Cultivating Cultural Resilience is an ongoing series that highlights the power and potential of artists working in times of crisis. In an age of fear, censorship, and division, these practitioners model courage and compassion — using performance to expose harm, to hold space for truth, and to awaken our shared imagination. By linking our collective struggles, the series connects international artists who are using the arts to resist violence, affirm dignity, build trust, and imagine more just and humane futures.
Read articles from events in the May 2025 session on HowlRound, including:
- Taking Care, Taking Risks with Kiyo Gutierrez (Mexico), Teddy Mangawa (Zimbabwe), Dijana Milosevic (Serbia), Ada Mukhina (Russia/Germany), Tra Nguyen (Vietnam).
- The Government Took Over Their University. Here’s How These Students Fought Back with Todd London (U.S.) & Laszlo Upor (Hungary)
- Why Soft Power Is Not So Soft with Ambassador Cynthia P. Schneider (U.S.)
The series is curated and hosted by the Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics and the Center for International Theater Development.
Fall Series 2025
Online
Writing in a War Zone: How Ukrainian Playwrights Are Defending Culture
Monday, November 10, 10:00 am – 11:30 am EST
With Iryna Harets, Andrii Bondarenko & Laura Cahill
Facilitated by Sophia Hanziuk
When Putin launched his full-scale invasion, he claimed Ukraine had no language, no culture. Even now, Russian officials frame the war as “Russians killing Russians.” Yet every Ukrainian play staged, every script written, every actor stepping onstage to tell Ukrainian stories in the Ukrainian language pushes back against that narrative. In Kyiv, tickets sell out in minutes; in Kharkiv, underground shows still draw full houses despite the threat of shelling. Harets and Bondarenko embody this historic moment of artistic transformation, using new forms, languages, and myths to shape and safeguard Ukrainian identity.
This session brings together Ukrainian playwrights Iryna Harets and Andrii Bondarenko in conversation with American playwright and teacher Laura Cahill to explore the role of art in wartime and how playwriting in Ukraine has become both a cultural renaissance and resistance.
Iryna Harets
Andrii Bondarenko
Dr. Andrii Bondarenko – playwright, journalist, culturologist, PhD in Philosophy. Co-founder of Playwrights Theatre in Kyiv. Participant of the Worldwide Ukrainian Play Readings Project curated by John Freedman.
Laura Cahill
Sophia Hanziuk
Sophia Hanziuk is an actor and playwright from Kyiv, Ukraine, who has just started her first year at SUNY Purchase Acting BFA program. She’s a member of Young Playwrights Ukraine, a mentorship project for actors and writers living with war. She was mentored by playwrights Theresa Rebeck, Kate Robin and Alexis Scheer, and worked with directors Tyne Rafaeli and Lars Rudolfsson.
Beyond Crisis - How Performing Arts Help to Heal
Crimes against humanity, such as Armenia 1915, Rwanda 1994, and those we are witnessing today, have a long lasting impact on those that live them, and on the generations that follow. How do we heal from such harm? These artists, from different continents, but with a shared history, are proving how performance can move us through and beyond unfathomable crisis and trauma. Ms. Armaghanyan and M. Ruzibiza met as Global Fellows at The Lab in 2021 and have built a friendship through stories and creative exchange. Sonya attended Ruzibiza’s dance festival, The East African Nights of Tolerance, in 2022- you can read about her impressions from the festival here. In this conversation, they reflect on their own experiences of healing through art and the power in performance as a space for recovery and connection.
Sonya Armaghanyan (Armenia)
Sonya Armaghanyan is a theater artist who has worked internationally in conflict zones and has most recently worked with the World Health Organization exploring the potential of the arts to support health and well-being, including recovery from war-related trauma.
Wesley Ruzibiza (Rwanda)
Ruzibiza is a dancer, choreographer and founder of the East African Nights of Tolerance Festival, which he created because “You cannot have peace, you cannot have harmony, and you cannot have love if you don’t accept the presence of the other.”
Sebastián Torres
Sebastián Torres is an actor, writer, producer, and director born in Caracas, Venezuela. He is the son of forced migration and welcoming arms in a land that he now calls home. He studied performing arts with the internationally acclaimed Elia K. Schneider at the Stella Adler Academy of Acting and Theater in L.A. and in 2007 co-founded Grupo Teatral Emergente de Caracas, devoted to social and political productions.
Migrants, Mothers, and Artists
There are over 122 million forcibly displaced people of whom over 42 million are refugees – all of them in search of safety around the world. Among them, women are mothering and providing for their children while on the move, in multiple languages and across cultural and governmental barriers. Their survival and continuance of care is a holistic act of resistance and generative power. We meet with artists leveraging performance to center their stories and make them known when the power-hungry seek to silence and separate them. Through the use of story, song, and dance, these artists grapple with matrifocal narratives of migration, displacement, and exile, but also of determination, love, and resilience. The stakes of providing care and connection under the most politically oppressive conditions require ingenuity of the highest order.
Jasmin Cardenas
Marta Górnicka
Caroline Hatem
Caroline Hatem was born in Beirut in 1976 when the Lebanese civil war erupted. Her father taught philosophy, and her mother, dance. She found out quite early how to face turmoil with art and books. She learned philosophy (a Masters’s in France), theatre (a BA at the University of Arizona), and dance.
Sophia Skiles
Sophia Skiles (she/her) is a New York City-based stage actor, acting teacher, facilitator, and citizen — purposefully blurring, disrupting, and bridging the boundaries of the stage, the classroom, and the public. She recently served as Cultural Advocate and Equity Facilitator for Here Lies Love Broadway.
Theatre as Civic Imagination
Thursday, November 13, 10:30 am – 12:00 pm EST
With Michael Rohd , Coya Paz, Irina Kruzhilina and the U.S. Arts Leaders
The federal government is attacking freedom of expression and working to harness cultural symbols and public narratives. This attack on the arts isn’t just part of the culture wars, it’s part of a larger attack on civic care. From education to health, from justice to environment, sectors that work to create compassionate webs of support are being systematically dismantled and decimated. The arts are part of this ecosystem and theatre artists are storytellers and collaborators with the skills to organize, communicate, and imagine resistance. So while the U.S. federal government is working to divide, conquer, and squash our spirits, theater, as a form and practice, is being deployed around the U.S. to gather, to envision, to build coalition and to center what’s possible. Join theatre-maker Michael Rohd in conversation with artists and cultural leaders who are doing just that.
Michael Rohd
Coya Paz
Coya is a writer, director, scholar, and arts administrator with a deep commitment to racial and economic equity in the arts. She specializes in co-created performance and applied theater, and is the Director of Strategy for the historic Free Street Theater in Chicago, whose mission is to create original performance by, for, about, with, and in Chicago’s historically divested communities. Visit her on the web at coyapaz.com
Irina Kruzhilina
Irina Kruzhilina is a New York-based director, scenographer, visual dramaturg, experience designer and educator, creating work at the intersection of visual art, live performance, and civic engagement. She has collaborated with acclaimed artists and organizations including Doug Fitch, Lars Jan, Dmitry Krymov, Geoff Sobelle, En Garde Arts, Mabou Mines, and Arlekin Players.
In-Person
Truth-telling, Performance, and the Art of Getting Things Done
Wednesday, November 12, 5:30-7 pm, followed by a reception.
Location: Georgetown University, Riggs Library
With George Brant, Mykola Kuleba & Katya Pavlevych
Moderated by Gillian Huebner & Derek Goldman
This session is presented in partnership with The Collaborative on Global Children’s Issues
In Ukraine, tens of thousands of children have been separated from their families, communities, and country and forcibly transferred to Russian-occupied territories or deported to Russia and Belarus. Some have been placed in Russian families and given Russian nationality. Others have been transferred to “camps” where Russian officials have said they receive “patriotic education”. Some have been militarized, unwillingly prepared to fight against their homeland.This is the largest missing children’s case since World War II and mechanisms for enforcement and accountability are failing. We are witnessing the total ineffectiveness of the global child protection system. But in the midst of such tremendous challenges and constraints, ordinary people – mothers, grandmothers, civil society innovators, and artists – are doing extraordinary things: creating solutions, finding “what works”, and communicating in new ways – when all else fails. This conversation will focus on the power of narrative, the burden of storytelling, and the art of getting things done.
George Brant
Mykola Kuleba
Katya Pavlevych
Gillian Huebner
Derek Goldman
Dr. Derek Goldman is an award-winning international stage director, playwright, producer, festival director, adapter/ deviser, curator, and published scholar. He serves as Artistic and Executive Director of The Laboratory for Global Performance & Politics (The Lab), which he co-founded in 2012 with Ambassador Cynthia Schneider with a mission “to humanize global politics through performance.” Under his leadership, The Lab has grown into a unique organization that is both a global destination for students and an expansive network of global collaborators, and is recognized for its distinctive thought-leadership and innovation at the intersection of performance, politics, education, and social justice.
The Art of Care for Children in Adversity and Those Who Serve Them
Friday, November 14, 10 am-12 pm, followed by lunch
Location: The Lab studio in Georgetown
Facilitated by Raghad Makhlouf, Associate Director of The Art of Care, with Gillian Huebner, Executive Director of The Collaborative on Global Children’s Issues, and Emma Jaster, Associate Director of The Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics.
This workshop will provide an opportunity for people working with children to experience the power of narrative, story-telling, communications, and performance in the midst of conflict and crisis. It is open to professionals, students, and community members. Part of the Art of Care Initiative,* led by The Lab’s Executive and Artistic Director Derek Goldman, this closed-door workshop will include Georgetown students and faculty, frontline actors, social creatives working under authoritarianism, and key allies to share stories, reflect, reconnect with purpose and play, and think through ways to communicate their work to build further support.
*The Art of Care Initiative advances the idea that art and care are profoundly linked, and that this linkage can lead to more caring systems, better health outcomes, and a more just world.
Raghad Makhlouf
Raghad Makhlouf is an accomplished actress, director, and teaching artist, and a two-time Helen Hayes Award nominee. She is thrilled to join The Art of Care initiative as the Associate Director. With a dynamic career that spans Syria, Lebanon, and Europe, she has an extensive repertoire of performances on stage and has appeared in more than 400 hours of television drama.
Gillian Huebner
Gillian Huebner is the Executive Director of the Collaborative on Global Children’s Issues at Georgetown University. Her work focuses on supporting the development, strengthening, and coordination of programs and systems to enhance community-based and nationally-owned approaches to fostering young people’s resilience, particularly in times of crisis.
Emma Jaster
Jaster specializes in physical expression and communication as a performer, director, educator, and facilitator. As Associate Director of The Lab, she works with international artists at the intersection of politics and performance using the skills of the stage for the sake of diplomacy and advocacy. She also teaches movement at The Shakespeare Theater Company’s Academy of Classical Acting.
Movement as a Site of Resistance
Saturday, May 10
10:30am–12:30pm EST
In-person workshop with Samwel Japhet & Tanvi Hegade
This workshop will begin at 10:30am and is followed by lunch for participants.
A live workshop with Samwel Japhet & Tanvi Hegade
Whether in India, Tanzania, or the U.S., each body has great potential for healing, empowerment, and change. Across the globe and here at home, how can movement challenge power, sustain hope, and strengthen communities in times of crisis? This workshop equips us with tools to get grounded, resist oppression, reclaim space, and reimagine through movement. Led by two Global Fellows with unique stories and expertise in the restorative and emancipating potential of movement, we will practice working from within our own bodies and present moment, cultivating homeostasis and tapping into play as a form of resistance to stay embodied, empowered, and connected.
This workshop is intentionally designed as an opportunity for artists, humanitarians, and cultural leaders based in and around the DC epicenter to connect in person, whether or not you consider yourself a dancer, mover, performer, or none of the above.
Participants will be led remotely by award winning dance artist and social entrepreneur Samwel Japhet in Tanzania and the India Vice President of ITI’s International Dance Committee, Tanvi Hegade in India, facilitated in person by The Lab’s Associate Director, Emma Jaster.
Stories, Seeds, and Survivance
Monday, May 12
11:00am–12:30pm EST
Online workshop with Fidaa Ataya & Dovie Thomason
A workshop that is not a workshop with Fidaa Ataya & Dovie Thomason
Stories are like a secret code, a cultural DNA; they carry keys to life based on our ancestors’ struggles and strengths, their strategies and values. When our culture and way of living are attacked in the material world, we keep them strong in our stories, planting them in the hearts and minds of all who hear them, all who will pass them on. Stories connect us to our past and shape our futures, helping us to imagine alternatives, to envision the dreams towards which we can collectively mobilize.
Led by Global Fellow Fidaa Ataya, Artistic Director of The Seraj Storytelling Academy, and master storier Dovie Thomason, participants will hear, share, and shape stories of their own for this moment. We call this session a workshop that is not a workshop but an opportunity to connect, share, and build relations across borders, boundaries, cultures, and traditions.
“It seems to me that we are in a space between stories, seeking an overstory— a unifying narrative with space for many voices…and laughter. My hope is to use storying as it’s always been used—to show us ways of being and being together in good relations.” – Dovie Thomason
Why Soft Power is Not So Soft; Artists as Changemakers
Tuesday, May 13
11:00am–12:30pm EST
A (pep) talk with Ambassador Cynthia Schneider
A (pep) Talk with Ambassador Cynthia Schneider, Co-Founding Director of The Lab
Sometimes in the face of adversity, it’s easy to forget the power artists have. Don’t.
Extremists and totalitarians get why culture matters and fight hard to control the narrative. We can wield culture for good.
From the Khmer Rouge to ISIS, extremists have destroyed history, literally and figuratively, to erase existing identities and impose their radical ideologies, rewriting the story to justify their actions. History suggests that ultimately the extremists and totalitarians fail, but it can be hard to imagine our way out when we’re in the midst of it.
Enter the artists, cultural, and intellectual leaders. Artists hold up a mirror to authority. They can tell you what really happened. They can show what the people are thinking, and have the power to move people to action, to connect across borders and differences to fuel movements for socio-political change.
This review of artists’ influence on political change throughout history and the world will remind us of what culture-bearers have accomplished, and, hopefully, inspire us to action. As Wole Soyinka said, “Culture humanizes; politics demonizes.” We need humanity to break through the extreme demonization of today. It has happened before; it can happen again.
Goddesses, Caution Tape & Torches: The Joys of Theatrical Resistance
Wednesday, May 14
11:00am–12:30pm EST
A conversation with Laszlo Upor & Todd London
A conversation with Laszlo Upor & Todd London.
When Victor Orbán’s authoritarian government began its “model change” plan for higher education in 2020, a euphemism for “privatization” and “takeover” aimed at eradicating university autonomy and placing public assets in the hands (and pockets) of government loyalists, only one university in Hungary fought back: the University of Theater and Film Arts (SZFE). Faculty and school leadership resigned (but kept teaching through a collective “Learning Republic” created with students) and the students mounted a seventy-one day blockade of the school. Ended by a national COVID lockdown, the blockade was distinguished by creative performance, design, music, and the mass participation of ordinary citizens—a truly staged resistance movement. Including photos and short films of the students’ performative protests, this session features a discussion between SZFE’s Rector at the time, Lázló Upor, a pre-eminent Hungarian dramaturg, educator, and translator of English-language plays, and fellow author, educator, and artistic director Todd London, with whom Upor is translating Lessons in Resistance: How a Small Hungarian Arts University Faced Down a Big Bully Government, his personal chronicle of the years of resistance and the formation of Freeszfe Society, a cooperative pan-European academy for artists.
From a four-mile-long human chain to a torchlight ceremony in the rain, from the appearance of Blind Justice at the Halls of Justice to an art installation delivered by bicycle to the gates of Parliament, these playful, passionate demonstrations and the symbols that arose from this movement inspired artists around the world. “Goddesses, Caution Tape & Torches” will dive into the mechanism of governmental incursion in the arts and higher ed and provide examples of ways artists can use their talents to stand up to tyranny. Participants can get a bit of the backstory by reading about the Learning Republic.
Taking Care, Taking Risks
Thursday, May 15
11:00am–12:30pm EST
Panel discussion moderated by Global Fellow Ada Mukhina, with Kiyo Gutierrez, Teddy Mangawa, Dijana Milosovic, and Trà Nguyễn
An international dialogue on artistic impact
As world events unfold, many of us find ourselves simultaneously feeling at greater risk and taking greater risks. There are toolkits, websites, resources on risk and impact for artistic resistance in the USA (see this recent workbook from Theater Communications Group). But what does taking risk look like in different political contexts worldwide? Meet international artists and cultural workers actively engaged in work that navigates questions of risk with great care. How do we define our circle of influence and artistic strategies? What is our role: to speak inside theatre or join broader political movements? How do we find and define risk for ourselves? What would it look like to build an international network of care and solidarity for those taking risks across the globe?
This panel discussion will be moderated by Ada Mukhina, creator of Risk Lab and feature artists from The Lab’s Creative Core and Global Fellows program including Kiyo Gutierrez in Mexico, Teddy Mangawa in Zimbabwe, Dijana Milosovic in Serbia, and Tra Nguyen in Vietnam.
Spring Series Facilitators
Fall Series Facilitators
This series is presented by The Center for International Theater Development & The Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics in partnership with The Horizons Project.
The two live sessions, “Truth Telling, Performance, and the Art of Getting Things Done” and “The Art of Care for Children in Adversity and Those Who Serve Them” are presented in partnership with The Collaborative on Global Children’s Issues.