dancescape Endowment Fund – Burlington Community Foundation

eat make share… dine & dance!

Bringing Culture to Life Through Food, Music, Movement & Shared Experience

The Museums of Burlington has invited danceScape to help lead a series of community cultural activations connected to eat make share: a taste of immigration — an exhibition exploring how food, tradition, memory, and shared experiences shape the immigrant journey and multicultural life in Canada.

Designed to move beyond traditional exhibition viewing, these activations invite the community to experience culture through participation, storytelling, movement, music, family traditions, and human connection.

As part of the initiative, multiple community organizations and cultural groups will help bring different dimensions of the immigrant and multicultural experience to life through interactive public experiences.

Through the activation series, danceScape is helping create spaces where cultural communities, families, newcomers, and local residents can connect through shared participation and experience.

Together, these activations explore how culture is carried not only through food and tradition — but also through music, movement, storytelling, celebration, and shared human experiences.


Featured Community Cultural Activations

Saturday, June 13, 7-9 pm — danceScape (Latin)

Saturday, July 18, 7-9 pm — Red Leaf Cultural Integration (Asian)

Saturday, August 15, 7-9 pm — Tyrsa Ukrainian Dance Group (Ukrainian)

Together, these activations reflect the many ways culture is carried, preserved, adapted, and shared across generations and communities.

Rather than presenting culture as something distant or static, the series explores how culture becomes lived through participation:

through food,
through movement,
through music,
through storytelling,

and through gathering together.


danceScape Latin Activation: eat • make • share … dance!

As part of the activation series, danceScape is presenting an interactive Latin-inspired cultural experience on Saturday, June 13th, exploring how Latin rhythm, music, food, movement, and family traditions help create connection and belonging within Burlington and surrounding multicultural communities.

The activation extends the themes of the eat make share exhibition by exploring how people carry culture not only through recipes and traditions — but also through:

Through Salsa, Bachata, Cha Cha, Merengue, Cumbia, storytelling, and audience participation, the experience invites audiences to move beyond observation and into participation. Because culture is not only something we watch. It is something we share.

A Celebration of Shared Participation

One of the most meaningful aspects of the activation is that many of the participants are not professional performers and do not come from Latin backgrounds.

They are members of the Burlington and surrounding communities who discovered joy, confidence, friendship, and connection through Latin music and dance.

Some are newer dancers. Some had never danced before joining danceScape.

Together, they reflect something powerful:
how culture grows stronger when it is shared openly and experienced together.

The focus is not technical perfection.

It is participation.
Connection.
Community.

And the willingness to step into another culture with openness, curiosity, and respect.

Community Through Rhythm & Movement

Latin music and dance have increasingly become part of Burlington’s multicultural social fabric — creating spaces where people from different backgrounds can gather, interact, and build relationships through shared experience.

People often begin by watching.

Then someone invites them to try a step.

A conversation begins.
A smile appears.
And slowly, strangers become community.

In this way, dance becomes more than movement.

It becomes a bridge between people and cultures.

Shared Stories of Belonging

The activation will also feature reflections connected to immigration, family, belonging, and rebuilding a sense of home in Canada.

These stories help illustrate how food, music, dance, and community traditions continue to shape both personal identity and shared community life within Burlington.

Together, the experience reflects a broader message:

Culture is not weakened when it is shared.

It becomes richer.

Why Experiences Like This Matter

In a time when many people feel increasingly disconnected despite being digitally connected, opportunities for shared cultural participation matter more than ever.

Spaces where people can:

help strengthen the social fabric of communities.

Because community is not built through information alone.

It is built through shared moments.

And sometimes, the most meaningful way to understand another culture…
is not simply to observe it —

but to experience it together.

Learn more about the exhibition here:

eat make share: a taste of immigration – Museums of Burlington

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