News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Human Trafficking to be Highlighted on Stage in MY MIND IS FREE

By: Jul. 02, 2017
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

Rah Rah Community Theatre Company has teamed up with The Salvation Army and anti-trafficking charity, Hope For Justice, to bring its production of MY MIND IS FREE by Sam Hall to this year's Edinburgh Festival Fringe between the 7th-18th of August to highlight the scale of the human trafficking problem in the UK today. We are excited to announce our preview will be at the Waterloo East Theatre on the 27th of July 2017 and will include a guest speaker, Major Anne Read Director of anti-trafficking for The Salvation Army.

Human trafficking is the world's fastest growing global crime. The 2015 Global Slavery Index estimates that there are 35.8 million people enslaved in the world. There are 1.1 million new, trafficked victims a year, 3,000 new victims a day, or a shocking 125 people per hour forced into slavery. The Metropolitan Police estimate that in the UK alone over 20,000 people are trafficked every year.

MY MIND IS FREE is a powerful interpretation of the degradations of human trafficking.?It tells the interlinked stories of four people trafficked to and within the UK and their horrifying tales of abuse, exploitation and enslavement. The production uses a mixture of physical theatre and multi-role playing to portray the epic journey and terrible risks that desperate people will go to in the pursuit of what they believe to be a better life, only to find that they are then exploited, ending up in a far worse position than when they started.

The company first toured the production in 2015, receiving 4 and 5 star reviews. It was nominated for "Best stage play" in the Human Trafficking Foundation's Anti-Slavery Media awards 2016 which was hosted by the Home Secretary at the House of Commons.

We are excited to be working with our charity partners to bring the play to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, alongside a series of workshops and talks which will inform audiences on how we, as a community, can make a change to fight this horrific crime and spot the signs of trafficking.

We will also be engaging with front-line workers on a training programme, in association with William Guild (the retired superintendent for Edinburgh Police) of Hope For Justice, who will be key to highlighting trafficking taking place in Edinburgh.

https://www.mymindisfree.com/

Watch a preview below:



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.



Videos