logo
Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to arctic Circle in climate action

Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to arctic Circle in climate action

Arab News12-04-2025
KINSHASA, Congo: In the Kinshasa Botanical Garden, a troupe of cardboard animals stand at attention in a clearing. Their handlers, puppeteers dressed in black, begin to move slowly through the woods, eventually picking up speed and breaking out into a run.
These were the first steps of 'The Herds,' a moving theater performance made up of cardboard puppet animals that flee from the Democratic Republic of Congo to the Arctic Circle in a bid to bring attention to the climate crisis.
This week, the puppet animals started their journey in Kinshasa, the capital of the DRC in central Africa. The story goes that the animals will be forced out of their natural habitats due to global warming and displaced north, stopping in cities along the way and being joined by more animals.
Just meters away a real-life example of climate change: Part of the botanical garden lay under floodwaters left over from massive flooding earlier this week that left half the city inaccessible and killed dozens. The sight brought 'The Herds' story to life in a bleak way. The main event planned in the center of Kinshasa on Friday was canceled because of the heavy rain.
A wildebeest, a gorilla and a giraffe were among the life-size puppets to begin the 20,000-kilometer (12,400-mile) trek that will cross about 10 countries between central Africa and the Arctic by August.
Their journey will take them through Nigeria, Senegal, Morocco, France and Norway, among other countries.
'This project tries to give the public a powerful emotional sense of what's happening to the planet,' project producer David Lan said.
The trek includes 'now 20, later 40, later 70 animals from all over west Africa, Morocco, Europe who are traveling to escape from the damage done to their ecosystem,' he added.
It is financed by several European countries as well as private foundations.
The puppets are made of mostly recycled materials: cardboard for the skin and rubber for the joints, according to Siphokazi Mpofu, of the South African collective, Ukwanda Puppets, which created the first puppets.
'Some animals will die on the way,' due to high humidity for instance, 'just like in real life,' Mpofu said.
As it travels, the herd will be joined by new puppets representing local species, such as vervet monkeys in Nigeria, wolves and red deer in Europe, and reindeer in Norway.
'The Herds' comes from the team that was behind 'The Walk' in 2021, in which a 12-foot tall puppet of a refugee girl called Little Amal drew attention to the refugee crisis by traveling to 15 countries — from Turkiye to the UK, Ukraine, Mexico and the US.
Tshoper Kabambi, a Congolese filmmaker and producer, is working on 'The Herds' as its DRC producer. He said 'The Herds' main goal is to raise awareness.
'Nature is very important to us. But humans have a tendency to neglect nature,' he said. 'We want to raise awareness among people about everything that is happening. You have seen the floods all over the world, global warming, deforestation.'
'The Herds' will stay in Kinshasa until Saturday before moving onto Lagos, Nigeria, and Dakar, Senegal.
'The Herds' organizers say the significance of starting in Congo lies in the fact that the country is home to the second biggest rainforest in the world. The Congo Basin serves as one of the planet's 'lungs,' the other being the Amazon Rainforest.
They say much less attention has been focused on Congo's rainforest, but it is still in dire need of protection.
Congolese artists were an integral part of 'The Herds' opening act, just as artists from other countries will be as the project moves north.
Amir Nizar Zuabi was on that team and is now the artistic director of 'The Herds.' He was also a part of 'The Walk.'
'I think one of the big impacts of this project is the fact that this project is happening in 20 different cities,' he said. 'It will travel through different cultures, different places, and it accumulates. And it will tell the story of the Congo also in Norway, because we have partners everywhere.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Syrian charged over plot to attack Taylor Swift Vienna concert
Syrian charged over plot to attack Taylor Swift Vienna concert

Saudi Gazette

time27-06-2025

  • Saudi Gazette

Syrian charged over plot to attack Taylor Swift Vienna concert

VIENNA — A young Syrian national has been charged with supporting a foreign terror group over a foiled plot to attack a Taylor Swift concert in Vienna last August. Mohamed A, who is described by German authorities as a juvenile and not in custody, is accused of following the ideology of jihadist group Islamic State (IS) and helping another suspect to prepare the attack. Concert organisers called off Taylor Swift's three sold-out gigs on the eve of the first show at Vienna's Ernst Happel Stadium last year, disappointing tens of thousands of fans during her Eras Tour. Authorities arrested several suspects at the time saying they appeared to have been inspired by IS and al-Qaeda. "Mohammad A has adhered since April 2024 at the latest to the ideology of the terrorist organisation Islamic State (IS)," Germany's federal public prosecutor said in a statement. "Between mid-July and August 2024, he was in contact with a young adult from Austria who was planning a bomb attack on a concert by singer Taylor Swift in Vienna." Sixty-five thousand fans had bought tickets for Swift's three concerts on 8-10 August, and the singer later apologised for the cancellation, speaking of the "tremendous amount of guilt" she felt. She said she had decided to throw all her energy into the shows at the end of her European tour in London. The main suspect in the case has been identified as Beran A, who authorities say was part of an IS cell in eastern Austria. Beran A, who is now 20 and from Ternitz south of Vienna, was arrested before the concerts following a tip-off by the CIA, which said the plotters had hoped to kill a large number of concert-goers. Investigators allege he had also planned to carry out an earlier attack in Dubai in March 2024. Reports suggested it was part of a co-ordinated plot involving three simultaneous IS attacks but Beran A had changed his mind at the last minute. According to the federal prosecutor in Germany, Mohammad A had helped the main suspect with a translation of bomb-making instructions from Arabic as well as making contact with a member of IS abroad over the internet. He is also accused of providing the text for an oath of allegiance to the main suspect to join IS. — BBC

Pianist Alfred Brendel dies aged 94
Pianist Alfred Brendel dies aged 94

Saudi Gazette

time18-06-2025

  • Saudi Gazette

Pianist Alfred Brendel dies aged 94

LONDON — Alfred Brendel, who was considered one of the world's most accomplished pianists, has died at the age of 94. His representatives confirmed the composer and poet died peacefully in London surrounded by his loved ones on Tuesday. Most critics have acknowledged him as one of the foremost interpreters of the works of Beethoven. A statement from his spokesman added that Brendel would "be remembered and celebrated with deep gratitude by his family — partner Maria Majno, Irene Brendel, his children, Doris, Adrian, Sophie and Katharina, and his four grandchildren." The musician was also known as an acclaimed essayist and poet, with an irrepressible sense of humor. He often cited his first musical memory as "winding up a gramophone playing opera records, and trying to sing along to it".Alfred Brendel was born on 5 Jul 1931 in Wiesenberg in northern Moravia (now the Czech Republic). He attributed his somewhat absurd view of the world to his experiences moving around with his parents in war-torn many successful musicians, none of his family were musical and he had no particular talent for the art when he was a he took piano lessons in then Yugoslavia and went to study at the Graz Conservatory in in Lucerne, he took master classes with Edwin Fischer, the musician credited by Brendel with having the most enduring influence on him, and teaching him to play passionately within the bounds of this formal training ended at 16 and, apart from attending further master classes and listening to other pianists, he explored the possibilities of the piano on his own."A teacher can be too influential," he once said. "Being self-taught, I learned to distrust anything I hadn't figured out myself."He made his public performing debut at Graz in 1948, aged 17, and won the prestigious Concorso Busoni prize in Italy the following a Liszt specialist, Brendel extended his repertoire to include the music of mainly central European composers, but purposely avoided modern preferred to chart his own process of creativity and power of interpretation by always concentrating on the works of his favorite classical career took him to concert platforms across the world, but he decided in 1971 to make his home in recorded Beethoven's Piano Concertos four times, lastly with the Viennese Philharmonic Orchestra in performance was under the guiding baton of Sir Simon Rattle, with whom Brendel shared a longstanding, prodigious musical was made a KBE in1989, although his Austrian passport meant it was an honorary title.A comparative latecomer to the international stage, the full stature of Brendel's talent only became apparent at the age of playing was distinguished by its emotional intensity within the disciplines of the musical framework, and by his apparent empathy with the composers' later life, back trouble hampered his performances of more titanic pieces, but he explained that this enabled him to enjoy more fully the richness of the less physically demanding work of Bach and Schumann, as well as his favourite always returned to his "beloved Beethoven", for whom "his admiration grew by the day, if not the hour".Brendel listed his hobbies in Who's Who as "unintentional humour and the collection of kitsch".Visitors to his north London home were often surprised by the quirky pictures and ornaments, as well as the skeletal hand that popped out of the grand piano when they raised the first book of essays, Musical Thoughts and Afterthoughts, published in 1976, contained allusions to his musical work, but was not limited by 1998, the publication of his book of poetry, One Finger Too Many, shared his good humor and his fascination with all things was awarded the Herbert von Karajan music prize for lifetime achievement in December 2008 in Baden-Baden, southern that month he made his final appearance on the concert platform in Vienna, where he was the soloist for Mozart's Piano Concerto no was voted one of the 100 greatest cultural moments of the decade by The Daily afterward, he suffered an acute hearing loss, according to German state broadcaster DW, and was only able to hear distorted his latter years, he still travelled to give lectures and readings and held masterclasses for young musicians.A man whose determinedly narrow musical repertoire allowed him to seek perfection at the piano, Alfred Brendel's written work displayed a mind of much wider-ranging the evening jacket of the disciplined concert artist lay an irreverent commentator on the absurdity of the world, who saw laughter as the distinguishing feature of humanity. — BBC

Saudi Film Commission Takes Part in Annecy International Animation Film Festival
Saudi Film Commission Takes Part in Annecy International Animation Film Festival

Leaders

time10-06-2025

  • Leaders

Saudi Film Commission Takes Part in Annecy International Animation Film Festival

The Saudi Film Commission is currently taking part in the Annecy International Animation Film Festival 2025 in Annecy, France, according to the Saudi Press Agency. Set to run from June 8 to 14, the festival stands out as one of the most prominent events in the animation all over the world. Through this event, the commission seeks to promote the presence of Saudi animation in European forums and keep a close eye on the latest trends. That is why the Saudi delegation included members from the commission as well as a group of Saudi animation filmmakers, who were selected based on their animated works produced during 2024. Importantly, the event offered an exclusive opportunity for Saudi delegation to foster communication with animation creators from various backgrounds and leverage from the accompanying training programs. Furthermore, the festival serves as a prestigious platform for creative collaboration, co-production opportunities, and professional dialogue. This participation plays a pivotal role in strengthening distribution and exhibition channels and flourishing the animation sector at a local level. Therefore, it stands as a testament to the Kingdom's pursuit of being a pioneering voice in the global cinema and animation industries. Related Topics: In Photos: Highlights from 1st Week of Cannes Film Festival Saudi Arabia Takes Part in Malmö Arab Film Festival Saudi Film Commission Participates at Beijing International Film Festival Short link : Post Views: 8 Related Stories

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store