Open Access
American Research Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences
ISSN (Online): 2378-7031
DOI: 10.46568/arjhss
Performing the Swahili Hamziyyah and the Pyeongtaek Nongak: A Comparative Analysis of Community Dance and Rituals.
Abstract
My first and most enduring lessons on per formative events came from the maulidi festival of the Lamu
archipelago, Kenya. Bands of Swahili passed year after year before my eyes during this festival to mark the
anniversary of the birthday of the Prophet Muhammad. In 2014, I came to Korea and in November of the same
year, I managed to attend the Pyeongtaek nongak(also known as pungmul), a widely-transmitted traditional
performance format blending music, dance and theatre. This paper was initiated to compare the performance of
the hamziyyah during the maulidi festival in the Lamu archipelago, Kenya and the nongak, a traditional Korean
music performed by farmers in the Republic of Korea. I give particular attention to the role they play during the
festivals and as a medium which is employed to reinforce values of the Swahili people of the Lamu archipelago
and that of Korean people respectively. This paper illustrates how the hamziyyah and the nongak are performed
during the Lamu maulidi festival and at Gyeongbokgung palace in Seoul and their subsequent transmission. The
performance includes the musical ensemble, the dances, the performers and the latent functions that the
hamziyyah and the nongak provide.