The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Amplifying Girls Voices hailed

- BY SHARON SIBINDI

INTWASA Arts Festival koBulawayo with the support from Plan Internatio­nal under the project — Amplifying Girls’ Voices through Digital Arts — has received positive responses from Zimbabwean viewers and those abroad.

Amplifying Girls’ Voices through digital arts serves as a sequel to 100 Girls 100 voices project which used poetry as a medium for advocacy for ending child marriages, sexual harassment of girls and enforcing of laws that protect girls and young women.

The project — began with 22 young girls and last year it opened to 10 new girls with the aim to provide a platform for girls and young women to talk about issues a ecting them.

“The response with regards to viewership has been good as is evidenced by the number of views and feedback received on Amacala and Ama2K which have over 700 000 views on our YouTube channel so far. However, there's still a lot of work to be done.

“Our aim with the lms is to raise awareness, educate and provoke dialogue on various issues a ecting adolescent­s, young girls and women. The conversati­ons have started, however change is yet to be seen as it is a process,” Intwasa Arts Festival koBulawayo administra­tor Runyararo Mutandi told Standard Style.

She said the recent rise in early pregnancie­s and raping of minors re ects that a lot of awareness needs to be done before they start seeing any signi cant change

in communitie­s. “This is our motivation to keep producing more lms which will help to raise awareness on some of these societal issues so we have as many people as possible empowered.

“We intend to continue doing more screenings in various communitie­s so as to reach those who do not have access to our lms on our digital platform, “she said. On Friday, a new production—Ihlazo was launched on YouTube. Ihlazo is a short series about young people, their choices and forced choices. It was shot at Sailors Hope Village in Inyathi.

Speaking about the production, Mutandi said: “Ihlazo is our latest project. It deals with same issues of child marriage, GBV, SRHR but unlike our previous lms it also subtly touches on boys' issues as well as we feel boys are normally left behind.”

She said in this series, they touch on circumcisi­on and how boys can misinterpr­et some informatio­n and further spread STIs.

“However, it is primarily a girl's story. A victim of child marriage decides to run away after years of abuse. Her family wants her to go back but she refuses," Mutandi said.

“Meanwhile, a city girl gets pregnant and they bring her to the village to abort, putting her life in danger. It is a series we hope will be able to tackle many issues about young people as it evolves.”

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