Radio drama - Amplifying Voices https://amplifyingvoices.uk/tag/radio-drama Getting people talking, listening and taking action Tue, 16 Jul 2024 14:32:33 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/AV_LOGO_FAVICON_RGB-01-150x150.png Radio drama - Amplifying Voices https://amplifyingvoices.uk/tag/radio-drama 32 32 Radio drama in Sierra Leone https://amplifyingvoices.uk/radio-drama-in-sierra-leone Tue, 21 Jun 2022 06:45:47 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=4228 Welcome to Saltville - the Freetown neighbourhood setting for a new 15-episode radio drama, based on community household visits and designed to stimulate wider conversations around living with Covid19 in Sierra Leone. 

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Welcome to Saltville a small, bustling neighbourhood in Sierra Leone, with its compact tin-roofed dwellings and thriving market, home to a lively line-up of characters.

There’s Bakar, the opinionated local carpenter and talented musician, who often feels free to dispense good advice, especially during the Covid pandemic. Orfoe is Saltville’s self-important chairman of the community bike riders who is always up for an argument; and then there’s Gibo, a young-man who’s had many so many setbacks in life he navigates his way on the street by getting hold of drugs from any place he can.

Bakar, Orfoe and Gibo are just some of the many characters in Freetown’s popular radio drama, which explores what happens when people make good (and bad) decisions about health and life issues.  Although Saltville only exists on the airwaves of our radio partner BBN, the plots for the drama come directly out of a community listening process in Freetown, known as ‘SALT’.

The 15 episode radio drama was designed not only to reflect the real challenges that people have been facing during the pandemic, but to stimulate further community conversations.

Radio drama setting

Street scene in Freetown, 2019

One enlightening feature of SALT community listening, is that a single seed question can lead to multiple different stories and topics that community members or households want to discuss. The SALT volunteers asked people they visited about learning to live with Covid and heard stories that wove this theme into different scenarios of real life in Freetown. When it came to plotting the radio drama, anonymised stories collected from these SALT visits were given to the producers. The producers then used the information to develop a plot that depicts specific interest groups or individuals relevant to the community.  Radio drama listeners have been shown to be more likely to consider new behaviours or attitudes if they identify strongly with the characters (Read this paper for a detailed study). So while the characters are fictional, their stories reflect stories of real community members.

Click play on the Audio Player below to hear a brief clip from Episode 1 of the radio drama which is in Sierra Leonean Krio.  This scene introduces the theme of Covid denial, interwoven with different views about self-employment.

If you don’t speak Krio, (or don’t have time to listen now), here is a synopsis of the scene,

Bakar is working on refurbishing a set of chairs and singing a nice song. A Councilor who is on his way to council comments on how good Bakar is at carpentry and singing. He jokingly tells Bakar that he should give up carpentry and become an artist so that he will become famous. Bakar tells him that he prefers to do his carpentry and if there is any luck for him, he will record some songs to see how people will receive them but he will not put carpentry aside. Councilor laughs and says Bakar is very smart and leaves. As he leaves, Gibo arrives looking and sounding as if he is high on drugs. Bakar stops working and ask him why after all the advice he has been giving him, he is still on drugs. Gibo denies and says that it is the system that is frustrating him as if those in authority do not care about the common man. Bakar tells him that he is always blaming others but yet still he does not make any effort to find some work to do. Gibo gives his opinion that there are no jobs for the youth to which Bakar responds by saying Gibo can learn a trade just like himself. He adds that he is always advising him to take good care of himself but even with Covid around, he does not take any precautions. An argument breaks out with Gibo saying that Covid does not exist. Orfoe comes along and meets them arguing. he immediately sides with Gibo saying that Covid does not exist and that Bakar always acts as if he knows everything when he does not know anything else but carpentry. Bakar retorts by asking Orfoe to tell him what he knows and Orfoe replies that he is the chairman of the bike riders in the community and therefore, Bakar should talk to him with respect. Gibo ends the scene by telling them to forget about the argument, after all he is the one who has the argument with Bakar and not Orfoe.

Later in this same episode, the writers also introduce several other characters in a series of scenes about street hygiene, the use of the health clinic, malaria prevention, and cooperation among religious leaders to fight against covid-19. Each scene addresses the life situation, while also introducing questions about Covid into the mix.

In this series there is an honesty about the dilemmas people face when confronted with controversies about Covid vaccines which was a major problem in Sierra Leone during the height of the pandemic (e.g. see this IGR Sierra Leone report on vaccine uptake and hesitancy). The radio dramas don’t provide neatly packaged solutions but provide information from respected sources woven into examples of difficult discussions that allow community members to make their own informed choices. Radio drama creates space to explore – and an appetite to do so.

SALT is a form of Ting listening in which teams of community volunteers visit households and neighbourhood meetings to learn from community stories and affirm local strengths. The letters S, A, L, T are used during team training workshops to stimulate conversation around words that illustrate SALT-y ways thinking and working … e.g. strength, story, support, affirm, attitude, appreciate, learn, listen, team, transfer. Visit Affirm Facilitators to learn about other communities using SALT approaches.

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Rising voices in Omugo Zone https://amplifyingvoices.uk/rising-voices-in-omugo-zone Tue, 04 Feb 2020 22:27:55 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=1887 Just over a week ago, the Soot Semee team in Northern Uganda handed out first Soot Semee podcasts on memory cards to a community of South Sudanese refugees. At the same time, they distributed speakerboxes so that over 100 groups of around 10-20 people each can listen to the podcasts together. One of the community…

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Just over a week ago, the Soot Semee team in Northern Uganda handed out first Soot Semee podcasts on memory cards to a community of South Sudanese refugees. At the same time, they distributed speakerboxes so that over 100 groups of around 10-20 people each can listen to the podcasts together. One of the community members said

Marketplace speakerbox. Omugo zone. CDC 2020

Marketplace speakerbox. Omugo zone. CDC 2020

“This is a bright and beautiful day for us in [our community]…these speakerboxes would be to us a school and that kind of voice we missed in the community.“

In the community trading centre, Soot Semee set up a large PA-sized speakerbox to play the podcasts. Barnabas from Soot Semee told me:

“We learned from the trading centre that people with smart phones came to transfer [the podcast] to their phones. Listening groups are also contributing content this time and we had a lot of recordings.”

Over 1000 people will have listened in the first week. I also had a chance to listen! And the first episode certainly started with plenty energy and ambition!

WHAT’S IN A PODCAST?

Right from the start the podcast is packed with community voices. Soot Semee aims to build peace in communities that have suffered too long from conflict. Local journalists start the podcast off with a roundup of the week’s news from South Sudan, keeping people up to date with the peace process. Local musicians sing a song promoting peace. Villagers introduce themselves and share their opinions on issues affecting their day to day lives. NGOs and local government offices provide information about services and job opportunities.

REFUGEE VOICES

A community leader tells us that a big problem facing her neighbourhood is the lack of water. Tank 53 is shared between the host and refugee communities. The water needs to be boiled before being safe to drink. Most families only have one saucepan which they use for cooking. And there is a shortage of firewood. So how can they boil the water? She feels frustrated by unfulfilled promises made to provide new water sources. They want to live peacefully alongside the host communities, but both communities feel the tension as access to resources gets more difficult.

South Sudanese refugees collect water. Bidi Bidi, Northern Uganda. Photo: HCR, 2019

South Sudanese refugees collect water. Bidi Bidi, Northern Uganda. Photo: HCR, 2019

HOST COMMUNITIES

Next is an interview with a Ugandan community member who also gets water from Tank 53. He explains that they treat their water with a purification solution before drinking. He goes on to talk about normal practices of locals charging a fee to help at a key river crossing. The language barrier is clear between interviewer and interviewee so there is a lot of double checking what each other actually said. But they persevere because it’s important for the refugees to understand the norms, so conflicts don’t flare up over people feeling exploited.

Soot Semee interviews community members at river crossing. Omugo zone. Photo: CDC, 2020

Soot Semee interviews community members at river crossing. Omugo zone. Photo: CDC, 2020

WATER DRAMA

The podcast finishes with a tense drama produced and acted by a local drama team. Opening with the sound of running water we are soon immersed in a heated argument in a language I don’t understand. But for sure, we are back to the issue of water. In the drama an NGO worker arrives who doesn’t speak the local language, so he speaks English. A community leader translates for him. She calls people together and they have a meeting to hear what the community wants, and to help them come up with ideas that could help reduce the tension. The meeting finishes and a much more relaxed conversation happens around the running water. It’s a drama. But it reflects the hope and real possibility that community members will find a way for peaceful co-existence.

HOPE FOR THE FUTURE

The first programme has set a high bar! But people in these communities know all too personally, the price of conflict, and they seem determined to make the most of the opportunity for building peace that is offered through the Soot Semee podcasts.

This week, as the team came back to the community, they found people were waiting for them

“with joy and happiness to receive the next [podcast].”

At HCR, we are also hopeful that these podcasts become a tool for lasting peace as people continue to restore shattered lives together.

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Celebrating 3 years of Amplifying Voices in Freetown https://amplifyingvoices.uk/celebrating-3-years-of-amplifying-voices-in-freetown Sat, 16 Feb 2019 05:49:42 +0000 https://amplifyingvoices.uk/?p=2604 HCR (now Amplifying Voices UK) joins with the AVS (Amplifying Voices through SALT) Project in Sierra Leone to celebrate 3 years of strengthening communities and locally generated action with a big vision for the future. There is much to celebrate! The project is actively working in 7 communities in Freetown with a strong group of…

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HCR (now Amplifying Voices UK) joins with the AVS (Amplifying Voices through SALT) Project in Sierra Leone to celebrate 3 years of strengthening communities and locally generated action with a big vision for the future.

There is much to celebrate! The project is actively working in 7 communities in Freetown with a strong group of volunteers from the community, clinic and the churches who regularly meet with people in their homes and their communities to listen to and appreciate their concerns, their hopes and their strengths. This way of working is generating positive local actions by the community themselves. People are seeing their potential and ability to create change in their own lives and community not waiting for outside help to fix everything. In three years we have witnessed tangible, measurable and material changes including pipe borne water, feeder road construction and community centre construction. Some intangible changes though significant have been improved dialogue between stakeholders, stronger participation in community projects and improved social capital of the community volunteers we work with. Through drama and magazine programmes on radio, our local partner, Believers Broadcasting Network (BBN) is amplifying the stories from these communities to highlight what people care about, to generate further action by other key people and encourage other communities to have hope.

With HCR, BBN is going deeper.  Ransford Wright, CEO of BBN says:

We have started going further and engaged in our first community meetings. We are moving into the next phase and we have a big vision where we will reach further and deeper. With our communities we want to bring out the more hidden voices in our community, we want to address poverty and build community cohesion.

BBN (Believers Broadcast Network) is a large Christian Radio Station and counselling centre working with churches, local people and health facilities to strengthen people’s resilience, health and well- being by promoting effective engagement with service providers and using the radio to amplify Voices in the Local Community. SALT is an acronym meaning Strength, Amplify, Listen and Transformation. The project was started to support post Ebola recovery by promoting healing after the epidemic.

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