From the dance floor to the book store Jersey City belly dancer debuts mystery novel
by Mary Paul Reporter staff writer
23 months ago | 90 views | 0 | 3 | |
A Jersey City resident of three years and a professional belly dancer, Sandra Catena has found that a pen in the hand can be as exciting as a shake of the hips.
Catena's new novel, The African Belly Dance, isn't just a tale involving the exotic dance; it's a murder mystery with a belly dancer who is drawn into the investigation, finding herself at the scene of the crime, a nightclub in West Africa.
On April 5 at 3 p.m., Catena will discuss and sign her book at the Five Corners Branch of the Jersey City Public Library, 678 Newark Ave.
What's the appeal of moving and shaking in exotic belly dancing style?
"It's very sensual. It's muscle dancing. It's not just linear, and it's also very passionate dancing. You can express your feelings while you're dancing. You can shimmy, you can shake. It's a sexy way to dance and total fun." And if that isn't cause enough to take interest, she adds, "It's an excellent way to get fit. It's an excellent cardiovascular and flexibility workout."
A mover and a shaker
"I love belly dancing more than I love anything in this world," Catena proclaims. "This is the one thing [interest of hers] that is a true passion. I'm inspired every day that I wake up and every day that I dance."
A teacher at Yamuna in the West Village in New York City, where she also produces belly dancing concerts, Catena is equally inspired by her students, and she takes pride in seeing some go on to become belly dancers in New York or even Egypt.
Starting with ballet and tap, Catena began learning to dance at the early age of 3. At 11, she took up modern jazz, and at 17, she developed an interest in belly dancing and started taking lessons - the style has since become her unchallenged favorite.
"Belly dancing is a very ancient and much loved Middle Eastern art form," says Catena. "However, a good girl does not become a belly dancer."
Though Catena says that belly dancers are revered in many cultures, she admits there's a certain stigma attached to it.
"You can compare it to some parents not wanting their daughters to be an actress," she explains. Her own parents were less than thrilled.
"When I first started at age 17, it was something 'cute' and they thought I'd grow out of it. Unfortunately, I didn't. When I started working, I trained very intensively. Work supported my dance habit. Every night I'd be at a different dance class."
Catena didn't "forget this silliness" as her parents might have hoped, though. "I think they would have preferred that I led a more traditional life."
Just as she paid her own way for her jazz lessons with money from her first job, babysitting at 11 years old, she paid for her belly dancing classes working as a secretary.
Growing up in Irvington and the Ironbound section of Newark, Catena came from a blue collar family, and couldn't afford to go to college - she says her parents figured she would just get married - but belly dancing has given her a living as well as an informal education.
"I'm an expert on Middle Eastern culture," she says, adding that she's constantly learning.
Her profession has also allowed her to travel at home and abroad to places such as Montreal in Canada, the Spanish Riviera, West Africa, San Francisco, and all over the Metropolitan area. She also danced in New Orleans before Katrina.
"I have everything I've ever wanted. I'm thrilled to be doing my first book signing, [and] I lead a very rich life," she said.
'The African Belly Dance'
"The second you walk into an Arabic nightclub, whether it's in West Africa or Europe or Newark, you're walking into a different country."
Catena's experience dancing in nightclubs far and wide set the stage for her novel, The African Belly Dance. Catena and the heroine of the story, Santina Cole, have a lot in common - they're both Italian-American Catholic girls from blue collar families, and they were both born and raised in the same acre. Catena and Santina both danced in nightclubs in Abidjan, capital of the Ivory Coast in West Africa, but that's where their similarities end. While Catena admits that there are some similarities, she maintains that the book is a work of fiction.
The book is actually separated into two parts. Book I of the novel explores belly dancing through the character's experience and movements, and Book II is the meat of a murder mystery that Santina must help solve.
"This book relates to women," explains Catena. "Santina Cole is an 'every woman.' There's nothing special about her. She grew up poor, she's ordinary, but this everyday gal goes on to create an unusual and exotic life for herself. And despite her exotic life, at her core, she's still an everyday girl that everyone can relate to ... It's a book that I think any woman can relate to."
Believing the book will appeal to men and women from ages 20 to 70, Catena describes writing the novel as "a total love affair" that was a lot of fun.
"I want to share belly dancing with the whole world."
Catena has five more novels planned, which will possibly be about belly dancing, but set in different locations.
For more information on the book signing at the library, call (201) 547-4543. Comments on this story can be sent to Mpaul@hudsonreporter.com.