One of the awful ironies of this harrowing play about the Sudanese human rights activist Mende Nazer’s experience of modern slavery is that it wouldn’t exist had she not had the courage to try and escape — and had a couple of brave people not helped her. Being an enslaved person in today’s world means being invisible and voiceless. When Nazer broke free in 2000, it was from a home in north-west London: her plight had gone shockingly unnoticed in contemporary Britain.
Since Kevin Fegan’s play (drawn from Nazer’s 2002 autobiography, Slave, co-written with journalist Damien Lewis) was first staged in 2010, the UK has introduced the Modern Slavery Act. Yet there are currently an estimated 49.6mn enslaved people across the world, according to the Global Slavery Index, and an estimated 130,000 in the UK, according to Anti-Slavery International. Those grim statistics hang over Caroline Clegg’s revival for Feelgood theatre company.
In 1994, as a young girl, Nazer was snatched by mujahideen raiders, who torched her village in the remote Nuba mountains in Sudan, killed many of the inhabitants, and kidnapped and raped her. The traumatised 12-year-old was then sold to a wealthy family in Khartoum, where she was beaten, brutalised and bullied into submission. About six years later, she was trafficked to relatives of her “master” in London, where a chance encounter finally offered a way out. Even then she was initially refused asylum by the UK government; it would take a vigorous campaign to save her from deportation back to Sudan.
Fegan’s play offers a straightforward, episodic account of events, staged by a versatile ensemble in Clegg’s production, who deploy rich traditional music and dance to whisk us into Nazer’s early childhood and contrast that easy warmth and freedom with the later horrors of enslavement. It’s not a particularly innovative show in style or structure. But that’s not the point of this drama, which is more about conveying the naked facts of modern slavery and its impact.
Watching the excellent Yolanda Ovide, as Nazer, transform from an open-faced, hopeful little girl into a shrunken, cowed young woman is awful. There’s a wonderful performance too from Ebony Feare as her friend, Kheko. That they represent real people, and that their experiences are common to many, is what really hits you. This is theatre as educator and campaigner, admirably shining a light on this most hideous and shameful of trades.
★★★★☆
To November 9, riversidestudios.co.uk
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