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Love's Troubadours

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Welcome to Love's Troubadours, a Lorraine Hansberry-inspired novel series about people learning and living as they love. Ananda Kiamsha Madelyn Leeke is the author of the series.  Click here to find out how it was made: www.lovestroubadours.com/id7.html.

The first book in the Love's Troubadours' series is entitled Love's Troubadours - Karma: Book One (iUniverse, Inc. - August 2007).  It tells the story of Karma Francois, a thirtysomething Oakland-born BoHo B.A.P. (Bohemian Black American Princess) with Louisiana and urban debutante flair. The novel begins with Karma's life in an uproar. Her relationships and the museum curator career that she struggled to form in New York City have crumbled, leaving no viable options to rebuild. Relocating to Washington, DC, Karma struggles with denial, depression, and debt. A lack of full-time employment opportunities forces her to craft a gypsy existence as a Jill of Many Trades: yoga teacher, art consultant, and freelance curator at Howard University Gallery of Art. Unable and unwilling to appreciate these jobs as gifts, she wallows in a pool of lost identity-and doesn't see a way to keep from drowning.
When she looks in the mirror, Karma sees a woman whose choices have dishonored her true character. Now, for the first time in her life, Karma must learn to see herself for who she really is.  

Love's Troubadours - Karma: Book One is available on Amazon.com for $20.95.  To purchase a copy, click on the link below.

http://www.amazon.com/Loves-Troubadours-Karma-Book-One/dp/0595440819/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/002-2834089-1615222?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1192066805&sr=8-1

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Before you leave the Love's Troubadours web site do Seven things:

1) Sign the guestbook at the bottom of the page.

2) Explore BAP Living, a social networking site for women of African descent who share similar life experiences as the main character Karma in Love's Troubadours - Karma: Book One. Visit http://baplivingforbapsandebw.ning.com.

3) Tune into BAP Living Radio, a radio program that airs on the first Sunday of each month on Talkshoe.com. It features shows that discuss issues relevant to the lives of women of African descent mentioned in Love's Troubadours - Karma: Book One. Topics of discussion include self-love, self-care, spirituality, yoga, fashion, mental health, health and wellness, finances, music, culture, gender, race, community service, entrepreneurialism, and so much more. Visit www.talkshoe.com/tc/18598 to listen to recordings of the live broadcast.

4) Read Marc Hopkins' "Writer's Block" article that was featured in Prince George's Suite Magazine (www.pgsuite.com).  It discusses Love's Troubadours - Karma: Book One (www.lovestroubadours.com) and its connection to Prince George's County, Maryland. The article also shares information about Ananda's childhood in Landover and Mitchellville, Maryland, and work with Smith Farm Center for Healing and the Arts (www.smithfarm.com) at Howard University Hospital (www.huhealthcare.com). Click here to read the article: http://kiamshacom.blogspot.com/2008/10/great-news-ananda-featured-in-pg-suite.html.

5) Learn how Ananda became an artist in a media blast from the past.  Click here to read the article entitled "Magic Hands" that was published in the November 2001 issue of Heart and Soul Magazine: http://kiamshacom.blogspot.com/2008/10/how-i-became-artist-media-blast-from.html. Ananda co-wrote the article with Juvita Layne Abrams.

6) Read Amy Alexander's "Om, Sweet Om" article that was featured on the Washington Post's TheRoot.com.  It features Ananda and Love's Troubadours - Karma: Book One. Alexander's article discusses how African Americans use yoga to release their stress. Click here to read the article -www.theroot.com/id/47356. Alexander is the Alfred A. Knobler Fellow at The Nation Institute. She is currently writing a book about race and media. 

7) Bookmark where you can find Love's Troubadours and Ananda's social media projects on the web. See the list of sites below.

-Official Love's Troubadours Site - www.lovestroubadours.com
-Love's Troubadours Apparel and Products - www.cafepress.kiamshacom

-Love's Troubadours YouTube Videos - www.youtube.com/kiamshaleeke 

-Love's Troubadours on Myspace - www.myspace.com/lovestroubadours

-Ananda on Facebook - www.new.facebook.com/profile.php?id=712231678

-Ananda on Twitter - http://twitter.com/anandaleeke

-Ananda on Utterz - www.utterz.com/AnandaLeeke08

-Ananda on Flckr (photos) - www.flickr.com/photos/anandaleeke/

-Ananda's Poetic Memoir Blog- http://kiamshacom.blogspot.com

-Ananda's Yoga Business Blog - http://kgyoga.blogspot.com

-Ananda's Yoga Meetup Group - http://yoga.meetup.com/584

-Ananda on Red Room: Where the Writers Are -www.redroom.com/member/anandaleeke

-Ananda on SMITH Mag's Six-Word Memoir Network - www.smithmag.net/community/people.php/Ananda_Leeke

-Ananda on Blogher - www.blogher.com/haystackprofile/viewprofile/anandaleeke

-BAP Living Social Networking Site - http://baplivingforbapsandebw.ning.com

-BAP Living Radio - www.talkshoe.com/tc/18598

-BAP Living Facebook Group - http://www.new.facebook.com/group.php?gid=15124364305

-BAP Living Myspace Group - http://groups.myspace.com/bapliving

-Go Green Sangha Social Networking Site - http://gogreensangha.ning.com

-Go Green Sangha Radio - www.talkshoe.com/tc/21325

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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Celebrate Alice Coltrane's Birthday in August and Her Connection to Love's Troubadours

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Alice Coltrane
www.alicecoltrane.org


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Blessings All,

Alice Coltrane was born on August 27, 1937.  She shared her musical gifts as an organist, harpist, and pianist.  Alice married John Coltrane in 1965. After John died in 1967, Alice recorded her own music for Impulse! records and collaborated with Pharoah Sanders and Carlos Santana. She was also a devotee of Swami Satchidananda and the Hindu saint Satya Sai Baba. In 1975, Alice established the Vedanta Center, an ashram in California as a center for her spiritual activities. She died in 2007.

Journey in Satchidananda was and remains my favorite Alice Coltrane CD. I discovered it in 2004 during a time when I was questioning many things in my life. Alice's music and spiritual practice helped me find my way back to my higher self. She helped me see myself as Ananda. Through Alice's music, I learned how Eastern spirituality, music, yoga, and meditation influenced the life, creativity, and spirituality that she shared with her husband. It opened my spirit, heart, mind, and body to the life I currently live as an artist, writer, yoga teacher, and Reiki Master practitioner. Click on the following link to see a YouTube video of a 1978 interview of Alice in concert in Bombay, India: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgqimZjJZ3U.


In 2006, my sistalove friend Shantam Anand and I drove to Newark, New Jersey to see Alice perform with her son Ravi Coltrane. There are no words to describe the power and presence of such a beautiful soul. Her devotion to Spirit manifested in each composition she lovingly offered to the audience. LOVE was the only vibration we could feel in her presence. Shantam and I sat mesmerized with tears rolling down our faces for most of that magical evening. We knew then that it was a lifetime experience we would always cherish.

Alice's Journey in Satchidananda CD is featured in Love's Troubadours - Karma: Book One. It happens to be one of the CDs that the main character Karma Francois listens to in the prologue.  Karma's father introduced her to the music of Alice and John Coltrane.  To learn more about Alice, visit www.alicecoltrane.org.

Enjoy August!

Many Blessings,

Ananda
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Monday, July 7, 2008

Celebrating the Life of John Coltrane and His Connection to Love's Troubadours

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Painting from St. John Will-I-AM
Coltrane Church



On July 17, 1967, jazz musician Ohnedaruth John William Coltrane made his life transition due to liver cancer. He was born on September 23, 1926. Ohnedaruth is the Sanskrit spiritual name that Coltrane adopted. It means compassion. For more information, visit
www.johncoltrane.com.

Coltrane's A Love Supreme CD, creative spirit, marriage to Alice Coltrane (www.alicecoltrane.org), and spirituality play a major role in Love's Troubadours - Karma: Book One. Karma, Love's Troubadours' main character, spends time listening to John and Alice Coltrane's music. Her father Eugene adored Coltrane's music and spiritual practice. He made certain that Karma attended the Saint John Will-I-AM Coltrane Church in San Francisco. The novel contains scenes from Karma's church attendance. For more information about Saint John Will-I-AM Coltrane Church, visit www.coltranechurch.org. Karma's father also named his son after Coltrane. The son's name is Ohnedaruth. He plays a major role in Karma's healing journey.



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Has Artist/Author Ananda Leeke's work made a difference in your life this year? If yes, then click on the PayPal button above and make a donation to Kiamsha.com, LLC, Leeke's healing arts company. PayPal offers Visa, MasterCard, and American Express secured payment options. It also offers a PayPal card that you can use for other purchases.  Many thanks in advance for your gift. It is greatly appreciated!

Kiamsha.com, LLC promotes creativity through coaching and expressive arts, teaches contemplative practices (i.e. yoga, Reiki healing touch, meditation, breathing exercises, journaling, affirmations, and prayer), and builds community that awakens your soul and transforms your life.

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AKOMA is a Ghanaian
Andinkra symbol that
represents the heart and means
keep an open heart filled with compassion.



"Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud It is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil, but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. Love never fails."
1 Corinthians 13:4-8
 

WHAT IS LOVE'S TROUBADOURS?

Love's Troubadours
is a healing fiction series that features stories told by people who are learning and living as they love. The healing fiction series is deeply rooted in the storytelling traditions of the West African griot and troubadours of the French Middle Ages. To learn more about these traditions, read the sections below.

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Senegalese Griot, 1890


WHAT IS A GRIOT?

A griot is a West African poet, storyteller, historian, advisor, arbitrator, and wandering musician who serves as a repository of oral history tradition. They are walking history books who memorize traditional songs and teachings, folktales, cultural history, and family relationships. This information is passed down through generations. Griots Griots also marry them with current events and chance incidents to create praise songs and stories with wisdom teachings, comic relief and satire, political comment, and gossip. Today, griots live in Senegal, Mali, Gambia, and Guinea. They are present among the Wolof, Serer, Mande, Malinke, Bambara, Fula, Tukuloor, Wolof, and Mauritanian people. There are several African names for griots including jeli (a word that means "blood in the Manika language that is derived from ; northern Mande areas), jali (southern Mande areas), guewel (Wolof), gawlo (Pulaar, a Fula language), and igiiw ( Hassaniyya, an Arabic language).


WHAT IS A TROUBADOUR?

Troubadour is derived from an Old French word "trobador" which comes from the verb "trobar" that means to invent or compose. When you put it all together, troubadour refers to a composer and performer of lyric poetry. The French Middle Ages (1100-1350) gave birth to the troubadour tradition in the eleventh century. The tradition defined troubadour lyric as poetical, rhetorical, and musical fiction. They dealt mainly with themes of courtly love, chivalry, nature, life, and death. Most troubadour lyric were metaphysical, intellectual, and formulaic. They also included many genres including alba (morning song - the song of a lover as dawn approaches, often with a watchman warning of the approach of a lady's jealous husband), canso or canço (the love song, usually consisting of five or six stanzas), dansa or balada (a dance song with a refrain) ensenhamen (a long didactic poem, usually not divided into stanzas, teaching a moral or practical lesson), enuig (a poem expressing indignation or feelings of insult), escondig (a lover's apology), partimen (a poetical exchange between two or more poets in which one is presented with a dilemma by another and responds), planh (a lament, especially on the death of some important figure), salut d'amor (a love letter addressed to another, not always one's lover), and tenso (a poetical debate which was usually an exchange between two poets, but could be fictional).

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ODO NNYEW FIE KWAN is a Ghanaian Andinkra symbol that means the power of love.







  

Copyright 2007-2012 by Madelyn C. Leeke. All rights reserved.


The slogans "Love's Troubadours"; "Be love, love light, and live as the spirit of life"; "YOGA is Your Opportunity to Graciously Accept yourself"; "Honey I'm OM"; "OM on My Mind"; "BAP Living;" and "Black American Princess...BAP Being At Peace" are trademarks of Kiamsha.com, LLC.

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