When Oscar-winning music composer A R Rahman, of Slumdog Millionairefame, 
invited UQ PhD student Hana Alhadad to work alongside him in India's 
impoverished slums, she accepted instantly. 

Ms Alhadad, who dons the hat of artist, mentor, writer and producer, and who 
was recently awarded a University of Queensland Endowment Fund (UQef)
scholarship, was earlier this year chosen to work as a consultant in
the A R Rahman Arts Foundation in Chennai to help kick start its Music
and Dance Educational program. 

“It was a surreal experience working with a musical genius,
especially watching him patiently mentor a group of children from the
slums who have never before had any form of education in music or the
arts,” she said. 

“The opportunity that he has opened up to the disadvantaged
children of Chennai is immense and has certainly and quite literally
brought smiles, song and dance to the streets. 

“It was my first time in Chennai and I did not even need an address
to Mr Rahman's Arts Foundation. Literally everyone in Chennai will know
not only Mr Rahman's Arts Foundation building, but also his music
studio, music conservatory and even Mr Rahman's home!” 
 Over the past eight years, Ms Alhadad has gathered many stamps on her
passport, travelling the world promoting youth theatre and the use of
performance in building peace. 

Her artistic prowess and love for humanity has seen her work with
youths in Thailand, Cambodia, Mali and Peru as well as on the
award-winning Children of the Seaand Finding Marinaprojects in Sri Lanka, which 
concentrated on the issues of the Boxing Day Tsunami and civil and ethnic 
conflict. 

Ms Alhadad's interest in the arts also recently took her to Brazil to work on 
the UNESCO-supported Capoeira Knights– a Brazilian martial art – on the issues 
of violence, drugs and gangs. 

Capoeira Knightsreceived critical acclaim at the 2008 Edinburgh Festival while 
Children of the Sea received the Spirit of the Fringe first prize award at the 
2005 Edinburgh Fringe Festival. 

Finding Marina – a production that tackles the civil conflict in
Sri Lanka – won the Amnesty International Award for theatre that
changes people's lives in 2006. 

“Traditionally, education in arts and performance has ironically
been a closed group available to those who can afford it,” Ms Alhadad
said. 

“Since 2004, I have endeavoured to open this group, take
performance training to the streets and provide free education in
refugee camps. 

“That was the spark that led myself alongside internationally acclaimed 
director Toby Gough and close partners to create the Children of the Seaproject 
and The World Festival bringing together theatre, music and
dance projects in communities and encouraging and empowering others to
create opportunities to transform their own lives through performance.” 

As Ms Alhadad embarks on a PhD in UQ's School of Social Work and
Human Services and the Australian Centre for Peace and Conflict
Studies, her interests in the creative arts move closer to home. 

With the help of a UQef scholarship (University of Queensland
Endowment Fund), Ms Alhadad aims to examine the process of performance
in the transformation of conflict. 

The UQef was established in 2007 and supports academic initiatives
such as scholarships, named professorial chairs and specific research
programs in areas of defined need. 

The initial philanthropic support from the fund includes
scholarships totalling $500,000 for PhD and Honours level research in
cultural history, new media studies, peace studies, conflict resolution
and social aspects of natural resource management and sustainability. 

“UQef for me is much more than a scholarship. It has strengthened
the gift of giving and has inspired me to give back when I can,” Ms
Alhadad said. 

“Hopefully, a spirit of giving will also be born within such
scholars, and they might one day do the same for other needy people,
and thereby over a period of generations, a flood of good will start.” 

One of Ms Alhadad's research goals is to build a creative art for
peace project where professionals train youths in the performing arts,
culminating in a multicultural Indigenous-themed theatrical production. 

“Working with Kooemba Jdarra Performing Arts Company for my
research, one of the overarching objectives is to build capacity and
boost capabilities to enable the involvement and participation of young
people in our project in the creative arts,” she said. 

“At UQ, I wish to unpack the issues of marginalisation and social
exclusion faced by the Indigenous and minority urban youth in Brisbane
within their own communities and externally.” 

UQef scholarship recipients attended a special morning tea with
benefactors on May 5 at The Sir Llew Edwards Building, St Lucia Campus. 


http://www.uq.edu.au/news/?article=18369


Krish..
His Music ~ My Mother Tongue


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