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Dancing and Screaming Against the Sky

Profanations,” created by choreographer Faustin Linyekula and music artist Franck Moka, is not a “just” dance piece: it’s a live concert, a cinematic séance. And it is a ritual as well: a refusal to mourn quietly. Faire la fête pour ne pas mourir triste (to celebrate so as not to die sad) is the mantra that threads through the work, resisting despair with ecstatic defiance.

Performance

“Profanations” by Faustin Linyekula

Place

Chaillot Théâtre national de la Danse, Paris, France, October 8, 2025

Words

Greta Pieropan

Faustin Linyekula's “Profanations.” Photograph by Sarah Imsand

Linyekula, long known for choreographing memory and resistance, brings his Kisangani-rooted aesthetic into dialogue with Moka’s sonic world. The result is a hybrid form that feels both traditional and contemporary. Projected images flicker across the space, inhabited by wooden frames replicating fragments of home (a door, a window, a chair). Not a narrative scenography, but pieces from a haunted memory of a sacrifice during a dinner for rich men.

On one side of the stage, the musicians comment the movement, and seem to be in their own world, but still connected to the dancing, which is happening way closer to the audience, inhabiting the space following more straight lines, while the movements are anything but predictable or easy. Inès Mangominja’s solo is the gravitational centre: her movements are raw, unadorned, and fierce. She dances as if the floor beneath her is unstable, as if each gesture must scream their existence. Her body becomes archive, altar, and amplifier. There is no narrative, but there is history, and there is a heartbreaking prayer—or challenge—stitched into muscle, breath, and dance heritage.

Faustin Linyekula's “Profanations.” Photograph by Sarah Imsand

Faustin Linyekula's “Profanations.” Photograph by Sarah Imsand

It feels important to acknowledge that, as a white working-class European woman, who knows very little about Congo, I approach this work with a partial lens. The histories and lived realities that “Profanations” evokes—and displays in the videos shown on stage—of colonial violence, cultural erasure, and survival are not mine, as they are not mine the dances echoed or quoted in the choreographic material. 

I may not fully grasp the weight of what is being danced, but I can connect to the screaming against a sky that does not seem to keep the promise of lifting the weight of suffering off your shoulders. Screaming into the void, and still dancing: stomping on the floor just to reconnect with the earth, moving the hips as if they were the heart of a volcano, the body following the rhythm carrying the echoes of all the women who have been screaming before (or maybe singing, like the amazingly powerful drummer and singer Huguette Tolinga). And at the same time observing that dancing to witness, to listen, to feel the limits of one’s understanding and still be moved to reckon with what is shared.

The title “Profanations” suggests desecration, but here it feels like it has a double meaning: it is the profanation of a country by a colonial past (and present), but also it is a profanation that strips away the sacred veneer imposed by others, to reclaim what was always ours. 

“Profanations” dances in the ruins and finds a space where grief can be danced, where joy can be defiant, and where survival is a shared beat.

Greta Pieropan


Greta Pieropan likes to define herself as ‘your friendly neighbourhood dramaturg’. She works as a dance dramaturg with artists, collectives, and communities to build thought, structure, and narrative within creative processes. She believes in dramaturgy as a relational practice—one that generates context, listening and accessibility. She’s also a professional shapeshifter: from dramaturgy in the rehearsal room, to project development, to moderating public conversations, to workshops, digital and traditional communication for live performance, she’s always backstage ready to support the dance scenes.

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