The Herds, a vast act of theater to spark climate action | Amir Nizar Zuabi

Episode Summary

In his 2023 talk at the Countdown Summit, theater director Amir Nizar Zuabi shared his journey of transforming the refugee experience into a compelling work of art through the story of Little Amal, a 13-foot puppet representing a vulnerable, unaccompanied refugee child. This project, which saw Amal traverse 5,000 miles across the Middle East and Europe, was not just a theatrical endeavor but a vast act of storytelling that engaged over a million people directly and many more online. The success and impact of Little Amal's journey inspired Zuabi to tackle another pressing global issue: the climate crisis. Zuabi's new project, "The Herds," aims to replicate the storytelling and emotional engagement of the Little Amal project but focuses on the climate crisis. Scheduled for spring 2025, "The Herds" will depict a massive migration of puppet animals fleeing climate disaster from Central Africa to Norway. This journey is designed to be a wake-up call, highlighting the urgency of the climate crisis through a visually stunning and emotionally impactful narrative. The project intends to work with leading arts institutions and artists to create moments that not only showcase the calamity but also the beauty of the natural world, emphasizing the importance of beauty in making the issue personal and compelling for action. Zuabi's approach to both projects underscores the power of storytelling and art in transforming complex issues into relatable human stories. By moving from statistics and data to emotions and personal experiences, these projects aim to break through indifference and inspire action. "The Herds," like the journey of Little Amal, is an invitation to everyone to become part of the story, to feel the urgency of the climate crisis, and to join a movement demanding change. Through these endeavors, Zuabi illustrates how art can be a catalyst for awareness and action, making abstract issues tangible and urgent for a global audience.

Episode Show Notes

Theater has the power to transform the most pressing issues of our time from news stories into human stories, says director and playwright Amir Nizar Zuabi. Recounting his work on the journey of Little Amal — a 13-foot puppet symbolizing the refugee experience — Zuabi unveils his newest project: "The Herds," a vast theatrical production of animal puppets that will "migrate" from West Africa to Norway in 2025, aimed at sparking climate change awareness.

Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_02: TED Audio Collective. I'm Elise Hugh.You're listening to TED Talks Daily.Theater director Amir Nizar Zouabi turned the refugee experience into a work of art, but it didn't stay still.It traversed 5,000 miles.In his 2023 talk from the Countdown Summit, he shares the lessons of taking little Amal, a 13-foot puppet, across the Middle East and Europe, and how the storytelling power from Amal's journey inspired a new creative endeavor to touch audiences about the climate crisis. After the break. for a fraction of the price.To learn more, visit odoo.com slash TED Talks.That's O-D-O-O dot com slash TED Talks. Odoo.Modern management made simple. 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SPEAKER_00: Two years ago, I was standing in the ancient city center of Gaziantep, on the border of Syria and Turkey.We were about to start an incredible journey that would lead us through Turkey, across the sea to Greece, through Europe and finally to the UK.This 5,000-mile journey across eight countries was led by a child, a 10-year-old vulnerable, unaccompanied refugee. She was called Little Amal, and she was vulnerable, but also powerful and determined.Oh, and this is the moment I can tell you that Little Amal is a 13-foot puppet. In her first walk, Amal walked across 65 cities and was met by more than a million people on the streets, whilst millions more followed her online.Since she completed that first walk, she visited the Ukraine, Poland, Canada, the Netherlands and New York, and we are now in the final stages of preparing a three-month journey for her across the United States, all the way from Boston to San Diego, and we are also going to pass through Detroit. I don't know. I'm a theater director and a playwright, and the Little Amal project is essentially a vast act of theater.Imagine one side of the stage in Gaziantep in Turkey and the other side of the stage in Manchester in the UK. And whilst walking with Amal, we started to understand the power of telling a story across a vast geography, evolving over time and inviting many people from many different places to help us tell that story. a story where everyone can contribute and everyone has a role to play.As theater makers, the main achievement of the Amal project was to take one of the pressing issues of our time and turn it from a news story to a human story.We wanted to talk about the millions of refugee children, but turn the hardship and misery into a story of potential and hope. We wanted to change the numbers and statistics into emotions and heart.As a young boy, I used to go into the desert in my country, in Palestine. and watch one of nature's most marvelous phenomenas, the great migration of birds from Africa to Europe and back.Twice a year, the sky would darken with millions of birds, herons, buzzards, kites, swifts, storks, all flying in breathtaking formations, all flying home. As I would lay there on the ground, looking up to the sky, these days were defining.They placed me in the world. They were inspiring and humbling.Here I am, one organism, and above me, thousands of other organisms, flying for safety.As I grew, the flocks of birds became smaller, the sky became less thick of them. And whilst walking with Amal across Europe, I would often look up to the sky, looking for birds.Somehow it felt connected.The migration of people, this misery all around us, felt connected to the migration of birds.Two mirror migrations, now both extremely vulnerable.A sign of a system collapsing.With that in mind, a nagging question started. Can we create a project that would deal with the climate crisis like Amal dealt with the refugee issue? Can we make people feel?Can we make people care?Can we embark on a project that will tackle the biggest issue of our time?So we took everything we learned from the Amal journeys and we are now ready to start our new project, the herds.In the spring of 2025, we will journey from Central Africa all the way to the tip of Norway.We will create a massive herd migration. a migration of puppet animals.Hundreds, perhaps thousands of them, fleeing climate disaster.They will emerge out of the jungles of Africa, cross the deserts of the Sahel, across the Mediterranean to Gibraltar, then climb their way through Europe all the way to the north of Norway. Evolving, changing, constantly growing as it moves, the herds will be joined by new species, native to each country they encounter. They will be an alarm bell, impossible to ignore, a wake-up call urging us to change our ways.Animals are the early warning system of nature.Birds flocking before volcanic eruptions, herds fleeing before earthquakes.And although we live in a world with constant alarm bells and warnings, the urgency is not registering.We want to disturb this indifference. The herds will happen to us, around us, on top of us, crashing through our metropolis cities, where the effects of the climate change are still largely ignored.And they will do that in order to remind us that underneath the layers of asphalt and concrete and vanity, there is nature.And it is wild, vivacious and uncontrollable. We will work with leading arts institutions and invite them to create their own unique artistic response to the herds taking over the streets. We'll work with top artists in Africa and Europe to create unforgettable moments of dystopian calamity. The herds will happen in our immediate surroundings, in our familiar.This is important.It needs to happen to us, not to someone else somewhere far away.It needs to happen where we feel safe so we understand that we are not safe. We imagine that the herds will be a story of humanity losing control, a story of the wildness of nature overwhelming civilization, but also the story of what is left behind, what remains when the dust from the stampede settles.What are the lessons we have learned?So much of the climate debate is happening above the heads of ordinary people. We're given data, we're slammed by scientific explanations, we're given dire prophecies, but we're never given an emotional sensory experience.We're never made to feel that this is ours. We're never given an experience, and it's always cerebral.We want to challenge that. As storytellers, we know that people are moved to action because they care, and nothing breaks the walls of indifference more than beauty.The minute you add beauty into the equation, it becomes personal, it becomes yours, it becomes something worth fighting for. That's why we are working with an amazing team of puppeteers and designers from South Africa.They will create beautiful animals, because although the herds need to be powerful and devastating, they also need to be beautiful.They will create dozens of species out of recyclable, reusable and easily sourced materials. And our puppeteers, our puppeteers are some of the best in the world.And they will evoke animals that are ferocious, tired, frightened, but also elegant and proud.And our call to action to artists and audiences everywhere is, come and join us. Every school, every university, every city can help us shape this story. And our call to climate organizations everywhere is, use us, use us to spread this message.Together, we can create a movement, a movement that demands change.And I know, I know, we're just water dripping on a stone.But it's crucial to continue dripping, because slowly and over time, water shapes the stone. and when lions and gazellas, when zebras and hyenas, when wolves and deer are running together, predator and prey running alongside one another, and they're running away from us.They're running away from a disaster that we have created.Who are we in that story?What does it say about us?Because, like with all great stories, this story is really about us. Thank you.