Community archive project Reverberate documents Black Irish migrant experience

Reverberate is an oral history project developed by Éireann and I, a black migrant community archive, in collaboration with members of Galway’s African diaspora.

The project invited Black migrants settled in Galway to recount their journeys to Ireland, their relationship with the city, and to reflect on whether or not they have developed a sense of belonging. It opens on Saturday December 3 in the Galway Arts Centre, with music and performances by Church and Wally Nikita and food by Melting Pot Luck. The exhibition will run until Thursday 22 December.

Reverberate documents the legacies of migration as they happen, giving narrative agency and equal centering to each perspective. The testimonies gathered here come from eight individuals of varying age and origin, whose stories touch on parenting, politics, the effects of the asylum system, and the communities and organisations they have built.

The narrators share obvious commonalities, but in between each story is woven more implicit threads of connection that make evident the ways in which we are all affected by the same global and local tensions that cause people to leave where they are from and build new lives elsewhere.

This project consists of a series of radio broadcasts and a listening library and recording room installed in the Galway Arts Centre. By using oral history as a parallel to African storytelling tradition - which functions to pass past beliefs, counsel, morals, and myths down to new generations - we are seeking to challenge the fixedness of the archive, restructuring it as an active and living space that accommodates multiple voices, that responds, repeats, and echoes between places and perspective. One which invites others to add to the record too.

The listening library invites you to listen, read transcripts and other resources which connect and expand on the subjects shared by the participants. The recording room is offered as an activation of the archive where you can enter to record your own oral history.

The seven recordings will be broadcasted on GOCOM radio, an ethnic minority interest community radio station, and Dublin Digital Radio (ddr ) from December 3 to December 22. They'll also be shared online at www.eireannandiarchive.com

The launch of the exhibition will include a live performance by Church and Wally Nkikita on Saturday December 3 at 2pm and a workshop by Éireann and I: 'Retelling Migrant Stories' on Monday December 12.

Éireann and I is an online community archive consisting of found and donated material which document the lives of Black migrants in Ireland. It's also a migrant memory project, programming events and discussions about community archives, memory work, and agency and autonomy within the public record. It is co-developed by Beulah Ezeugo and Joselle Ntumba.

Beulah Ezeugo is an Igbo curator and researcher. Her work centers on Black postcolonial dreaming, using cultural memory and myth. Her practice is informed by a Social Science background from University College Dublin and an MLitt in Curatorial Practice from Glasgow School of Art and the University of Glasgow.

Joselle Ntumba is a cultural producer of Congolese heritage and was raised in Galway City. Her work centers on memory work and the archive as tools for community engagement. Alongside this, she has a background in health science from Trinity College Dublin.

This project is supported by the Galway Arts Centre through its Artists in Residence programme, 2022 and Galway International Arts Festival through its Elevate programme, 2021. Reverberate was also made possible by contributions from Esther, Noma Mapoma, Church, Wally Nkikita, Precious Martyn, Islammiyah Saudique-Kadejo, Benjamin Enow Oben, and Joselle Ntumba.

 

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