Good Chance Theatre's giant refugee puppet Little Amal arrived in Coventry - The Coventry Observer

Good Chance Theatre's giant refugee puppet Little Amal arrived in Coventry

Coventry Editorial 28th Oct, 2021   0

A GIANT puppet of a nine-year-old Syrian girl made by War Horse creators Handspring Puppet Company, visited Coventry yesterday during The Walk, one of the most ambitious live artworks ever.

Little Amal, the 3.5-metre-tall giant puppet was at the heart of The Walk.

She is on an epic 8,000km trek in a moving artistic response to the stories of displaced children around the world.

After travelling across Turkey, Greece, Italy, France, Switzerland, Germany and Belgium, Little Amal arrived in Britain.




She walked from Coventry Transport Museum to University Square yesterday at 3pm.

Two teachers at Earlsdon Primary School came up with the idea of welcoming


Little Amal to the city with Footprints of Welcome – a montage of paper footprints designed and decorated by children from across all year groups with personal messages of welcome and artwork.

They include drawings of city landmarks they felt Amal would like to see and messages of welcome in different languages spoken at home.

President Kennedy School, an outstanding coeducational secondary and sixth form, in Coventry has also picked up on the project.

Good Chance Theatre, whose critically-acclaimed production The Jungle inspired The Walk, were so impressed when they heard about Footprints of Welcome from Coventry City of Culture Trust’s Education and Young People programme, they have asked to endorse and feature it online so it can be shared with other schools across the UK and globally.

A film about Footprints of Welcome, featuring 15 Year 6 pupils at Earlsdon Primary, as well as support materials including footprint templates and instructions have been created by the Trust. These are set to be published on Good Chance Theatre’s website.

Year 6 teacher Michelle Andrews, one of the teachers behind the project, said: “Footprints of Welcome came from a desire to try and encourage the children’s empathetic responses, through emotion, art and language to the refugee situation.

“We wanted to be involved with the City of Culture in welcoming Amal to our city, which is well-known for acceptance and diversity and do something special.

“It’s really exciting how something simple has grown into something powerful. We are really pleased and proud to be part of Good Chance Theatre’s project.”

Andy Reeves, education & young people programme manager, Coventry City of Culture Trust said: “We are delighted to see how the Footprints of Welcome project has grown from an original idea sparked at Earlsdon Primary School in Coventry, is now being taken up by Good Chance Theatre.

“It is wonderful to see the impact that schools can have, not only on their own students, but potentially students around the world, by engaging with events like The Walk as part the Coventry City of Culture programme.”

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