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Protest Arts International festival
Savanna
Trust
November 13, 2010
Beyond
Protest Arts
Savanna Trust
a local arts for development organization recently held its second
Protest Arts International Festival (PAIF). This year's event
had participants from Botswana, Kenya, Malawi, South Africa and
Zimbabwe. The festival that ran under the theme, imagining and inventing
the future opened with an intimate yet vibrant crowd that was treated
to some engaging poetry and music. Launched on the African human
rights day, 21 October 2010, the festival challenged protest and
cultural artists and researchers to engender and envision democratic
spaces for the socio-political development of their societies.
The three day festival with the goal of facilitating the development
of critical arts, spectatorship and citizenry opened with a calabash
of community theatre and amateur productions at the University of
Zimbabwe. The productions saw university students, academics, social
activists and community theatre practitioners lock heads in an engaging
tirade of theatre and poetry whose storylines revolved around themes
of human rights, democracy and the human quest for justice.
In his opening
remarks the Savanna Trust board chair, Mr Sydney Chisi said, "There
is need for theatre practitioners to know the people to protest
to. Theatre practitioners must research from the grassroots level
and then capitalize on their God given talents in communicating
what they would have researched. Artists should take advantage of
opportunities like the democratic space of the inclusive government,
and the constitution making process". He stressed on the role
of theatre as an alternative voice as it can help explore issues
like democracy, human rights and equality with and for the ordinary
citizens, most of them often disenfranchised and marginalized from
mainstream-state dominated and propagandist media. Just like in
mainstream politics and the struggle for democracy and human rights,
artists are sometimes confronted with censorship, arrests and countless
threats but there is need for resilience to achieve the ideals of
democracy.
The festival director Mr. Daniel Maposa augmented Mr. Chisi's
words saying that," The purpose of the festival is to highlight
and reflect on the contribution of protest arts to democratic processes".
He reiterated that protest art was not merely a tool of lampooning
the system of the day, simply pointing at evils bedeviling the society
or venting outrage, rather it plays an initiatory and active role
in raising issues and practices that can enhance democratic processes.
The main component
of the festival was the symposium which was opened by Professor
Christopher Joseph Odhiambo an Associate Professor of Post-Colonial
Literatures and Applied Drama at Moi University in Kenya. In his
address titled Intervention Theatre and the paradox of patronage,
he argued that all African theatre is protest theatre; there is
no art for art's sake. Prof Odhiambo said, "Every time
theatre is done people will be reacting to something". His
address opened up a vibrant discussion on the question of patronage
and the symbiotic relationship between art and patrons?
McDonald Lewanika
the director of Crisis
in Zimbabwe Coalition gave a civic society perspective on the
role of art and the artist in society. His address dwelt on the
need for the artist to be relevant to continue living at the same
time being relevant to the society. It is through such roles that
artist collaborate with civic society in articulating pressing development
issues hence community transformation
At Savanna Trust
we strongly believe that ‘ the verdict of the mass is the
jury of their own destiny' yet the space for ordinary citizens
has for long been sealed under despotic control of media and political
space hence reducing citizens to passive consumers of state propaganda.
Deriving from our experience in the use of theatre, we see the festival
as an opportunity to bring together artists and the academia not
only to break barriers of a shrunken democratic space but to nurse
and pursue the discourse on development and fostering civic participation
through the arts.
As the curtain
came down we remember the engaging performances; Election Day, Apokalupsis,
Revolution Avenue, Poetic Journey , Weapons of mass Instruction
, the powerful symposium and enlightening workshops but it goes
beyond our provocation. As an arts for development organisation
we brought together our individual and collective experience into
something we called Protest Arts International Festival. The stigma
associated with the word protest haunted us. People associated us
with violence based on their assumption of protesting as a violent
process. At the end of it all, we have learnt that protest arts
and the festival are not about mobs running amok and hooligans looting,
it is about a creative class of ordinary citizens identifying problems,
reflecting on the past and creating alternatives.
Visit the Savanna
Trust fact
sheet
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