Showing posts with label power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label power. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

The power of theater as a humanizing force

The Jakarta Post | Thu, 06/09/2011 8:00 AM

Ron Jenkins, a professor of theater at Wesleyan University, started running a theater project in Kerobokan correctional institution, Kuta, in January this year. To learn more about the project, The Jakarta Post’s Rita A. Widiadana interviewed the professor on the way to rehearsals last week. The following are excerpts of the interview.

Question: How did you become interested in running theater activities in prisons?

Answer: I have always been interested in theater that happens outside of ordinary venues, especially when the subject matter is important in some special ways to the people who are performing or watching it. The incarcerated groups I have worked with have always been passionate about theater as an art form that empowers them in an environment where they are otherwise powerless, and gives them a voice when they often feel voiceless. Their passion to write and perform motivates me to keep coming back to prisons.

As a teacher of the humanities, I believe that theater can help us understand what it means to be human, and I have never felt the power of theater as a humanizing force than I have in prison.

Prison is by its nature dehumanizing, and one of the things I have heard often from incarcerated actors is that performing theater makes them feel human again.

How relevant is Dante’s work to our contemporary lives especially to those inmates in Kerobokan prison?

Through Dante’s classical work Divine Comedy, the incarcerated actors have a lot to teach the rest of the world, not only about Dante, but about the true meaning of freedom and justice.

An important aspect of our work is to let people outside prison hear the words written by people inside prison so that the stereotypes we all have about prison from Hollywood can be forever put to rest, and we can see people in prison as human beings, not statistics.

When you first entered Kerobokan prison, how did you feel? Did you think the project would work well?

The most difficult part of working in prisons is dealing with the official bureaucracy, but in this case Director Siswanto (Kerobokan prison warden) was very supportive from the beginning and has helped make everything work smoothly. He understands theater can provide a unique form of rehabilitation in a prison environment.

When you first met with members of Kerobokan theatre group, what went through your mind?

When I first met the group at Kerobokan, I was impressed with their intelligence and creativity — most of all with their ability to embark on this project with such a positive attitude in spite of their difficult situations.

Now that I have seen the preliminary results of their writing and performance, I am even more impressed with their talents and their generosity of spirit. I expected to learn a lot about Dante by seeing his story from their point of views and I also expected to learn a lot about being a human being by listening to how they coped with difficulties in their lives.

I am not disappointed, and have learned even more than I expected from these extraordinary men and women (in Kerobokan). My hope is that we can continue this work and give more people a chance to discover their powers — inside and outside of prison.

The Kerobokan Theater Group will perform before the public in January 2012.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

PLN asks govt to revise power rates regulation

Rangga D. Fadillah, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/21/2011 3:03 PM | Business

State electricity company PT PLN has recommended the government revise the 2010 ministerial decree on basic electricity rates, if the cap on increases to power rates for industries is to remain in place.

PLN business and risk management director Murtaqi Syamsudin said Friday that as an executor of government policies his company needed a clear legal basis to avoid problems that appeared to be caused by the excesses of government policies.

"The government and House of Representatives may make political decisions, but for us the most important thing is that they materialize their decisions into clear legal instructions," he told reporters in a discussion in Jakarta.

The electricity rates for industries have recently been in legal limbo since PLN announced it would lift a cap on power rate increases in early January.

Through a ministerial regulation, the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry introduced new power rates in mid 2010. Business owners slammed the change, as calculations showed they would experience increases in power costs of between 20 and 30 percent.

As a compromise, the government and House agreed to cap the tariff increases at 18 percent, as of July 2010.

Friday, December 24, 2010

China State Grid buys Brazil power assets for $1b

The Associated Press, Shanghai | Wed, 12/22/2010 9:28 AM | World

China's biggest electricity provider, State Grid, says it has invested $989 million to acquire seven Brazilian power companies and their transmission facilities.

A notice by State Grid on the website of the government agency that manages state assets says the investment includes a 30-year concession to operate the Brazilian power grids that can be renewed in 20-year contracts once it expires.

The deal marks a further expansion of State Grid into overseas markets following a similar investment in the Philippines.