All posts tagged: Crocodiles

Carters’ cries, lullabies and tales of errant crocodiles: Lero Lero and the battle for Sicily’s soul | Folk music

Carters’ cries, lullabies and tales of errant crocodiles: Lero Lero and the battle for Sicily’s soul | Folk music

‘What do I do now that I no longer have my mother?” Lero Lero sing on Com’haiu a Fari, the opening track of their self-titled debut album. “If I still had my mother, I would not love you.” What may sound like the kind of honest self-reckoning a modern songwriter has dragged out of therapy sessions is actually a traditional Sicilian folk text once sung by a washerwoman, reimagined here through three voices modelled on Sicilian Settimana Santa polyphonies. For this Palermo collective, maternal loss is also metaphor: symbolic of Sicily’s ruptured cultural inheritance, which they recover through archival labour songs, carters’ cries and lullabies, then reshape through electronics and microtonal instrumentation. In the Italian imagination, Sicily has long been more than the island at the country’s southern edge. It has functioned as a symbolic South, carrying fantasies of archaic beauty and rural authenticity alongside associations with poverty, criminality and backwardness. Its culture is often romanticised and patronised at once. Alessio Bondí (left) plays his Palermitan guitar with Lero Lero. Photograph: Giulia Parlato Lero Lero’s …

Floods Push Crocodiles Into Mozambican Towns as Health Concerns Rise

Floods Push Crocodiles Into Mozambican Towns as Health Concerns Rise

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — As floods ravage Mozambique, crocodiles are appearing in submerged towns and responsible for at least three deaths. In the town of Xai-Xai, the provincial capital of Gaza province and one of the worst-affected areas in the country’s south, authorities have warned residents of heightened crocodile risks as floodwaters spread and evacuations to higher ground continue. Torrential rains and severe flooding across parts of southern Africa over the past month have killed more than 100 people in Mozambique, South Africa and Zimbabwe, destroying thousands of homes and damaging infrastructure such as roads, bridges, schools and health facilities. Of the 13 people reported dead from the floods in Mozambique, three were killed by crocodiles, authorities said. “The river levels are rising and are reaching urban areas or heavily populated areas,” Paola Emerson, head of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Mozambique, said this week after visiting the town. “So the crocodiles that are in the Limpopo river in this case are able to get into populated areas that are …