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From July to November 2021, Little Amal, a 3.5m-high puppet created
by Handspring Puppet Company ('War Horse') will travel 8,000km from
the Syria-Turkey border along the established refugee route through
Europe to the UK, ending at the Manchester International Festival.
With 100 theatrical events in 65 cities, along the way, 'The Walk'
will be the world's largest live performance and its aim is to
celebrate the contribution that migrants and refugees make to the
cultures and communities through which they pass and to the
countries in which they find a new home. With an introduction by
Nizar Zuabi (artistic director of Good Chance) and an afterword by
David Lan (formerly of The Young Vic and one of the producers of
'The Walk'), The Long Walk with Little Amal is the official
companion book to a cross-border collaboration on a magnificent
scale. The journey is documented by award-winning photojournalist
Andre Liohn and contributing essayists include: PEN International
Writer of Courage Samar Yazbek (Syria); prize-winning
Turkish-Kurdish novelist Burhan Sonmez (Turkey); Greek-Armenian
literary and crime writer Petros Markaris (Greece); Prix
Goncourt-winning author and film director Philippe Claudel
(France); Children's Laureate Cressida Cowell (UK); crime writer
Olivier Norek whose fiction has been set in Calais' The Jungle
(France); and bestselling author Timur Vermes (Germany).
"They call it a civil war, but there is nothing civil in this.
Nothing civil at all. "They came from Damascus, from Halab, from
Banias where the bombs fall day and night and the wounded children
look like sleeping angels. Now they live in camps and abandoned
buildings in Lebanon or Jordan. Now Syria is just a distant memory,
a home forever lost.This urgent and extraordinary play explores the
crisis in Syria through the stories of its two million refugees.
"Oh My Sweet Land" received its UK premiere at the Young Vic
Theatre, London, on 9 April 2014.
I am Yusuf and This Is My Brother is a powerful, poetic exploration
of history, memory and different forms of love. 'Before it happened
I didn't know those people existed. Now I'm not certain that we
do...' January 1948. Palestine. The British Mandate is ending. The
UN is voting on who will control what part of the land. Ali is in
love with Nada - but he is in despair. Her father won't let them
marry because his brother Yusuf is 'odd' with his own eccentric,
child-like point of view. Rufus, a soldier on the occupying British
forces, longs for the cold fogs of Sheffield. War begins and, as
the villagers are scattered and become refugees, the secret that's
kept Ali and Nada apart is revealed. Although set within a
politically charged context, the play is full of haunting,
dreamlike poetry rather than didactic polemicism. Instead of simply
exploring the political debate, Zuabi concentrates more on the
richness of language and culture. With a keen awareness of the
vulnerability and fragile ephemerality of life, I am Yusuf and This
Is My Brother explores humanity and love in the context of loss and
death.
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