DIMA MABSOUT |  INFO


 


 



KAN YA MAKAN
A program by Catalytic Aciton



Kan Ya Makan (Once Upon a Place) is a design-build program based on storytelling, artistic explorations and spatial interventions, initiated after the August 4th port explosion in 2020. With the Karantina public garden damaged and most children deeply scarred, the program had several aims: to explore and reimagine spaces of safety mentally, emotionally and physically; through this process, to renovate the park with the children and rebuild a loving and caring relationship with the space; to advocate for the park to be open to the public and in the hands of the community.

Most public parks in Lebanon are not accessible due to corruption and a general lack of respect for the common goods. This program feeds into a larger movement of reclaiming public spaces run by local civil society groups.


As a resident artist and educator from CatalyticAction’s team, I have been designing, directing and leading the program on the ground since the start, creating crossovers between Zayraqoun, other artists and cultural groups based on the emerging themes as the program evolved.











The following videos show parts of the process, filmed by the children








Through art, theatre and filmmaking we co-created the ‘Hawiya’ (means ‘bin’ in English) parade. Children created their protest signs with messages of “Happiness, Care and Play”, they custom painted the wheel barrel, created the chant, and filmed one another as we walked around the neighbourhood's public spaces with the aim to #CleanUp and inspire others to join us. Through the Kan Ya Makan كان يا مكان program, we have been working with children to tackle important issues they raised in relation to the care of the neighbourhood’s #publicspaces.








'Kan Ya Makan' program introduces storytelling, imagination and play, inviting the children of Karantina to reimagine, reconstruct, and reconnect with the physical and nonphysical spaces they inhabit. In this video, the children venture to help the newly planted trees live and grow tall by adding canes harvested from their neighborhood.