Adong Judith: How I use art to bridge misunderstanding
Adong Judith: Cómo uso el arte para crear caminos al entendimiento
Adong Judith uses art as a vehicle to drive social change and trains aspiring makers to create art that dares to ask serious questions. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
who tells social-change stories,
historias sobre cambios sociales
touch and move us.
tienen alcance y conmueven.
and teach us to empathize.
y nos enseñan a empatizar.
of disadvantaged groups,
de los grupos desfavorecidos.
away from social, political theater
al margen del teatro político y social
by former Ugandan president, Idi Amin.
que promovía el expresidente Idi Amin.
I am breaking the silence
voy rompiendo el silencio
conversations on taboo issues,
sobre temas tabúes
is the rule of thumb.
el "silencio es la ley".
and challenge our minds to think,
y nos obligan a reflexionar
is its often one-sided nature
con frecuencia nos muestra solo una cara
who see issues differently
de una forma distinta
sellout or plain stupid.
con el cerebro lavado o estúpidos.
only in different fields.
solo que en áreas diferentes.
"stay in your truth" is misleading.
"sigue tu verdad" es engañosa.
you believe is wrong
que piensas que está equivocada
son dos extremos
avenues of conversations.
nos llevan a entablar una conversación.
to touch, humanize
provocativas que tocan, humanizan
to the conversation table
a la mesa de conversación
will not magically solve all problems.
no resolverá mágicamente los problemas,
to create avenues
para construir caminos
many of humanity's problems.
mucho de los problemas de la humanidad.
"Voces silenciosas",
of the Northern Uganda war
de la guerra del norte de Uganda
and Joseph Kony's LRA rebel group,
y el grupo rebelde de Joseph Kony,
political leaders, religious leaders,
políticos, religiosos y culturales,
and transitional justice leadership
y líderes de justicia transitorios
of justice for war crime victims --
para las víctimas de la guerra:
in the history of Uganda.
en toda la historia de Uganda.
cover them all right now.
to sit at the table
la oportunidad de sentarse a la mesa
de la Comisión de Amnistía
the big injustice they suffered
la gran injusticia que sufrieron
of the war perpetrators.
de los perpetradores de la guerra.
acknowledged the victims' pain
reconoció el dolor de las víctimas
behind their flawed approaches.
detrás de su actitud fallida.
that has stayed with me
que más me marcaron
tour of the play,
por el norte de Uganda
de Joseph Kony.
feeling disappointed,
que me fuera decepcionada
inappropriate laughter.
en un momento inapropiado.
was a laughter of embarrassment
of his own embarrassment.
en los actores de la obra
of his past actions.
de sus acciones pasadas.
a more powerfully uniting truth
would be shocked at my ignorance
se sorprendían ante mi ignorancia
like lasagna, for instance.
como, por ejemplo, la lasaña.
about malakwang,
de vegetales de mi cultura.
richer and fuller individuals.
una mayor riqueza de conocimientos.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Adong Judith - Playwright, filmmakerAdong Judith uses art as a vehicle to drive social change and trains aspiring makers to create art that dares to ask serious questions.
Why you should listen
Founder and artistic director of Silent Voices Uganda, a nonprofit performing arts company, Adong Judith creates art that provokes meaningful conversation on issues often considered taboo.
Notable among her training programs is the annual Summer Theater Directors Apprenticeship, a two-tier program that combines production and training of ten aspiring theater directors. Originally only for Ugandans, Judith has opened the 2018 and future apprenticeships to aspiring theater directors across the African continent, who she believes share the same challenges in practicum gaps.
In 2018, Judith will be in residence at Illinois State University, where she will direct her 2016 social media buzz-stirring play, Ga-AD!, which explores spirituality and the place of women in Pentecostal churches. Her first social change play, Silent Voices, which she wrote after accidentally encountering the inescapable stories of war crime victims in her hometown of Gulu, developed at Sundance Institute’s Theater Lab, received its world premiere in 2012 at the National Theater of Uganda and was described by the Ugandan media as "the spiritual rebirth of theater since its decline due to political persecution of artists by the Idi Amin regime."
Adong’s plays are taught at Ivy League Universities including Dartmouth College and Princeton University, and she recently signed a contract with Methuen Publishers UK to publish Silent Voices in an anthology of Contemporary African Women Playwrights.
Adong Judith | Speaker | TED.com