황주연(Irene) 부동산
신민경 부동산
샘 마(Sam Ma) 위니펙 부동산 리얼터
쥴리 손 (Julie Son) - 부동산 전문 컨설턴트 (Re/Max Professionals)
매니토바 브랜든 한인교회에서 담임목사를 청빙합니다
네이션웨스트 보험 - 마틴권
Min ByungGyu 공인회계사
데이빗 최(David Choi) 위니펙 부동산 리얼터

 
캐나다 / 매니토바 소식


Ko사랑닷넷 뉴스 기사는 원문에 충실하여 인명, 도로명, 지역명, 단체명 등 번역 단어 옆에 영어 단어를 함께 표기합니다.
또한 교민 여러분의 영어 표현이나 단어력 향상을 위해서 필요하다고 생각되는 영어 단어 및 숙어 등도 한글 옆에 함께 적으니 참고하시길 바랍니다.

Manitoba 분류

포크로라마(Folklorama) 1주째 민속관 22개 - 어디로 갈까요?

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 Ireland
Ireland
 Tamil
Tamil


 Brazil
Brazil
 
Nayong Pilipino 
Nayong Pilipino


<출처>   위니펙 프리 프레스


1.Africa/CaribbeanGrant Park High School, 450 Nathaniel St.
FOOD
: The jerk chicken ($9) and roti ($7) come highly recommended but this night it's the Jamaican Patty ($3) which is tasty with the requisite spiciness.
DRINK: A Red Stripe beer ($5) is perfect to wash down a spicy dinner, but who can pass up a refreshing rum punch ($5)? Ginger beer and Calypso Punch are nice non-alcoholic alternatives.
SHOW: The rhythmic dancing of the Afro-Caribbean Dancers, accompanied by the Paradize Band, were a feast for the eyes and ears.
DISPLAY: You don't need to hop a plane to tour Africa or the Caribbean to get a feel for the cultures when you can view this extensive and interesting display.
REASON TO GO: Prince Jo-Jo's limbo stage perfomance is amazing and well worth the trip. His finale, where he slithers under four flaming poles set atop beer bottles, brought the house down.
CULTURE SHOCK: A steel drum is not a percussion instrument. It produces different notes, depending on where you strike it.
-- Jim Johnson

2. Brazilian

Heather Curling Club, 120 Youville St.
FOOD: Feijoada pork and black bean stew, plus a vegetarian version. Desserts include mango gelati to cool you, or sweet coconut cake dessert to seduce you. I want for the feijoada, crab cakes, and coconut cake, all for just $15.
DRINK: You can have a Brahma, an ice-cold Brazilian beer "in a bottle shaped like a Brazilian woman," says crackerjack Meire Anne Thorainnson (a Brazilian who married an Icelander). But for me, it was go wild or go home with a capirinha (sugarcane liquor) and lime ($5.25).
DISPLAYS: Learn about Brazilian special imports such as the famous acai berry health tonic. Then get personal instruction in making capirinha using a pestle, sugar and lemon.
SHOW: An amazing percussion, samba, acrobatics and capoeira martial arts dance show from Viva Brasil entertainment, a mixture of local and international entertainers.
BEST REASON TO GO: Witness the amazing hand-walking athlete in the martial arts troupe, dancing upside down across the stage.
CULTURE SHOCK: Brazilian dance is lusty: muscled-bound martial arts-style dancing to entertain the ladies and carnival damsels in sparkly bits and feather headdresses shaking it until they glisten for the guys.
-- Maureen Scurfield

3. Portuguese

Portuguese Centre, 1080 Wall St.
FOOD: Deluxe seafood platter $17, chicken dinner or pork and clams $12.My pick? A platter of three six-inch sea-salted sardines grilled by the beer tent with bread and salad, so lip-smacking good four hungry guys gobbled 72 of them on opening night ($5).
DRINK: Select from Portuguese beers Sagres or Super Bock ($5), dry white Aveleda wine (vinho verde) or a medium-dry red wine called Charamba, plus some sweet port. I went for the Aveleda ($4.25 a glass or $20 a bottle).
DISPLAYS: See the history of the Portuguese coming to Canada, starting in the late 1400s with large ships full of tiny boats fishing off the coasts of "new found land".
SHOW: Charming preschoolers to accomplished adult dancers doing Portuguese folk numbers in jewel-coloured costumes, and a duo singing in the lyrical Portuguese language. Overheard: "What are they saying? Who cares, it sounds great."
BEST REASON TO GO: Warm hospitality in a smaller venue, and a beer tent with BBQ grills for lingering outdoors with friends.
CULTURE SHOCK: You'd swear Tina Fey was helping run this show -- VIP hostess Dina Oliveira is a dead ringer for her.
-- Maureen Scurfield

4. Chilean

Notre Dame Recreational Centre, 271 ave de la Cathedrale
FOOD: Empanadas, chacarero, pastel de chocio as well as amazing torta de mil hojas ("thousand layer cake") for dessert. My pick? The flaky fresh combo plate of empanadas ($9.00).
DRINK: Chilean wine punch, Pisco sour, spirits and soft drinks. Borgoña sweetened with strawberries ($4.50) is a must.
DISPLAYS: Well organized display of postcards, pottery, stamps and crafts from various geographical regions as well as mysterious Easter Island.
SHOW: The Chile Lucha y Canta dance troupe and live band celebrate Chile's bicentennial as well as surviving one of its most deadly earthquakes last winter.
BEST REASON TO GO: A live band with vocals adds authentic folkloric flavour.
CULTURE SHOCK: As the world's thinnest country, Chile measures a mere 65 kilometres across near capital city Santiago.
-- Holly Harris

5. Croatian Zagreb

West Kildonan Collegiate, 101 Ridgecrest
FOOD: Lots of homemade delights by members of the local Croatian community. I had a tough time choosing between the meaty cabbage rolls ($3.25) and the succulently grilled shish kebab ($3.25).
DRINK: There's plum brandy, but I went for the Karlovacko beer - refreshing and light ($6 a half litre.)
DISPLAY: Check out the set of tamburica (lute-like instruments) and be sure to chat with friendly, knowledgeable Igor - a font of information on everything Croatian.
SHOW: Croatian Dawn, a tamburica band, plays live music throughout most of the energetic dance performances. Wait for the dancer who balances a bottle of wine on his head as he dances!
BEST REASON TO GO: Ambassadors and volunteers of all ages go out of their way to make you feel welcome.
CULTURE SHOCK: Who would think you could make such beautiful artwork with simple straw?
-- Holly Harris

6. Cuba Va! Tropicana

Billy Mosienko Arena, 709 Keewatin St.
FOOD: Try a platter of puerco asado (roast pork) or chicken with black beans and rice and a basic green salad for $9; it doesn't taste particularly exotic, but it does come in generous portions.
DRINK: You're on Havana time now, so make sure to leisurely sip your light, soda-sparkling mojito ($5) while relaxing in a white zoot suit and fanning yourself with your Panama hat. What, no zoot suit? Well, at least you have other choices in cocktails, such as the cola-based Cuba Libre.
DISPLAYS: The souvenir stand, featuring beautiful hand-painted Cuban fans and CDs of the show's performers, is the most interesting.
SHOW: You know what to expect from a Latin dance show, and you won't be disappointed: this production is hot, hotter, hottest, with almost a full hour of hip-shaking Latin dancing from supermodels in sequin bodysuits and their dashing dance partners. If that's not sizzling enough for you, just wait 'til you swoon over De La Rosa, a sultry singer who was born in Cuba and moved to Winnipeg last year.
BEST REASON TO GO: After the show, a nimble-fingered woman hand-rolls a cigar from a bag of fine Cuban tobacco. You can buy the fruits of her labour for $15, or $3 for a tiny cigarillo.
CULTURE SHOCK: Despite the seemingly endless rows of tables across the hockey rink, there was still nowhere to sit when the show started.
-- Melissa Martin

7. DOTC First Nations

Riddell Hall, 515 Portage Ave.
FOOD: Terrific selection of traditional and updated favourites courtesy of Diversity Catering's Executive Chef Ben Kramer. Notable feature was the tableware - 100 per cent compostable dishes and cutlery. I tied into the savoury elk smokies served with mashed potatoes and fried onions for $10.
DRINK: All non-alcoholic.
DISPLAY: Crafts, mostly jewellery, souvenirs and moccasins. Be sure to pick up the 44-page program that is chock full of information about the Seven Sacred Teachings and more.
SHOW: Ray "Coco" Stevenson, doubling as MC and singer/drummer, provides interesting background on the history behind each dance performed by the Walking Wolf Singers and Dancers.
BEST REASON TO GO: The show - stunning regalia combined with grace and skill. Coupled with the delicious food, this is an impressive debut for this new pavilion.
CULTURE SHOCK: Brian Clyne's astounding hoop dance. This international performer from the Peguis First Nation never stops moving as he creates a multitude of creatures.
-- Gwenda Nemerofsky

8. Hungarian

St. James Civic Centre, 2055 Ness Ave.
FOOD: Plenty of countries make cabbage rolls and sausage, but it's hard to top a Hungarian plate of both, especially with a slab of langos (deep-fried bread). Yummy! No traditional goulash on the menu this year but the pork stew with dumplings ($8) is very good.
DRINK: If you like brandy, you've come to the right place. Try a glass of Unicum, but for heaven's sake, sip it! Ergi Bikaver proved to be a very nice dry red.
DISPLAYS: Hand-painted Herend porcelain pieces in display cases in the concourse, and assorted pottery, folk art and photos inside the pavilion.
SHOW: The Karpat Hungarian Folk Dancers of Winnipeg put on a high-energy, high-kicking performance, with lots of leg and boot slapping tossed in.
BEST REASON TO GO: The fascinating bottle dance, where smiling women in intricately embroidered dresses spin around the floor with bottles balanced precariously atop their heads. Will one come crashing to the floor?
CULTURE SHOCK: The pavilion at its new home in the St. James Civic Centre. We'll have to get used to that.
-- Jim Johnson

9. Indo Tropical Paradise

Churchill High School, 510 Hay St.
FOOD: The cinnamon-laced cassava pone ($2) is a sweet gelled treat. But for more fire, turn up the heat with classics such as roti or a flaky veggie, chicken or beef patty ($3) with a spice that sneaks up on you...
DRINK: ...then cool down your tastebuds with a rich and fruity mango rum punch, featuring Guyana's own El Dorado rum ($4.75).
DISPLAYS: A simple table of spices and artifacts. But the education comes straight from the gracious volunteers, who are eager to explain how Indo-Caribbean traditions evolved in the almost 170 years since Indians first arrived on the islands.
SHOW: Starts with a bang - literally, thanks to the whomp and crash of a group of drummers - and winds through a variety of island and Bollywood-inspired dances.
BEST REASON TO GO: The island vibe is bumping at this laid-back pavilion: the food is tasty, the attitude is casual, and the friendly service will set you smiling.
CULTURE SHOCK: The Churchill High gym can get hot - real hot. The host joked they were bringing the authentic Caribbean experience to the venue. Come ready with short sleeves.
-- Melissa Martin

10. Ireland-Irish Pavilion

Holy Cross Gym - 290 Dubuc Street
FOOD: From the folks who invented meat'n'potatoes fare: heaps of hearty Irish stew or a creamy shepherd's pie for $5.50. Oh, and try a slab of bright green velvet cake for $2.50... you'll feel left out if you don't.
DRINK: An expected selection of stout Irish beers ($5 to $5.50). Even more delightful: the whiskey snug, a wood bar attended by two genial Irish guys who really, really like whiskey. They're on a mission to make you like it too.
DISPLAYS: Lots to see, hear, and do: in the spacious basement, tap your toes to a live-music jam, learn a few words of Gaelic, and help your kids build, decorate and thump their very own pizza-box bodhran.
SHOW: Lords of the dance, indeed: a veritable legion of fleet-footed step-dancers whirls through dazzling Irish routines to the tune of recorded and live music with an able Irish band. Even repeated technical problems on opening night didn't stop the music: the band just picked up where the recording died, and the plucky dancers hardly missed a beat.
BEST REASON TO GO: To see what happens when you mention "Jack Daniels" to the guys at the whiskey snug. Hint: it involves warding off the demons of cheap bourbon.
CULTURE SHOCK: Get here early: the venue is both cozy and popular, leaving many to squeeze along the walls until a seat became available. Luckily, eagle-eyed volunteers will help you find a spot.
-- Melissa Martin

11. Italian

Caboto Centre, 1055 Wilkes Ave.
FOOD: All your favourite Italian foods, but you can't beat the cannoli from De Luca's - crunchy on the outside and creamy filling to die for at $3.75
DRINK: Italian soft drinks, Italian and domestic beers. Chinotto is a taste worth acquiring - a little like an herbal Coke without the sweetness ($2.75).
DISPLAY: This year's theme is "Che Sarà Sarà" - a tribute to Italian immigrant pioneers. The display pays homage to the over 440,000 Italian immigrants who came to Canada between 1950-1971. SHOW: Musical theatre and dance with superb acting and singing by a cast of seven talented performers. Over a family dinner, Nonno (Grandpa) and Nonna (Grandma) tell their story of coming to Canada to their grandchildren.
BEST REASON TO GO: You won't see a better family-oriented show at any pavilion.
CULTURE SHOCK: No shock. This pavilion runs like a well-oiled machine. Parking attendants, an outdoor patio, cappuccino bar and strolling musicians -- they've thought of everything.
-- Gwenda Nemerofsky

12. Mexican

Eric Coy Arena, 535 Oakdale Drive
FOOD: Traditional tacos and tostados plus Posole, a soup featuring hearty chunks of pork and tender hominy. The corn tortillas are made on-site and are much better than those tasteless disks available at the grocery store.
DRINK: The Most Interesting Man in the World would love this -- rows of Dos Equis in the cooler, along with other Mexican beers like Corona and Sol. This night, though, it's tequila. Salud!
DISPLAYS: This is Mexico's bicentennial and there's plenty to see of the culture and history of the country.
SHOW: Yowza! The colourful Balet Folklorico Sinaloense direct from Mazatlan put on a dynamite show of high energy, stomping dances, often involving fancier footwork than any Riverdance.
BEST REASON TO GO: The Mexican community in Manitoba is small (3,300 people) so this is a rare chance to talk to some ex-pats working the pavilion about their homeland.
CULTURE SHOCK: The Mexican people really want our business. There are all kinds of pamphlets and info available on your first/next trip down Mexico way.
-- Jim Johnson

13. Paraguay

Maples Multiplex Arena, 454 Adsum Drive
FOOD: A delightful array of homemade goodies, all of them yummy and reasonably priced: don't miss the plump beef empanadas ($1.50), the chewy and cheesy sopa paraguaya ($1.50), and whatever you do, make sure to leave room for the soft and sinfully scrumptious alfajores cookies ($1). The beef asado is uncommonly juicy, served with sides for $12.
DRINK: All the basics are here, but for a real kick, try the potent Paraguayan sugar-cane rum, Aristocrata, mixed with grapefruit juice after the Paraguayan style ($5).
DISPLAYS: A small stand of pre- and post-colonial gowns and a whole lot of soccer jerseys and soccer balls, all of them for sale. Guess what Paraguay's favourite sport is!
SHOW: The six-piece Ballet Andanzas dance group are troopers, swapping costumes and styles to present pre-colonial tribal dances, a post-conquistador party, and a Carnivale extravaganza, all in one night. The bottle dance, wherein a very brave (and strong-necked) star stacks up to 15 bottles on her head, is a showstopper.
BEST REASON TO GO: Steinbach's Pay Me Foods brought a whole emporium of Paraguayan food and drink to sell at the pavilion, including whole kilograms of the country's wonderful yerba mate drink for a mere $4.50 to $6.50.
CULTURE SHOCK: No, you didn't accidentally walk into the Steinbach Pavilion. The program is full of names like Wiebe, Penner and Klassen - many part of a vibrant old community of Mennonite Paraguayans, who quietly keep deep connections with Manitoba's own Mennonite community.
-- Melissa Martin

14. Canadien-français

Centre culturel franco-manitobain 340 Provencher Blvd.
FOOD: Lots of traditional choices, but check out the family pack. It feeds six hungry people for a very reasonable $32. Includes: tortière, bread, coleslaw, six sugar tarts and pop It is also available for take-out.
DRINK: Caribou "fortified" wine, beer. For me, it was a toss up between Caribou ($4.25) or a tamer, non-alcoholic maple coffee ($3).
DISPLAYS: Soldiers in dramatic costumes from Western Canada's only French-language living history group La Compagnie de la Vérendrye proudly share tales from New France.
SHOW: Dare yourself to sit still for this one. L'Ensemble folklorique de la Rivière-Rouge's Roots to Today show takes you on a jig through time.
BEST REASON TO GO: Experience the competitive thrill of the Red River Jig accompanied by 15-year old fiddle dynamo Emilie Chartier fronting a live band.
CULTURE SHOCK: The ever practical "ceinture fléchée" (traditional sash) was used not just to hold pants up, but also to carry loads and contain hernias.
-- Holly Harris

15. Nayong Pilipino

Tec Voc High School - 1555 Wall Street
FOOD: Standard Asian steam-table fare: noodles (in this case, the thin and translucent pancit noodles with chunks of chicken for $3.99), egg rolls, and spring rolls.
DRINK: The light, refreshing San Miguel stubby is imported straight from the Philippines ($4.50), but the most interesting bevvy is good for the whole family: a can of crisp, unsweetened coconut juice refreshes for $2.25.
DISPLAYS: A small room of Filipino artifacts and posters showing scenes so beautiful, you'd book a ticket then and there if you could. Plus, a man is on-hand to write your name in the Philippines' rare and pre-colonial Baybayin script.
SHOW: Vivid storytelling and gleeful games from the vivacious Kayumanggi Philippine Performing Arts troupe. The finale performance, featuring a bamboo-pole game -- picture something like jump-rope, but more rhythmic and more dangerous - is thrilling.
BEST REASON TO GO: Check out the wild party wagon. A colourful Mitsubishi bus - imported from the Philippines - has a built-in karaoke machine bumping with Filipino pop songs.
CULTURE SHOCK: The show is held in Tec Voc's fixed-seat auditorium, so don't count on grabbing more food or drinks during the performance. Not that you'll want to miss a minute anyway.
-- Melissa Martin

16. Romanian

Canad Inns Garden City, 2100 McPhillips Street
FOOD: Romanian sausages, fresh cucumber salad, Chicken Dracula, Romanian Beef and Vegetable stew and more. Be sure to finish with the apple torte ($4.50).
DRINK: Ursus or Becks beer, Feteasca Negrea (a Rumanian red wine), Feteasca alba (white wine), but you can't go wrong with Romanian plum brandy at $4.50 a shot.
DISPLAYS: Traditional Romanian crafts and food, including pureed chestnuts.
SHOW: The show features a variety of Romanian songs and folk dances as well as a couple of musical numbers by Pavillion youth Ambassador Damien Eugene Dragne playing the accordion.
BEST REASON TO GO: Dragne is a very good musician with a delightful stage presence. The locale also provides for a more intimate atmosphere -- and it's air conditioned.
CULTURE SHOCK: In Romania, vampires ears are a gustatory delicacy. Visitors can sample the deep fried, salted, garlic-seasoned bread.
-- Myron Love

17. Russian

Indo Canadian Arts & Cultural Centre, 479 St. Mary's Rd.
FOOD: Cabbage pie, borscht, blintzes, meatballs. I chowed down on the delicate pelmeni (meat dumplings) with sour cream. They are pure heaven and only $5 for a generous helping.
DRINK: Russian and domestic beers, Kvass - a fermented bread drink and, of course, vodka and other spirits. Try the Kompot ($1.50), a light-tasting non-alcoholic drink made from various fruits.
DISPLAY: Items found in a Russian kitchen, a good selection of amber jewellery and every kind of chocolate and candy you'd ever want.
SHOW: You'll recognize the tune as you watch the regal Ksenia Starikova and dance partner, exotic-looking Artur Aleksanyan in the opening Kalinka. Limpopo, from California, provides the music. Vocalist Marina Zhuravleva knows how to work a crowd.
BEST REASON TO GO: Great food and lots of it.
CULTURE SHOCK: A visual presentation running beside the stage started promisingly with scenes of Russia and photos of favourite dishes but then deteriorated into a sponsor-recognition video of business cards and ads for sewer and drain cleaning.
-- Gwenda Nemerofsky

18. Serbian Beograd

St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Church, 580 Talbot Ave.
FOOD: New this year: wallet-friendly family meal deals ($6.50, $7 and $7.50). Baked stuffed peppers, cabbage rolls (sarma) and the very tasty cevape (meat rolls) are all nice appetizers. Save room for dessert; there are 14 different pastries.
DRINK: Niksic and Nektar imported beers ($5), and traditional plum brandy ($5.50). If you're brave enough, try the Manastirka brandy.
SHOW: Pay attention to the fast-paced St. Sava Serbian Dance Group Beograd. You may be next up on the stage to try their steps at the end of the show.
DISPLAY: A six-city pictorial tour of Serbia is fantastic, as is the church housing the display. Check out the Gusle, a Serbian fiddle used in story-telling at family gatherings.
BEST REASON TO GO: Is this a pavilion or somebody's house party? The atmosphere is intimate and the hosts welcoming.
CULTURE SHOCK: The MC is a kilt-wearing Scot. Turns out he married into the culture.
-- Jim Johnson

19. Sudanese

Sudanese Community Resource Centre, 129 Dagmar St
FOOD: Sambosa, green mullaah stew, fowl madammas, and ta'amiya spiced with dill and coriander. I went for the Mahschi stuffed green peppers, which melt in your mouth (large $7.50/small $3.50).
DRINK: You can always bet on Fort Garry ale to quash your thirst ($4.50).
DISPLAYS: Modest display includes mahogany woodcarvings and sweet incense burned at weddings. Make sure you check out local artist Hanan Imam's delicate watercolours and oil paintings.
SHOW: Four dance tribes celebrate happiness with hypnotic rhythms and ritualistic fervor. If you've never experienced Sudanese rap make sure you get there early for King Deng and Little Ash's warm up act.
BEST REASON TO GO: The raw energy of a tightly knit community officially launching its first year at Folklorama.
CULTURE SHOCK: Who knew there are over 600 different tribes and more than 100 languages spoken in Sudan?
-- Holly Harris

20. Tamil

Burton Cummings Community Centre, 960 Arlington St.
FOOD: A wide selection of samosas, spicy curries, veggie rolls, chutneys. A combo plate with generous portions includes meat curry, rice and two veggies makes choosing much easier ($10).
DRINK: All non-alcoholic. I want for the mango juice ($2).
DISPLAYS: Photo exhibit includes architecture and figures from ancient Tamil history; musical instruments and costumes. Have your name scribed in Tamil for $1.00
SHOW: Multi-generational dancers in eye-popping silk costumes perform traditional dances. A nightly sari demonstration includes a free sari giveaway to an audience volunteer.
BEST REASON TO GO: Gracious hospitality and terrific food.
CULTURE SHOCK: The Great Temple of Tanjore, built in 1010 AD, is topped by a 60-ton granite rock that prevents shadows from falling on the ground.
-- Holly Harris

21. Ukraine-Kyiv

Maples Collegiate, 1330 Jefferson Ave.
FOOD: Good ol' Manitoban comfort food: tender varenyky (perogies), a pink and hearty borscht and kolbassa with sauerkraut. Best bet: grab a platter that also includes cabbage rolls, rye bread and dill pickle for $8.50.
DRINK: Mostly your standard spirits and domestics, but there is an imported Ukrainian beer for $5.50.
DISPLAYS: Gee, think these folks have Ukrainian pride? Three huge rooms of displays, including an easter-egg making demonstration and mannequins in traditional garb frolicking on a "hillside" made of real grass. There's even a model interior of a Winnipeg Ukrainian church.
SHOW: It changes every night, but bet on a whirlwind of heel-kicking, skirt-spinning Ukrainian dance, plaintive folk songs and bright-eyed young performers. The show-closing hopak dance is always a crowd pleaser with its high-flying, leg-flailing antics.
BEST REASON TO GO: Who could pick just one? From start to finish, this pavilion spares no effort: from the line of jolly babas who greet you at the door to the incredible pysanka mosaics from Dave Wasylyshen.
CULTURE SHOCK: There's no shortage of Ukrainian dance and music groups in Manitoba: there's so many, in fact, that this show features a new line-up of artists every night, sometimes changing more than once a night. Experience tells us the most exhilarating shows will come late in the week... and they'll be jam-packed.
-- Melissa Martin

22. Warsaw-Poland

Polish Combatants Association Branch 13, 1364 Main St.
FOOD: Warsaw-style hunter's stew, breaded pork cutlet, roasted pork hock, kielbasa (hot sausage), golabki (cabbage roll) and Polish perogies. My choice for desert was a crepe with cottage cheese topped with berry sauce and icing sugar ($3.50).
DRINK: Polish beers, spirits and liqueuers. I tossed back a strong shot of Wisniowka ($4.25).
DISPLAYS: Polish wood carvings, Baltic stone jewelry, recent paintings by Winnipeg Polish artists Margaret Switala and Wioletta Mikos-Los.
SHOW: The award-winning Iskry Polish Dance Ensemble and students from the Iskry Polish School of Dance presented a series of dances from different regions of Poland and ranging from peasant dances to a formal ballroom series with the ladies in long gowns and white gloves and men in military uniforms.
BEST REASON TO GO: The dancing is outstanding.
CULTURE SHOCK: Next year, Warsaw-Poland is moving its pavilion to the Glenwood Community Centre in St. Boniface after 40 years at its current location in the north end.
-- Myron Love



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이번 일요일(내일)부터 포크로라마(Folklorama) 2주째 축제기간으로 1주일간 한국관(Korean Pavilion)이 개관을 합니다.
전체 9,537 / 9 페이지
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