mssrf•org

Centre without walls.

pro-poor, pro-nature & pro-women.

 
 
The belief in the efficacy of theatre as a tool for conscientization, for critiquing social disparities and for self exploration and expression is at the core of Voicing Silence's activities with women.

For different groups of women, articulating through theatre their perceptions, hopes, dreams and aspirations, their ways of knowing and being, has been an unique process-oriented path to enter unexplored territory. A source of empowerment, it enables them to speak out, "gives them voice", In an exploration of women's own unique idiom - their songs and forms, their language and ways of communication.
 
These workshops have culminated in simple productions, sometimes performed for audiences, sometimes not, but always for the participants - theatre more for the actors, than the spectators.
 
The communities of women worked with through this methodology include women quarry workers and beedi workers, rural Dalit women, school teachers and adolescent school girls, political activists, and members of rural women's self-help groups. For four continuous years, a group of women professional actors in traditional Tamil theatre genres was one such community, for whom the workshop also led to the production of finished performances as well as, most recently, a group of transsexuals.
 
The workshop approach, of collective improvisation, and group critiquing leading to shared learning and mutual support has been part of the process of playmaking, of rehearsals, and in some cases of playwriting too. This group has gone on to form an autonomous women's theatre company, playing to the same rural audiences in the same genre. The transsexuals have been using the play developed in the workshop in an advocacy campaign to draw attention to the nature of social discrimination face in everyday life and to demand their basic human rights as citizens.
 
Workshops conceptualized and coordinated by Mina Swaminathan and A. Mangai.