ONLINE CULTURAL SHOW TACKLES CHALLENGES OF DEAF STUDENTS AMID PANDEMIC
Filipino deaf students share express finding hope amid pandemic challenge in The Face Mask,a fund-raising cultural show on 25 November. It is the culminating event of the month-long celebration of the 28th Deaf Festival: Defining Servant Leadership in Rebuilding.
Spearheaded by deaf choreographer, director and trainer Myra Medrana, the two-hour production follows the journey of a deaf student (John Riven Canilang) who lost his means to communicate with the community amid the quarantines. In his solitude, he finds guidance from his mother (Angel Zyra Podaca) and friendship from spirits (Jay-R Lacorte and Ryan Frayres), who loses him hold on to his aspiration for a better future.
The Face Mask mirrors the personal experiences of the deaf who were immensely affected by the lack of in-person interaction with their loved ones and the public, as well as the chance to volunteer and engage in group activities. It uses the face mask as a metaphor for the struggles, social inequalities and illness experienced during the pandemic. It likewise serves as a symbol for hope and responsibility to protect mankind.
The production follows the journey of a deaf student who lost his means to communicate with the community amid the stay-at-home orders.
The show will feature a medley of Broadway and Filipino music, Filipino Sign Language poetry, interpretative and contemporary dances and ballet to highlight performing arts as a universal language. It will be presented by Silent Steps, the official deaf dance group of the School of Deaf Education and Applied Studies of the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde.
The Deaf Festival was established in November 1995 by the Deaf students from the SDEAS to commemorate the Deaf Awareness Week. The event has since become a tradition to promote awareness and appreciation of their unique identity and culture.
The beneficiary will be the SDEAS Student Support and Calamity Fund, which assists Deaf scholars with allowance for food, school transportation and internet access to attend online classes.
“A big number of our students do not have the financial means for their basic needs. So the Student Support Fund provides them this opportunity,” said SDEAS Center for Deaf Esteem and Formation director Bea Francisco.
“The Calamity Fund is for areas that have been affected by natural disasters and other calamities, most of them Deaf communities or the marginalized sectors who are usually the last to receive support from LGUs and other NGOs,” she added.
The Face Mask is open to the public. It will be shown online via Zoom from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Voice interpreters will be available for the hearing audience.
Tickets are on sale at P80 for students and P100 for adults through
forms.gle/whxcvzUP9WKDcpGD6.
For more information, visit the FacebookPagesofBenildeSDEAS(www.facebook.com/DlsCsbSchoolOfDeaf EducationAndAppliedStudies) or SDEAS Deaf Festival (www.facebook.com/SDEASDeafFestival).