Art Action for Peace: Support Young Iraqi Artists
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Summary
Help unite Iraqi youth through a series of public events and workshops featuring poetry, theater, dancing, and music within a framework of peace and human rights.
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Received $180 from 3 donations from people like:
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More Information About this Project
Project Needs and Beneficiaries
Iraqis today face a triple threat of foreign occupation, sectarian violence, and heavy militia recruiting. The resulting political climate is stifling and divisive to young artists and activists, who lack a public forum for censorship-free expression. This project is filling that gap, as Sunni and Shia youth flock to events, defying the logic of civil war and coming together in a shared vision of a peaceful Iraq. Participation has boomed from a few dozen to over 700 audience members.
Activities
Artist, poets, musicians, actors, and students hold monthly public performances in and around Baghdad. Open human rights trainings and capacity-building seminars are also held biweekly to build youth leaders organizing, writing and computer skills.
Funding Information
Total Funding Received to Date: $180
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $41,320
Total Funding Goal: $41,500
Additional Documentation
This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc).
Resources
Why this Project is Important
Potential Long Term Impact
Dialoging and networking with supposed adversaries will serve participants for years to come, as the lasting effects of sectarian violence are felt. Through trainings, participants develop skills to initiate change and build alternatives to war.
Project Message
The ability to hold vibrant festivals in the current oppressive and military times is an important success
it raises the voices of liberated people in the midst of religious hegemony and militarism.
- Yanar Mohammed, Director & Founder, OWFI
When this Project was Updated
Last Updated
This project was last updated on June 10, 2008.
Date Added to GlobalGiving
This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on May 01, 2008.
Latest Update from the Field
International Women's Day Festival; Youth Outreach
By Vivian Stromberg - Executive Director, MADRE, June 10, 2008 06:48 PM
To celebrate International Womens Day, on March 9th, 2008, OWFI organized a festival in the theater hall of Baghdads Technology University. The festival was fliered widely in the streets of Baghdad, and the hall, which seats 550, was so crowded there was not even standing room in the aisles.
To open the events, the Hurriya Theatre Group performed a play dedicated to the memory of Dua Khalil Aswad, a seventeen-year-old Kurdish woman who was stoned to death in 2007, allegedly for dating a Sunni boy. The honor killing took place in the town square of Bashika, where one to two thousand men brutally murdered Dua, while local police watched on in total compliance. The play, whose only line of dialogue was the phrase Love will not die, was met with ovations and riotous applause from the packed hall.
Following the play, OWFI Director Yanar Mohammed delivered a rousing speech. Musician and long-time OWFI friend and collaborator Jafar Al Mshattat, who smuggled musical instruments across militia checkpoints to attend rehearsals, performed a song written specially for the struggles and strengths of Iraqi women, followed by popular ballads and love songs. The side aisles and balcony of the space were crowded with students and young people singing and dancing. Lastly was a poetry jam featuring some of Iraqs most talented young poets and activists.
This was a landmark evening; the ability to hold such an event in public in an oppressive military state was marked as a huge success in the history of the womens movement in Iraq. Many attendees recorded parts of the performances on their cell phones to show their friends and family who were unable to attend. The hosting Universitys administration was so impressed with the event and the reaction it garnered that they invited OWFI staff back to hold regular womens rights workshops for students and faculty.
On March 20th, as part of an outreach program to youth in occupied areas, OWFI held another Art Action for Peace event in Al Madaen, also known as Salman Pak, marking the fifth year of U.S. occupation in Iraq. This Sunni suburb 15 miles south of Baghdad has been a hotspot of sectarian violence in recent years, as roving Shiite militias and extremist Sunni groups like Al Qaeda have been terrorizing residents. The Awakening, a moderate Sunni militia funded by the U.S. military in hopes of limiting area bloodshed, has, in actuality, escalated tribal violence.
The event was held outdoors at a local secondary school and attended by many youths from Al Madaen/Salman Pak and surrounding neighborhoods. Some young soldiers of the Awakening movement came to the event, and, while organizers were worried they would object to an atmosphere that was far from encouraging paramilitary culture, the militia members were so moved by the performances that they stayed until the end of the event, guarding attendees and artists from any possible attacks. The event was very successful, garnering new participants and performers alike, and spurring requests for Art Action for Peace events in neighboring areas.
We hope you will give today to support this wonderful initiative from MADRE and OWFI. Your help can build new bridges for young people navigating the difficulties of occupation and civil war.
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