"Belly dance" resources, classes and performances in Edmonton (Alberta, Canada) by Viraj (aka Raj) -- the only professional male belly dancer on the prairies and creator of the VO Fitness Bellydance system. Viraj has been featured in national print, radio, television and an in progress documentary "1001 Performances".
Belly Dance Class Registration ( Edmonton ) is now online
News Last update: June 24, 2008
- Registration Open: Summer 08, 8 weeks Jul15-Sept2, $128, Tues 6:45-8pm Beg1/FitnessBD split class.
- Viraj is gone: June 24-July 10 London-Cairo-London: Planet Egypt June Showcase then Raqia Hassan's Ahlan Wa Sahlan Festival
- May 17-19 ECC: East Coast Classic (Competition), Virginia USA
- Apr 18-27, 2008: International Belly Dance Conference of Canada, Toronto ON
- Placed 3rd in International Level of Egyptian/Turkish Soloist at the 1st World Belly Dance Competition, Seoul, Korea.
- restarted: the proposed documentary (on little ol' me) "1001 Performances" by Northscape Productions jointly with Panacea Entertainment, being filmed for a planned multicultural cable channel, won the Omni Award at HotDocs in Toronto, Apr 2007.
- I'll have more event news about competitions and conference travels.
Weekly Edmonton Belly Dance Shows by Viraj
- Fri 7:15pm, south, solo, Grub Med Ristorante, 17 Fairway Dr is about 119 St, 38 Ave, 436-1988.
- Fri & Saturday 8pm, central, duet, Cosmos Greek Restaurant, 10810-124 St, 455-7474, reservations recommended for Saturdays in fall.
- Saturday 9pm (on call), south, solo, Kasbar (Yianni's bsmt ultra-cool lounge), 10444 82 Ave, 433-6768, call to confirm that I'm performing.
- if you're coming out for dancing please drop me a quick voicemail so I know to look for you 717-8001.
Please Contact for Private Bookings, One-time Workshops, or Pvt Classes
Guiding Values: Innovating, Connecting, Empowerment
- humanistic: connecting/bridging diversity through common-ground; cultural awareness
- artistic/wellness: exploring the beauty of movement and the power of expression.
- gender issues: valuing men for 'soft-skills' versus crude power; valuing women's pride in the power of their sexuality.
- performing: global reach through online promotion, touring and collaboration.
- teaching: fun but practical skill-building; building self-esteem via competence and social networks.
Site Map/Summary
About "Bellydance"
This dance is very misunderstood. Facts to know:
- true nature: IS NOT sexual display but festive entertainment danced by the general population (young/old, women/men) and complex musical, lyrical, technical artform.
- true name: raks sharki or "Eastern dance" in Arabic is commonly known as Oriental dance (Eastern not Chinese vs Occidental/Western).
- role of men: men had significant roles from the present day to centuries past. Currently, many top master teachers are men but I believe more than 99% of practitioners are women (elite, professionals, enthusiasts, hobbyists).
About Viraj
- the only professional male Oriental dancer between Vancouver and Toronto
- formally trained in dance instruction, performance, wellness and
fitness - resume being updated
-
resident performer at Cosmos and Grub Med restaurants
- featured in national print, radio and tv - media content coming
- currently training to audition with Cirque du Soleil and the Bellydance Superstars - promo video, gallery coming
- smoothly translates lighthearted showmanship into a supportive, skill-building, fun journey
- resume upgrade, media appearances and photo gallery still coming.
Men as Cooperators not Dominators
Men, (perhaps in regions with a recent history/culture of adversity), too narrowly define themselves as successful (as men) using one-dimensional terms of power: the money or strength to control and dominate another through compulsion. Despite other, arguably even better, means of influencing others (shared exchange by free choice) men feel that power is what defines them as successful men. Why are men telling themselves to be powerful rather than influential? Why is dominating preferred to cooperating?Free cooperation is a better way to offer value, to contribute, to influence, yet such a culture seems to value men who dominate the most, men who create even less (based on their practical utility) and men who connect/share the least. To me, this is obvious so I'm just going to move on to implications. Why it's bad for men to be valued by narrow definitions.
Once concentrated, men hold all the power tightly for two major reasons, as I see things. First, it is to their advantage. Second, they feel they have nowhere else to go. This is a big problem in society because the power broker wins and another group loses. How: men are corrupted by that power and abuse it (at every level from organizational to personal).
I feel very strongly that when men feel valued for cooperating instead of dominating, the common win-lose arrangement will by replaced by more win-win arrangments. My point is that power imbalances will always exist but if men are supported, they'll see themselves differently, give themselves permission to change, and use/share their power differently for more mutually beneficial outcomes. Everyone wins.