Filmmaking helps refugee girls learn English

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Filmmaking helps refugee girls learn English
The biggest thing the girls walked away with was confidence and love for a new language.

Dubai - With the guidance of a team of filmmakers, the girls come up with their own idea before jotting them down on a script and acting out the different characters.

by

Sherouk Zakaria

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Published: Thu 25 Jan 2018, 7:55 PM

Last updated: Thu 25 Jan 2018, 10:04 PM

"From filmmaking, I learned to never give up on my dreams no matter how tough the path gets."
Alaa Mustafa, 13, is among the estimated 11 million Syrians who have fled their homes since the outbreak of the civil war in 2011. Living in the UAE for the past six years, she was also among the 33 girls between 10 and 15 years old, to recently take part in the filmmaking programme under the NGO 'Lights Camera Learn' that aims to empower and educate children through the art of filmmaking.
As the war left over 3.5 million refugee children without proper access to education in 2016 alone, Lights Camera Learn teaches English to displaced children around the world through an interactive method of learning.
Through the programme that toured Palestine, Jordan and Tunisia, children got to write their own scripts in English and act in different roles on camera to produce short films.
In collaboration with a UAE charity organisation that helped select the girls, filmmakers worked with the youngsters to produce four short films that were screened during a red carpet ceremony at the Sharjah Art Foundation. 
During the five days, of eight hours each, the girls wrote scripts and filmed the movies that addressed topics like bullying, chasing dreams and featured the #GirlsCount campaign that aims to count the 130 million girls that have no access to education on videos.
The girls received small Oscar statues and certificates of participation during the red carpet event.
Mustafa who acted in a short zombie film could still remember the sentences she memorised - "Yes mum, I'm at the park," "Are you ok," "This can't be real" and "Yes Fatima, I have to leave". 
"I loved that I could apply it in acting, and it took me two days to learn these sentences. At the beginning, it was hard; then I found it very easy," said Mustafa.
For her, English was a tough language, but repetition was key. "When someone helps me memorise, it is easier," she said. The zombie idea for the movie came from a discussion with the filmmaker in charge of the group about horror films and alert they keep the children at night. "I would love to continue learning English," she said.
Amal Bahloul, president and founder of Lights Camera Learn, said: "The technique goes against the conventional ways of learning in a classroom. While it's easier to be a passive learner and look at words in textbooks, filmmaking forces children to speak English, which is harder but more efficient," said the 22-year-old Amal. 
With the guidance of a team of filmmakers, the girls come up with their own idea before jotting them down on a script and acting out the different characters. The Tunisian-American founder noted that with the difficulties the girls in reading letters, speaking sentences on video was "a huge success". 
"Every group picked their characters and we made sure their English was correct through repetition." She said a longer programme is in plans to be carried out with the girls in the future.
Amal added that the biggest thing the girls walked away with was confidence and love for a new language. "Some of these girls watched their houses bombed, while others were forced to pick cotton for a living. When they make their own films and speak a foreign language in five days, it shows them they can do whatever they set their minds on."
She added that through the programme, children are exposed to different cultures. For the girls who never spoke English and lived in areas with no exposure to another culture, they walked away with more curiosity in a foreign language. 
sherouk@khaleejtimes.com
 


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