Bhangra has health benefits for kids, but more school programs needed: Doctor
VANCOUVER — When nine-year-old Viaan Deol goes to bhangra lessons twice a week, his favourite part is seeing all the friends he’s made from different schools in Surrey, B.C.
His mom, Raj Kaur, is thrilled he’s getting more physically fit and connecting to his Punjabi roots during the hour-long, high-energy classes at a dance school.
“If they stay home, they just watch TV and sit and eat. They don’t do any other activity,” Kaur said of Viaan and his five-year-old brother Jaivir Deol, who was eager to follow his older sibling into the world of bhangra, a folk dance that originated in the Punjab province of India to celebrate the harvest.
Viaan was initially more into the music than the moves of the traditional dance he started at age four but has since performed in some local shows and likes jumping in on the bhangra action at weddings and parties, he said.