Document details

Theatre for Peace: CPS Work in Cameroon, DR Congo, Nepal, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Sudan and Uganda

Bafoussam; Berlin: Brot für die Welt;Civil Peace Service (CPS) (2014), 143 pp.

Other editions: also published in French

"This manual is an opportunity for the Civil Peace Service (CPS) networks to share the experiences of some of the people and organisations who use theatre as a tool for communication, change and peace. You will find theoretical bases, concrete examples related to the contents and some techniques and methods we would like to make available to as wide an audience as possible. While the goal is not to turn you into professional entertainers, you will find techniques, tips, and other people's hands-on experiencience in the discipline. The purpose of this manual is to de-dramatise the art of the sketch, the role play, the theatre and add it to the toolkit of the CPS peace workers. This is theatre practice as a tool for reflection and communication, for expressing emotions and points of view, be they diametrically opposed, which can open a chink in apparently sealed situations weighed down in dead ends or which seem to be impossible to resolve and let some light into conflicts between people and communities. All the experiences described in this manual have been developed in a community-based way with the help of experienced peace workers and African artists." (Introduction)
Introduction / Flaubert Djateng and Christiane Kayser, 6
What is Forum Theatre for APRED-RGL? / Kasereka Lusenge Joshua, 8
Forum Theatre for peace: Experiences in Uganda, Rwanda, DR Congo and South Sudan / Claus Schrowange, 11
The community based theatrical aproach of Freetong Players international (FPI) theatre of Sierra Leone / Charlie Haffner, 73
Communication through theatre for peace / Jean Blaise Kenmogne, 80
Theatre for peace: contents and methods. CPS work in Cameroon / Silvia Stroh, 83
Outcomes of theatre for peace trainings in Cameroon / Jeanne Medom, 134
Peace work in the country of social harmony: CPS work in Nepal / Anne Dirnstorfer, 138