Indonesian @ Chicago, Midwest Region dan sekitarnya: 19-20 MAY SKOKIE FESTIVAL

Friday, May 04, 2012

19-20 MAY SKOKIE FESTIVAL

Click for Skokie Culture Fest website

22th ANNUAL SKOKIE FESTIVAL OF CULTURES
DATE: May 19 & 20, 2012
TIME: 11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
VENUE: Oakton Park, 4701 West Oakton St., Skokie, Illinois



INDONESIA joins on celebrating and promoting a better understanding among different ethnics and cultural backgrounds

Grand Opening & Flag Raising Ceremony: May 19, 2012; 12:35 p.m.
(Please gather in the Auditorium Hall)

Cultural booth: Indonesian Consulate General in Chicago
Contacts: Redo Ferdiansyah (redo_f@yahoo.com)

Indonesian Dance Performances:
Outside Stage:
May 19, 2012; 5:55 p.m
2 Dances by: Indonesian Performing Arts of Chicago
contacts: Wayan Mulyati (niwayanm@gmail.com)
1 Dance by: Indonesian Dance of Illinois
contacts: Ngurah Kertayuda (kertayuda@yahoo.com)

Interactive (Inside) Stage: May 19, 2012; 6:35 p.m
Indonesian Dance of Illinois - contacts: Ngurah Kertayuda (kertayuda@yahoo.com)

Participating Cultures:
Armenian, Assyrian, Baha'i, Bangladeshi, Belizean, Chinese, Croatian, Cuban, Danish, Filipino, Finnish, French, German, Haitian, Hellenic (Greek), Indian, Indonesia, Irish, Israeli, Jamaican/West Indian, Japanese, Korean, Lebanese, Luxembourgian, Mexican, Norwegian, Pakistan, Polish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, United States.

Further information in Indonesian Community, please contact:
I Nyoman Mahartayasa (mahartayasa@gmail.com); Kus Folkers (kus.marc@prodigy.net); Lucy Kusumo (mbaklucy@yahoo.com); Roosy Miller (pakmiller@hotmail.com); Martino Tangkar (mtangkar@yahoo.com)



About the Village of Skokie
The Village of Skokie, Illinois, located 16 miles northwest of downtown Chicago and 12 miles east of O'Hare International Airport, provides high-quality government services to the over 63,000 residents and 2,400 businesses that call Skokie their home. Skokie covers 10.2 square miles of land and is bordered by the Villages of Glenview and Wilmette on the north, the Village of Lincolnwood and the City of Chicago (West Rogers Park and Edgebrook neighborhoods) on the south, the Villages of Morton Grove and Niles on the west and the City of Evanston on the east. Twice-weekly refuse collection, a highly engineered Storm-Water Runoff Control System and sidewalk snow plowing are some of the many unique Village programs that enhance Skokie residents' quality of life. Superior municipal services together with the nationally acclaimed Skokie Park District, superb Skokie Public Library, and preeminent North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in Skokie, exceptional Skokie Northshore Sculpture Park and outstanding school districts make Skokie an excellent place to live. The Village is a recipient of a Governor's Hometown Award and has received "All America City" finalist distinction from the National Civic League.

The Village of Skokie has a rich cultural heritage as well. The first settlers were immigrants, primarily from Germany and Luxembourg, seeking a prime area to relocate their families. When originally incorporated in 1888, the Village was known as Niles Centre. Historians estimate that around 1910 the spelling was changed to Niles Center. By the late 1930s, a campaign began to change the community's name, primarily due to confusion caused by the neighboring Village of Niles and the fact that both towns are within Niles Township. On November 15, 1940, after several years' debate over a new name and a referendum to authorize the name change, the community became the Village of Skokie. Since then, the Village has enjoyed tremendous population, cultural and commercial growth. The Village's rich heritage continues to grow as members of many ethnic and cultural backgrounds choose to call Skokie home. Each May since 1991 the two-day Skokie Festival of Cultures celebrates the heritage of the residents of Skokie. Flags from participating Festival of Cultures countries that belong to the United Nations and are recognized by the United States State Department are flown throughout the year on a rotating basis at the Skokie Northshore Sculpture Park’s Flags of Nations display.

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