201504 hiroshima peace(eng)

1
Let’s learn tasks and practical ideas for peace education and create a network to exchange information! Date: 6:15 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. April 5 th Venue: Large Rehearsal Room, 6 th Floor, Hiroshima Aster Plaza http://hiyh.pr.arena.ne.jp/Hp_eng/ACCESS/accesseng.htm 4-17 Kako-machi, Naka-ku, Hiroshima-shi https://www.facebook.com/events/831021203643443/ The Content of the Workshop: “Resilience and Community Stories” This workshop teaches simple exercises to help groups share experiences and analyze situations using drama and storytelling. These methods can be used by community workers, activists, teachers and health workers. The process gives people another way to tell who they are and what is important to them. No experience is necessary. The Facilitator: Ms.Julie Salverson Julie Salverson is a writer, scholar theatre artist and community animator. She gives workshops and speaks about using creative arts to share stories, analyze community issues and address problems within organizations. She has published extensively about creative arts and trauma, the artist as witness, historical memory, ethics and the imagination. She is Associate Professor at Queen’s University. She has been writing about North American indigenous people exposed to radiation while working in mines of uranium. She is also writing about Fukushima in Japan. She has introduced "Theater of the Oppressed" in Canada with some other artists. Her opera, "Shelter" was played in a theater in Toronto last year. It is based on her research about nuclear industry. Her book about her trip to follow the route of nuclear substances will be published soon. Web Site: https://jsalverson.wordpress.com The Theatre of the Oppressed describes theatrical forms that the Brazilian theatre practitioner Augusto Boal first elaborated in the 1960s. Boal's techniques use theatre as means of promoting social and political change. In the Theatre of the Oppressed, the audience becomes active; they explore, show, analyze and transform the reality in which they are living. Fee: 500 yen (Students: free of charge) The maximum number of participants: 30 Organized by the Chushioku Branch of the Global Campaign for Peace Education Japan http://gcpej.jimdo.com/cipe/hiroshima/ Emails: Kakuzaki Hiromi, Akamatsu Atsuko: peacemessagestakamori(at)yahoo.co.jp Application: Please write “April 2015 Peace Education Workshop” in the subject of an email and send your name and workplace (NGO or school) to the email address above.

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Drama Workshop for Peace Education in Hiroshima

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  • Lets learn tasks and practical ideas for peace education and create a network to exchange information!

    Date: 6:15 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. April 5th

    Venue: Large Rehearsal Room, 6th Floor, Hiroshima Aster Plaza http://hiyh.pr.arena.ne.jp/Hp_eng/ACCESS/accesseng.htm

    4-17 Kako-machi, Naka-ku, Hiroshima-shi

    https://www.facebook.com/events/831021203643443/

    The Content of the Workshop: Resilience and Community Stories This workshop teaches simple exercises to help groups share experiences and

    analyze situations using drama and storytelling. These methods can be used by community

    workers, activists, teachers and health workers. The process gives people another way to

    tell who they are and what is important to them. No experience is necessary.

    The Facilitator: Ms.Julie Salverson

    Julie Salverson is a writer, scholar theatre artist and community

    animator. She gives workshops and speaks about using creative arts to

    share stories, analyze community issues and address problems within

    organizations. She has published extensively about creative arts and

    trauma, the artist as witness, historical memory, ethics and the imagination. She is

    Associate Professor at Queens University.

    She has been writing about North American indigenous people exposed to radiation

    while working in mines of uranium. She is also writing about Fukushima in Japan. She

    has introduced "Theater of the Oppressed" in Canada with some other artists. Her opera,

    "Shelter" was played in a theater in Toronto last year. It is based on her research about

    nuclear industry. Her book about her trip to follow the route of nuclear substances will be

    published soon. Web Site: https://jsalverson.wordpress.com The Theatre of the Oppressed describes theatrical forms that the Brazilian theatre practitioner Augusto Boal first

    elaborated in the 1960s. Boal's techniques use theatre as means of promoting social and political change. In the Theatre of the

    Oppressed, the audience becomes active; they explore, show, analyze and transform the reality in which they are living.

    Fee: 500 yen (Students: free of charge) The maximum number of participants: 30

    Organized by the Chushioku Branch of the Global Campaign for Peace Education Japan

    http://gcpej.jimdo.com/cipe/hiroshima/

    Emails: Kakuzaki Hiromi, Akamatsu Atsuko: peacemessagestakamori(at)yahoo.co.jp Application: Please write April 2015 Peace Education Workshop in the subject of an email and send

    your name and workplace (NGO or school) to the email address above.

    http://hiyh.pr.arena.ne.jp/Hp_eng/ACCESS/accesseng.htmhttps://www.facebook.com/events/831021203643443/https://jsalverson.wordpress.com/http://gcpej.jimdo.com/cipe/hiroshima/mailto:peacemessagestakamori/@yahoo.co.jp