The Azadi Project

Workshop on multimedia storytelling and community radio for migrants

This workshop was done in collaboration with the International Republican Institute.

Our participants were ten migrant returnees in Niamey. By providing entrepreneurial multimedia and radio storytelling skills to returning migrants and then securing their internships at local radio stations, we helped our participants build their agency to reintegrate and reenter the labor market by using their newly acquired digital expertise. By providing them with skills to tell their own stories we also enabled them to to take control of their narratives and counter the stereotypical narrative of migrants.

Success Stories: Meet Biba Souley

She couldn’t go to school but today she is on the radio. Biba Souley, a migrant returnee in Niger says that if there were opportunities and jobs in her country, she would never leave Niger and go to a new country to be treated as a slave. “Why would anyone risk their life if it wasn’t out of dire necessity?”, says Biba, a 35-year-old single mother of five children who made the journey through the Sahara desert to Libya. During Azadi’s digital media workshop, she learned skills such as storytelling, public speaking, radio programming, video, and social media to share her personal story of survival. Through sessions of art therapy, she learned how to draw strength from her traumatic past and transform it in productive ways. Within a week, Biba was able to share the story of her journey in Libya with confidence on different channels. Ultimately, Biba was invited by a local radio station to air her story and share her experience with community members, further creating awareness about what compels people to migrate and the risks associated with migration.

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