The play, staged this month and next in Berlin's historic
Volksbuehne, is an adaptation of Euripides' 2,500-year-old story
of a princess sacrificed by her father, the Greek King
Agamemnon, to placate an angry goddess.
Nine Syrian young women living in Germany stood on the stage
last Friday, telling their personal stories of escape and of
their lives in a new country in this adaptation of a play set on
the eve of Agamemnon's 10-year war to capture the city of Troy.
"The project, through its different episodes, intends to produce
a document of the lives of Syrians in different phases(of the
Syrian war), especially from the point of view of women," said
Omar Abusaada, the play's director.
It is the third part of an international theater project aimed
at showing the lives of displaced Syrian women, inviting
audiences to identify them as individuals rather than as
refugees from a war-torn country. The first two episodes were
performed in Jordan and Lebanon in 2013 and 2014.
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More than a million migrants, many of them fleeing conflict in the
Middle East, have arrived in Germany since mid-2015, and around a
third of them are girls and women.
The adaptation was first performed as stories in September in the
echoing halls of the former Tempelhof airport, which now serves as
one of Berlin biggest refugee camps.
"(In the play) we start thinking of their stories not as those of
refugees but as individuals who have their rich characters," said
Mohammad Al Attar, author of the adaptation.
"(Women) who are similar to their German, French, Sudanese or
Canadian fellows," Al Attar said.
(Reporting By Riham Alkousaa, editing by Thomas Escritt/Jeremy
Gaunt)
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