For some two and a half years, I have been looking after my mental health by participating in a community choir. The choir is called “Sing For Freedom”. It is one of the choirs that is led by a social enterprise company called Together Productions. Sing For Freedom used to be a therapeutic choir running under the auspices of “Freedom From Torture”: a charity (formerly the Medical Foundation for the Victims of Torture) which offers invaluable therapeutic and practical support to individuals who have suffered torture. Sing For Freedom members are survivors of torture; refugees; and allies.
More than one choir member has stated that one effect of torture is to remove one’s voice. Effectively, torture silences a person. Being part of a choir restores one’s voice - especially, being part of Sing For Freedom. In our choir, we aim to sing in different languages, and we aim to create our own material or to bring material from our own cultures. So Sing For Freedom performed “Hinnei ma tov u-ma naim Shevet achim gam yachad”: the Hebrew song generally translated as “How good and how pleasant it is When brothers dwell together in harmony” This week, we’re performing a Zulu song celebrating the power of prayer and especially the power of women praying -and we’ve adapted a song from the Disney movie The Jungle Book to portray the gift of true friendship.
I love being part of Sing For Freedom, because I get to mix with people who have demonstrated courage and resilience beyond what most of us can imagine. I know that whatever struggles I may be engaged with, they are not so painful as what some of my fellows went through. I know that in the UK I am protected from arbitrary arrest and torture. In 2024, we do sometimes have to stand up for what is right, even though this may put us at risk of retaliation. I am heartened by my fellow choir members, to keep standing up for what is right.
I feel a kinship with my fellow choir members who sought sanctuary in the UK, because my mother and grandmother also received sanctuary in the UK. My mother and grandmother were persecuted by the Nazi regime simply for being of Jewish descent. They did not need to demonstrate active dissent, they didn’t have to raise concerns which would draw unfriendly eyes toward them. Just by existing as Jews, that was sufficient to merit annihilation.
My choir celebrates the diversity of its membership. We use the power of love to help us in bridging barriers to enhance mutual understanding. Some members say that their families were snatched from them in the troubles they endured, and the choir is their surrogate family.
If you want to find out more about the Sing for Freedom Choir, including how to join, visit their page on this website.
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