In 2025, three theatre and performing arts organizations in the United States became the first in our industry to officially be designated Apartheid Free Zones (AFZs): Theatre of the Oppressed NYC, Bechdel Project, and Festival of Latin American Contemporary Choreographers (FLACC). The AFZ campaign is inspired by the South African anti-apartheid struggle and the international solidarity movement that emerged in support of it. Like the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, the AFZ campaign is a form of nonviolent action aimed to end all forms of complicity with apartheid Israel to compel it to comply with international law.
Theater Workers for a Ceasefire (TW4C) exists to organize United States based theatre workers in solidarity with the people of Palestine. Recently, TW4C sat down with Sulu LeoNimm, executive director at Theatre of the Oppressed NYC; Maria Aparo, co-creative director at Bechdel Project; and Liz Duran Boubion, artistic director of FLACC. We talked about what motivates their action in solidarity with the Palestinian people and what role they see the American theatre industry playing in international struggles for peace and justice.
TW4C: What drew you and your organizations to join the movement in solidarity with the Palestinian people? Can you talk about how you first got involved—either as theatre organizations or as individuals—and how that involvement has evolved?
Maria Aparo: We have a contact at LaGuardia Performing Arts Center who reached out to us because they were looking for a venue for The Gaza Monologues. Of course, we said, “Yes, come on, bring everybody,” and we hosted a presentation of that. As an intersectional feminist company, Bechdel Project believes issues like apartheid cannot be separated from gender equity, so it was kind of a no brainer. We are eager to always adopt social justice movements within the organization. There's no shyness about it. We've actually doubled down in the current climate. We've done the opposite of some other places.
TW4C: That's wonderful.
Sulu LeoNimm: I knew that there is a very prominent corner of Theatre of the Oppressed work by Palestinians and in solidarity with Palestinians, so this is a legacy of the work. We're a small organization and have a focus on the chronic issues in New York City, like racial inequity and how that intersects with immigration and gender justice. We assess opportunities outside of our community programs based on capacity. For The Gaza Monologues, a former staff member had plans to produce the event and proposed that we co-produce. This was alongside us shifting into becoming a worker self-directed nonprofit, so these are decisions we are now doing collectively. We said, “Yes, go. This is something we can do, so let's do it.”
Liz Duran Boubion: There's an internationalist approach that we're taking as an arts organization to understand that our struggles as Latine and Indigenous artists of the Americas align with the struggles of Palestinians. The root of that shared problem is Western capitalist agendas and settler colonial militarism. So, we've demonstrated solidarity with Palestinian artists and activists since 2023. I believe that the arts can be a place where we change hearts and minds by igniting really important conversations about soft power oppression in the arts. If those of us who have public platforms don’t exercise our First Amendment rights, they will continue fly out the window.
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Many thanks to Theater Workers for a Ceasefire (TW4C) for the organization of this important work!