Finding my Voice Through Art
Two women using art to help others overcome trauma or escape poverty. Isha Fofana set up an art centre for women in The Gambia and Zeina Iaali teaches art to refugees in Australia
The power of art to change lives. Two women talk to Kim Chakanetsa about how they use art to enable refugees, asylum seekers and young women to find their creative voice.
Isha Fofana is a Gambian artist who set up an art centre in her country to encourage young women to pursue their artistic talents. Although she showed an interest in art at a young age, she was not fully able to explore it until she was much older. Her canvasses are often large and extremely colourful, capturing the joy and power she sees in the women around her.
Zeina Iaali is a Lebanese-Australian artist who volunteers at the Refugee Art Project in Sydney, which supports refugees and asylum seekers to tell their stories through art. Her own artwork revolves around her experiences as a Muslim woman in Australia. She says art has the power to bring people together, and that's where magic happens.
Photo: (L) Zeina Iaali. Credit: Refugee Art Project. (R) Isha Fofana. Credit: Mama Africa)
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'I wanted to process what's happened to me'
Duration: 00:59
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- Mon 12 Jun 201702:32GMTBBC World Service Europe and the Middle East, West and Central Africa, Online & UK DAB/Freeview only
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