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PART 2 WORKING WITH THE COMMUNITY: Village Involvement in the Rehabilitation, Social Integration, and Rights of Disabled Children 455 CHAPTER 48Popular Theater![]() Community theater can be an excellent way to raise awareness about specific needs of disabled persons or to gain greater participation of local people in a community rehabilitation program. It is also a good method for educating people about important preventive measures. Actors can be disabled persons, parents of disabled children, health workers, rehabilitation workers, schoolchildren, or any combination of these. ![]() No special place is needed. However, some sort of raised area is helpful, with a plain wall or curtain behind. But effective popular theater has also been carried out in the street, the village square, and the marketplace. ![]() For example, measles is especially dangerous to poorly nourished children, leaving many with blindness, deafness, fits, retardation, or cerebral palsy. Preventing measles helps prevent disability. In Nicaragua a group of health workers and local children put on a street theater skit called 'The Measles Monster'. Popular participation is high, for as watchers gather, the monster runs through the crowd looking for unvaccinated children. At the end of the skit, when all the children are protected by vaccination, the children in the audience join the children in the skit in beating-up the monster.
The announcer of the skit asks the children in the audience why the boy was attacked. They shout back, "Because he wasn't vaccinated." At the end, after all the children are vaccinated, the loudspeaker asks, ''Why can the children now overcome the monster?" They shout back, "Because we have all been vaccinated!" 456 To give another idea of what can be done through popular theater, we will show you photos from 2 theater skits organized by Project PROJIMO, the villager-run rehabilitation program based in Ajoya, Mexico. In order to increase community involvement in PROJIMO and to help local people understand its activities better, the program uses popular theater. The skits were put on soon after the school children had helped build the rehabilitation playground. They tell the story of how PROJIMO began and how the playground was built and is used. The actors are local school children, disabled workers of PROJIMO, and village health workers from neighboring villages who were in town for a refresher course. The health workers' participation in the skits gave them experience working with disabled persons, and also gave them ideas for simple rehabilitation activities and aids in their own villages.
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458 The second skit is a continuation of the first.
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461 ![]() The ending of this skit was even more impressive for the village audience because they had seen lnés (who acted as Tristín) when he first came to their village. They knew that his transformation from a very disabled, withdrawn youth to a fast-moving, capable young man was not just acted-it was real. And because PROJIMO is the village's program, everyone felt proud. ![]() Sets of color slides (transparencies) with written scripts of the skits "The Measles Monster," ''Helping Your Neighbor," and "A Disabled Child Discovers New Life," are available from the Hesperian Foundation. Also available, although less directly related to disability prevention, are slide sets "The Importance of Breast Feeding," "Useless Medicines That Sometimes Kill,'' "The Women Unite To Overcome Drunkenness,'' and "Farmworkers Unite To Overcome Exploitation." Other skits are mentioned in this book on Page 443 and 445. 462 ![]() ![]() Go back to the CONTENTS Disabled Village Children A guide for community health workers, rehabilitation workers, and families by David Werner Published by The Hesperian Foundation P.O. Box 11577 Berkeley, CA 94712-2577 Copyright © 1987 by the Hesperian Foundation 2nd edition, 5th printing February 1999 |
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