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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, July 23, 2001 |
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When a message is acted out...
INDIA HAS the second largest HIV/AIDS population in the world.
There are 3.7 million HIV positive cases in the country. In many
cities, one in 50 pregnant women tests positive for HIV/AIDS. Two
per cent of the population of Tamil Nadu is affected with AIDS -
more than 12 lakh people, with the number rising steadily.
Impersonal statistics leave no impact. Whether published in
newspapers or flashed across TV screens, no personal connection
is made with the message.
A play makes the vital connection especially when enacted amidst
the viewers with no proscenium to distance them from the action
and when it deals with matters that affect their daily lives -
education, health and social practices. This interactive quality
is what gives street theatre its strength. Set in the local
milieu, it features characters we meet every day and discusses
issues that can make a difference - sometimes the difference
between life and death as in the case of AIDS.
The AIDS Prevention and Control Project (APAC), has, therefore,
chosen street theatre to propagate awareness about HIV/AIDS and
promote safer sexual practices. The APAC, a unit of the Voluntary
Health Services (VHS), Chennai, gets financial assistance from
the US Agency for International Development (USAID), under a
bilateral agreement with the Government of India. APAC has been
organising the street play programme with the project proposal
being formalised with the help of the State Resource Centre.
The ongoing project will cover 43 towns and cities in the State,
and leading NGOs with rich experience in traditional folk media
have been identified in various districts to train volunteers in
street theatre. The Centre for Social Reconstruction, Nagercoil,
the Mass Action Group for Social Welfare, Madurai and the Koothu-
p-pattarai, Chennai, are the three organisations chosen for the
programme.
Experts from these groups train representatives of NGOs involved
in AIDS prevention work. They, in turn, impart training to groups
in their areas to perform street plays at vantage points - bus
stands, street corners and market places. One such workshop was
conducted by the Koothu-p-pattarai some time ago in Chennai at
the Dhyana Ashramam at Santhome. The volunteers trained by the
repertory have been holding plays at various places, with one
group performing at Nanganallur recently and another at Arani.
At the Koothu-p-pattarai workshop, the NGO representatives learnt
the nuances of communication from veterans of the repertory. As
project coordinator Sundar gave the orders, the members walked
around in a circle, froze, made eye contact and learnt body
language and voice control.
Says N. Muthuswamy, founder-director of the Koothu-p-pattarai
repertory, "We wish to spread theatre consciousness among the
people and use the theatre for socially relevant causes. Our
involvement with this project stems from our desire to help the
volunteers develop theatre skills and convey the message in an
effective and aesthetic fashion."
A. Sivan, Programme Associate in charge of Communication, APAC,
says, "We used the Koothu-p-pattarai to propagate the message of
family welfare some years ago. The programme was a success for
they take the concept from us and develop the project from ground
realities. So we chose the group again as they use traditional
forms of theatre such as Theru-k-koothu in their productions to
convey contemporary themes. This appeals to audiences in both the
urban and rural areas."
Scripts for the plays on HIV/AIDS evolved from a writers'
workshop conducted by APAC earlier. The writers who participated
interacted with resource persons who had worked in the field of
prevention of AIDS. Eleven scripts on a range of subjects from
the concept of hygiene and the question of morality to the
adoption of preventive measures and the symptoms and spread of
the disease were finally selected. Six motivational songs were
also chosen. Adapted to folk music and interspersed at
appropriate places in the script, they help drive home the
message.
Three to five plays are generally put up on a single evening and
a variety of other folk performing arts such as Thevarattam,
Karagattam, Kolattam and puppetry are featured between the plays
so that the audience's interest does not flag. During the
performance, questions are posed to the audience to gauge how
well the message has been understood.
The 43 priority areas for holding the plays were identified
taking many factors into consideration, says Sivan. These include
the density of the population the concentration of industries and
markets as also highways and tourist areas where sexual activity
is high. Intervention work was done among sex workers and truck
drivers, he adds.
A structured questionnaire distributed the day after the
performance elicits information on efficacy of message, dialogue
delivery, script and choreography. Each play is modified
repeatedly to obtain the maximum results. At least 20
performances of the same play are held, four or five a month, at
the same city to reach out to the largest number.
The reactions have been varied and interesting. "Our mothers-in-
law turn a blind eye to our husband's affairs. Are they not to
blame for aiding them fall victim to the disease?", asks a group
of women angrily after a performance in a village near Chennai.
"I'll bring my teenage daughter to the play next week. She needs
to see it," says a middle aged woman."
Behavioural change is yet to come about, says Sivan. "But
awareness is being generated. An impressive 93.12 per cent of the
total number of viewers claimed to have gained awareness through
the plays while a good 86.84 per cent agreed to follow the
preventive measures."
KAUSALYA SANTHANAM
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