Theater & Music for Social Change Competition

Do you live in Kakuma, Kalobeyei refugee settlements? Then FilmAid Kenya invites YOU to participate in a community-based competition in music and theatrical arts in Kakuma, Dadaab and Kolobeyei refugee settlements. The goal of the project is to increase the capacity for dialogue, and community-led social change among refugees and Kenyans.

Please send your application letter, link to the video or theatre act and profile to arts@filmaid.org on or before September 4th, 2020 and indicate the subject line Theatre and Music for Social Change Competition. FilmAid Kenya encourages you to submit your application early as shortlisting is on a rolling basis. Only short-listed artists will be contacted. 

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Theatre and Music for Social Change Competition

FilmAid Kenya (FilmAid) is a development and humanitarian organization that harnesses the power and influence of film, media, and the arts to respond to displaced communities in need as well as promote social change. Using a participatory community-based approach, FilmAid provides displaced people with actionable information about their rights, safety, health, and future. Using compelling video, radio, print, SMS, and digital media campaigns, FilmAid reaches over 400,000 people every year. 

Project background/description and scope of work

FilmAid Kenya is deploying a three-pronged approach to achieve the goal of improving refugee/returnee community capacity, resilience and self-reliance to respond to the need for trusted and timely life-saving information in Dadaab, Kakuma refugee camps and Kalobeyei refugee settlement. Under the Social Behavior Change Communication Component, FilmAid uses media produced with the communities it targets in the form of film, theatre, radio, and print formats to start and sustain conversations about health, protection, and rights issues. Theatre and Music effectively engage communities due to its non-threatening format. These media also provide for self-expressive art to tackle sensitive issues and challenge the status quo while ensuring that participants maintain control of the messages they wish to portray.

FilmAid Kenya will engage music and theater artists to facilitate edutainment content on health and the protection of fundamental rights in Dadaab, Kakuma, and Kalobeyei locations. Artists will submit an original piece of either a music video or a theater act in an expression of interest call. A panel of judges will select the winning artists (4 musicians and two theater groups) and award a stipend for the submitted project under each category. The stipend for the music project will range between KSH 40,000 to 50,000 and for the theater group projects between KSH 60,000-80,000. The art project will focus on producing original pieces on music and theater act that addresses a critical health or protection issue in Dadaab, Kakuma, and Kalobeyei.

Deliverables of the project

  • Four Short music video (2 per location-Dadaab, Kakuma)

  • Two Theater Act videos (1 per location-Dadaab, Kakuma)

  • Facilitate conversations on community protection and health through the online distribution of the art pieces.

Expected deliverables 

Music artist

  1. Original music lyrics on a health or protection theme in English, Kiswahili-with English translation or Somali- with English translation.

  2. The original music video (3-minutes or less) in English, Kiswahili, or Somali.

  3. Bio of a musician. Include social media pages and other links in English, Kiswahili, or Somali.

Theater group artist

  1. Original theatre script on a health and protection theme in English, Kiswahili-with English translation or Somali- with English translation.

  2. Original theatre act video (5 minutes or less in English, Kiswahili, or Somali).

  3. Description of the history and purpose of the theater group. Please include social media pages and other links in English, Kiswahili, or Somali.

To qualify, you must fulfill the following: 

  1. Applicants MUST be at least 18 years old. Persons below 18 will not be accepted.

  2. Applicants MUST be a Kenyan citizen or living in Kakuma, Kalobeyei, or Dadaab Refugee Settlements.

  3. Multiple entries per musician or thespian group are allowed. For example, a single musician may submit more than one demo song on different health and protection themes. The same will apply for theater groups.

  4. Videos of artwork will be provided in English or Kiswahili only.

  5. Links to work will be received on Youtube or Vimeo only. Those submitting their work in any other way, such as downloads such as WeTransfer or WhatsApp, will not be considered.

  6. FilmAid and its judges reserve the right to exclude from this competition any works that they decree incite violence, culturally insensitive or degrading (this does not mean that the short video cannot contain allowable violence for theatrical purposes).

  7. The winners and runners-up will be announced virtually.

  8. FilmAid Kenya takes copyright law very seriously and will not accept work that infringes on copyright law. To view Kenyan copyright law, go here.

  9. If the short video includes original Music, the applicants MUST include a copy of the agreement in their application.

  10. FilmAid will work with the winners to polish the final pieces of wining art and include reshooting, re-edits, and any other additions to the music or theater act video necessary to satisfy this project.

  11. Donors and stakeholders supporting the ‘Theatre and Music for Social Change Grant’ will be acknowledged on the final version of the artwork used by FilmAid. 

  12. FilmAid Kenya does not charge or pay entrants any fees for screenings or submissions of their short video.

  13. FilmAid reserves the right to film Behind the Scenes footage from the competition and use the footage as promotional material. 

  14. Email arts@filmaid.org for inquiries regarding the Theatre and Music for Social Change Competition. 

 

How to Apply

Interested and qualified persons and groups with the required experience are invited to submit

  1. An application letter (with your photo) telling us who you are, where you stay, about the project, and why FilmAid should consider your arts as a winner of the stipend.

  2. A link to the video of either an original song (3 minutes or less) or theatre act (5 minutes or less) on Vimeo or YouTube.

  3. Profile telling FilmAid who you are and about your work submitted as a CV or link to your webpage indicated on the application letter. 

Please send your application letter, link to the video or theatre act and profile to arts@filmaid.org on or before September 4th, 2020 and indicate the subject line Theatre and Music for Social Change Competition. FilmAid encourages you to submit your application early as shortlisting is on a rolling basis. Only short-listed artists will be contacted.

*This competition is not valid where prohibited by local law.

Newsletter: COVID-19 Update

Together We Are Saving Lives

FilmAid has been hard at work converting our programs, projects and campaigns to aid in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic. In Kenya and Zimbabwe, it is your support that is making it possible for FilmAid to share life-saving information with refugees and other ultra-vulnerable communities facing the unprecedented COVID-19 crisis. 


How FilmAid is Taking Action

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KENYA: Sharing Live-Saving Information on Every Platform

FilmAid is sharing life-saving information with the 400,000 refugees living in Dadaab and Kakuma Refugee Camps using loudspeaker trucks, radio, SMS, social media and messaging services like WhatsApp.

Ensuring everyone is informed about covid-19

  • Bulk SMS: Sending regular messages about COVID-19 and social distancing to 40,000 households.

  • Radio: Broadcasting Public Service Announcements about COVID-19 in 13 languages - Amharic, Afaan Oromoo, Somali, English, French, Lingala, Dinka, Nuer, Didinga, Anyuak, Swahili, Lotuka and Turkana. 

  • Loudspeaker Trucks: Covering the camps block-by-block with announcements in 13 languages. 

  • WhatsApp: 140 listenership groups formed in Kakuma and doubling to 240 soon. Groups receive audio messages on COVID-19 and information about changes in camp services.  

Radio Call-in Shows for 200,000 people in Dadaab

Abdullahi Mire is a freelance journalist and former FilmAid student who recently packed his bags in Nairobi and transplanted himself to Dadaab Refugee Camp to inform the 200,000 people in Dadaab through a daily radio show about COVID-19. Click here to watch a short video from Mire.

Social distancing & Digital Distribution

FilmAid is using its Bulk SMS service with 40,000 subscribers, as well as WhatsApp, Facebook and other messaging platforms to reach the communities we serve with information about COVID-19 through podcasts, videos, and and info-graphics. 


ZIMBABWE: Defending Fundamental Rights through Mobile Cinema and Your Mobile Phone

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Mobile Cinema on your mobile phone

FilmAid is expanding our concept of Mobile Cinema to include both in-person film screenings, and virtual distribution networks. While the entire country of Zimbabwe is on lockdown, FilmAid is working in partnership with the fantastically talented Sunshine Cinema.

Together we are training ambitious young people like Bulisile Mgunie and Richard Shamba to create podcasts, smartphone videos, and to host online and offline discussions. Busilie and Richard's podcast series kicked off by exploring how COVID-19 exacerbates the many challenges facing communities in southern Zimbabwe. 

Listen as Richard and Bulisile interview filmmakers, activists and journalists about protecting people's health while protecting their fundamental rights during the COVID-19 pandemic -

  • Breaking the Silence About Genocide: Bulisile Mgunie interviews journalist, filmmaker and activist Zenzele Ndebele about why he made a film about the Gukurahundi Massacres. Click here to listen.

  • Peace & Reconciliation on Lockdown: Richard Shumba interviews Takaedza Tafirei about how reconciliation must continue while the nation is under lockdown. Click here to listen.

Strong Partners

In Zimbabwe our partner, the Center for Innovation and Technology (CITE) is currently producing an average of 45 stories weekly about COVID-19. Additional stories, podcasts and public service announcements are also being shared and produced by Kubatana, ZAKRAS (radio) and Internews.

Future Updates

FilmAid is working hard to support ultra-vulnerable communities during the COVID-19 pandemic. We hope to have some news from our work in Colombia with the Wayuu community on the border with Venezuela in our next newsletter. 

FilmAid Kenya featured on CNN’s Inside Africa

Storytelling is the most powerful force challenging outdated narratives

In December 2018, CNN International’s program Inside Africa explored the people and powerful impact of FilmAid Kenya’s Media Entrepreneurship Training courses in Dadaab and Kakuma Refugee Camp.  

FilmAid Kenya’s training course consists of a 12 month period of course work and practical training, serving 80-120 youth every year. Students gain skills in film, photography, journalism, radio, digital media and entrepreneurship, allowing them to access the invaluable creative and technical skills needed to explore issues within their communities and to express themselves creatively. For the past 12 years, FilmAid Kenya has hosted a film festival that showcases the students’ work alongside international features and shorts by, or about, refugees and other displaced people.

In this episode, CNN Inside Africa follows FilmAid’s students and graduates as they take their filmmaking journey from inspiration to exhibition.

Along the journey you will meet some extra special FilmAid graduates - the dynamic duo Amina Rwimo and Abdul Patient, founders of the production studio Exile Key Films - during the making of the Sukar Music Video by artists Mercy Akuot & Scoobylincos.

Amina and Abdul use their own independently produced work to empower, educate and impact their audiences about the realities, both hopeful and heartrending, that many refugees face. Their ambition and subsequent success has taken the duo many places. Amina and Abdul’s film It has Killed My Mother has won several festival awards including: best picture, best screenplay and best actress, and best emerging filmmaker at the IOM Global Migration Film Festival in Geneva. In June 2018, Amina took the stage at TEDx Kakuma Camp, the first TEDx event hosted in a refugee camp, with refugees, and for refugees (watch her full talk here). This January 2019, Abdul traveled to Davos for the World Economic Forum, as part of the media team of videographers, to document the yearly gathering that brings together leaders of global society.

The episode also follows Mercy Akuot, a talented musician, outspoken activist and refugee from South Sudan. In 2017, Mercy’s outstanding voice and stage presence drew the attention of FilmAid and the renowned Kenyan R&B and reggae producer Wyre. This lead to the launch of the FilmAid project ‘Finding A Star’, a talent scouting programme promoting youth economic empowerment through video and music. The project resulted in the production of the music album From Kakuma to the World and several music videos, one of them being the Sukar. Like Amina, Mercy was also selected as a TEDx Kakuma Camp speaker where she shared her grueling story of being married off to an uncle as a teenager (watch the full talk here).

Mercy Akout (left), Amina Rwimo and Abdul Patient behind the scenes during the making of the ‘Sukar’ Music Video

Mercy Akout (left), Amina Rwimo and Abdul Patient behind the scenes during the making of the ‘Sukar’ Music Video

While the episode aired on CNN International last December, we are now excited to finally share the full episode with you!