event designed to bring everyone together. This included a breakfast out at UNE, a Bollywood film festival, an international food evening at the creeklands - coupled with stage performances involving music and dance, and so on. Dot and I decided to attend the food festival with its accompanying stage performances. So, at around 5.45 pm we headed down to Dumaresq Creek. The first an most obvious thing of note was the flags of many different countries draped around he venue. In fact, I counted nearly 60 nationalities represented including the rather obvious Union Jack in the second photo. We wondered how Council managed to lay its hand on so many until we realised that UNE flies the flags of every nation providing students to the university on each country's national holiday.
Apart from the flags, the second most noticeable thing was the wearing of traditional dress by our overseas visitors, whether Islamic, or coming from many parts of Asia and Africa. And, as you can see below, there were playground facilities for kids like the inflatable jumping castle and slide. I was surprised by the large number of youngsters in the audience, both locals and from refugee communities like the Yazidis (or Ezidis) who driven out of their Iraqi homeland by Islamic State fighters.
The next thing of note was the huge range of ethnic food-stalls, each housed in a kind of tent. We joined a long queue of people waiting to collect free paper plates, bowls and cutlery, which were supplied after the magical hour of 6 pm when all the food-stalls opened up. Interestingly, all the food was free and must have been funded by Council and UNE. No wonder the event was popular! It's not often one gets a free lunch or tea. Better still was the massive range of ethnic foods to sample. Nations represented I think included: South Asia (e.g. Pakistan, India, and Nepal or Bhutan); Southeast Asia (e.g. Thailand, Indonesia, and Vietnam); East Asia (e.g. China and Japan); West Asia (e.g. Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Turkey); Europe (including France); Africa (I recall South Africa); and even Latin America. Here are some of the 'tents' each displaying one of the nations mentioned above. Has any reader ever eaten Saudi, Iraqi or Pakistani food??
Dot and I ambled around filling our plates with samples of food from a wide range of countries and we agreed that they were delicious. And we ate our meals standing up - many of the seats were taken by the large crowd.
And while we were doing that, performers took the stage to show off national music, songs and dance, much of which was new to us. Not to be entirely out-done by our overseas visitors, one Australian sang country-music songs.
We stood and listened to some performers as they were bathed in the bright light of the setting sun - a fitting end to a very enjoyable event. One of the things I like about Australia is that it is so multicultural that there is much less pressure on migrants to conform to early colonial behaviours and outlooks acquired from Britain and a lesser extent Europe.
This 'international openness' was expressed in another way yesterday when Australia signed off on a new international trade agreement called the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) with 14 other countries. Apart from Australia, other countries included: China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Korea, Malaysia, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, Singapore, Brunei, New Zealand, and Japan. This massive grouping of nations includes (a) 50% of the world's population and (b) c. 30% of global GDP. So, while parts of the world are increasingly disengaging from global integration and going it alone, we're heading in the opposite direction - networking regionally with countries of very different cultures to our own. Why do it? This constellation of countries is defusing conflict, boosting economic growth, and lifting hundreds of millions of people out of poverty. The 21st century has been billed as the Asian century and such strategies as the RCEP are boosting that assessment.
And I'm feeling that I'm leading a very interesting life in this small town of ours.
AS
To celebrate this multiculturalism, the Armidale Regional Council, coupled with the University of New England (UNE) sponsored a three-day event designed to bring everyone together. This included a breakfast out at UNE, a Bollywood film festival, an international food evening at the creeklands - coupled with stage performances involving music and dance, and so on. Dot and I decided to attend the food festival with its accompanying stage performances. So, at around 5.45 pm we headed down to Dumaresq Creek. The first an most obvious thing of note was the flags of many different countries draped around he venue. In fact, I counted nearly 60 nationalities represented including the rather obvious Union Jack in the second photo. We wondered how Council managed to lay its hand on so many until we realised that UNE flies the flags of every nation providing students to the university on each country's national holiday.
Apart from the flags, the second most noticeable thing was the wearing of traditional dress by our overseas visitors, whether Islamic, or coming from many parts of Asia and Africa. And, as you can see below, there were playground facilities for kids like the inflatable jumping castle and slide. I was surprised by the large number of youngsters in the audience, both locals and from refugee communities like the Yazidis (or Ezidis) who driven out of their Iraqi homeland by Islamic State fighters.
The next thing of note was the huge range of ethnic food-stalls, each housed in a kind of tent. We joined a long queue of people waiting to collect free paper plates, bowls and cutlery, which were supplied after the magical hour of 6 pm when all the food-stalls opened up. Interestingly, all the food was free and must have been funded by Council and UNE. No wonder the event was popular! It's not often one gets a free lunch or tea. Better still was the massive range of ethnic foods to sample. Nations represented I think included: South Asia (e.g. Pakistan, India, and Nepal or Bhutan); Southeast Asia (e.g. Thailand, Indonesia, and Vietnam); East Asia (e.g. China and Japan); West Asia (e.g. Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Turkey); Europe (including France); Africa (I recall South Africa); and even Latin America. Here are some of the 'tents' each displaying one of the nations mentioned above. Has any reader ever eaten Saudi, Iraqi or Pakistani food??
Dot and I ambled around filling our plates with samples of food from a wide range of countries and we agreed that they were delicious. And we ate our meals standing up - many of the seats were taken by the large crowd.
And while we were doing that, performers took the stage to show off national music, songs and dance, much of which was new to us. Not to be entirely out-done by our overseas visitors, one Australian sang country-music songs.
We stood and listened to some performers as they were bathed in the bright light of the setting sun - a fitting end to a very enjoyable event. One of the things I like about Australia is that it is so multicultural that there is much less pressure on migrants to conform to early colonial behaviours and outlooks acquired from Britain and a lesser extent Europe.
This 'international openness' was expressed in another way yesterday when Australia signed off on a new international trade agreement called the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) with 14 other countries. Apart from Australia, other countries included: China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Korea, Malaysia, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, Singapore, Brunei, New Zealand, and Japan. This massive grouping of nations includes (a) 50% of the world's population and (b) c. 30% of global GDP. So, while parts of the world are increasingly disengaging from global integration and going it alone, we're heading in the opposite direction - networking regionally with countries of very different cultures to our own. Why do it? This constellation of countries is defusing conflict, boosting economic growth, and lifting hundreds of millions of people out of poverty. The 21st century has been billed as the Asian century and such strategies as the RCEP are boosting that assessment.
And I'm feeling that I'm leading a very interesting life in this small town of ours.
AS
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