- Home
- About
-
Staff
- Commentaries by FPS Staff
- Rusakovich Andrei Vladimirovich
- Rozanov Anatoliy Arkadievich
- Research Briefs
- Tihomirov Alexander Valentinovich
- Shadurski Victor Gennadievich
- Sidorchuk Valery Kirillovich
- Brovka Gennady Mikhailovich
- Gancherenok Igor Ivanovich
- Malevich Ulianna Igorevna
- Prannik Tatiana Alexandrovna
- Selivanov Andrey Vladimirovich
- Sharapo Alexander Victorovich
- Testimonials
-
Conference Proceedings
- Amber Coast Transport Initiative Project Concept
- Nato and Belarus - partnership, past tensions and future possibilities
- OSCE High-Level Seminar on Military Doctrine
- Poland-Belarus: perspectives of cross-border cooperation
- Polish-Belarussian Transborder Customs Cooperation: сurrent Problems and Challenges
-
Reports
- We see the significant reduction of the U.S. Army in Europe
- NATO's International Security Role
- International seminar on issues in the Collective Security Treaty Organization
- Belarus-Turkey: The ways of cooperation - 2011
- Belarus - Poland: two decades of international relations
- Belarus-Turkey: The ways of cooperation - 2009
- International seminar Belarusian Diaspora: Past and Present
- The first Round Table
-
News Releases
- The conference on Overcoming the financial crisis
- Round Table on history and future of Belarus-Poland cooperation
- Seminar on Belarusian diaspora: past and present
- The conference on Belarus in the Modern World
- The conference on Economic, legal and informational aspects of cooperation in customs sphere
- Comments
- Contact
Spontaneous bagpipe jam
On December 11, the ”Javar” Ethno-Historical Center brought together young Belarusian bagpipers, scholars, and ancient music lovers to discuss the roots of the Belarusian bagpipe tradition in the context of European culture. The conference was a part of the U.S. Embassy Small Grants Program sponsored project aimed at the preservation and popularization of the unique Belarusian bagpipe music heritage. The participants shared the outcomes of their research about the origin of Belarusian bagpipe music and its interrelation with European mythology and folklore. Mr. Zmitser Sasnousky, a front man of Stary Olsa Medieval Folk Band and a key leader of the project, informed the participants about ethnographic summer expeditions and their results and presented a newly published CD of the Belarusian bagpipe music that included archival records dating back to 1930s. Vibrant informal discussions of bagpipe making techniques and styles, insights into bagpipe teaching methods and practices as well as demonstration of authentic instruments made the event very educational and dynamic. Bagpipe jams that burst out during the conference breaks and captured the attention of all participants culminated with master classes by established bagpipers that concluded the event.


