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Lova in jail: Movement and Freedom
LÓVA team in jail: Opera Penitentiary

Group that dances group that dreams. Photo: Gonzalo Moles

LÓVA IN PRISON: MOVEMENT AND FREEDOM

Experiential workshop in which to experience how we develop the LÓVA Project in prison, in particular those
expressivity development tools and dynamics, of body communication and dance.
Some interns of the module will participate 4, who will share their experience, your achievements and reflections, in
related to the theme that the current opera company El Puzle (Every year a new company is created in the
module) is analyzing, debate, singing and dancing: The forgiveness.
How to move in a jail? How to feel freedom when you are locked up? Is LÓVA a vehicle of
freedom? What is LÓVA used for in a therapeutic module? Is it possible to dance forgiveness?… All these questions and
many more to come, we are going to dance them, sing and perform.
We will share with you, with the presence of some of its protagonists, dynamic, games and proposals
we do with the guys from the module 4.

The team:
Miguel Gil took the LÓVA Project to the module 4 from the Valdemoro prison a few 11 years. The module is a
Therapeutic Community for Drug Addicts and, currently, LÓVA Project is part of the activities
therapeutics of the same.
The team has changed over time, feeding on people who, voluntarily, they contribute their
knowledge and their affection for the project: performing arts professionals, teaching, psychosocial intervention and
other disciplines (Fine arts, Photography, …).
At present, the team is coordinated by Miguel Gil and Nadja Jamard. The workshop will be facilitated by Nadja Jamard and Macarena Pena (Kirikú Social Initiatives), Miguel Gil (Lova project), Ana Prieto, and module internals 4.

Every year, in December, the inmates perform their opera before their families.

The work carried out by this team at the Valdemoro prison can be followed on our blog

And the last opera created was published in The country

Caring and being cared for. Photo: Nadja Jamard
color challenges. Photo: Gonzalo Moles