A non-profit organization, Tasawwur is a collective of artists and educators working to empower teenagers with the help of art and theatre.
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“This is a place where a young Muslim woman from a basti and her counterpart from an elite private school exchange stories about being a young woman in Delhi; where two Dalit teenagers explain what it’s like to be bullied by others from dominant caste backgrounds — to friends whose teachers insist caste is not an issue in urban India; where a young woman with cerebral palsy watches her friends tear up as she shares stories of her struggles — and then smiles as she watches them play together,” says Urvashi Bahuguna, the Development Manager with Tasawwur.Founded two years ago by poet and educator Aditi Rao, Tasawwur is a Delhi-based arts-for-social change programme that brings together small groups of 25-30 teenagers from different backgrounds and sections of the society under the same roof. The organization runs a 100-hour arts-based course with a curriculum that focusses on social change. Following this, the teenagers come up with a public performance to showcase their experiences before a wide audience. “For example, we have a young boy who is a refugee from Afghan, someone from the Dalit community, a teenager living with a certain disability, etc. and all of them are able to hear each other’s stories -- about things they would otherwise never know of,” says Urvashi. She adds that the programme was inspired by the Possibility Project in New York, in which teenagers participate in a four to six-month long course and then write and direct a play based on their own lives.
At Tasawwur, the group participates in a five-month long course that helps them develop confidence, leadership skills, and a deeper understanding of the problems within and outside their worlds. This is what the process looks like:
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- Tasawwur members visit different NGOs and schools in Delhi. Teenagers who will be able to commit to the programme are selected and the group meets for five hours every Sunday, over a period of five months.
- The first four sessions are dedicated to trust-building with different activities and exercises to help the participants be comfortable with each other and understand that solidarity is possible despite the fact that they come from different backgrounds.
- This is followed by five theme-based sessions in which the group takes up different topics like gender, class, caste, etc. and participates in activities around them for a better understanding.
- Then there is one intensive life story session where participants discuss their stories and issues they have, or are, facing.
- In the last two months, they together write a script for a show. While the entire theatrical production is written by the teenagers, they don’t play their own characters and write the play with a vision for change. "They pour their hearts into telling each other’s stories to the world, into working to challenge and transform the injustices that affect their friends," says Urvashi.
Tasawwur has completed two cycles of the programme till now and the plays were showcased in Studio Safdar and Akshara theatre in Delhi.
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85% of the participants come from underprivileged backgrounds.
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““Look, if you don’t speak English, speak in Hindi…don’t hesitate!” That’s what Tasawwur has taught me…that one should speak with an open mind and heart. I definitely opened up during this process and have started talking more in public. I believe that one can change by listening to other people’s stories. After listening to my Afghan friend’s experiences in the city, I know that strangers to our country get treated differently, and that we should help them,” says Gagan, one of the former participants who lives in Ramesh Nagar slum in Delhi.