We create high-quality audio content for individuals and organizations, including podcasts, pre-recorded radio shows, radio dramas, and audio sketches. We also offer scriptwriting and creative consulting; from concept development to final edits, ensuring compelling, culturally resonant storytelling.
Our refugee-led teams in Kenya and Uganda bring extensive experience in video production, specializing in films, documentaries, and human interest stories. We’ve collaborated with partners to produce compelling, authentic content focused on refugee experiences and stories, delivering real-life narratives and local expertise.
We work with a skilled network of refugee photographers across Kenya and Uganda, available to professionally capture powerful moments for a fee. Trained in event coverage, humanitarian documentation, and documentary storytelling, they bring a unique blend of artistic vision and lived experience to every assignment.
Smovee.app is a platform where displaced artists share sounds, earn income, and build community through music and stories.
In March 2022, we worked with Open Society University Network (OSUN) to produce the above short video.
Throughout three weeks in March, approximately 50 refugee and internally displaced students located across Kenya and Jordan attended Robert Todd’s RhEAP Science Literacy Course. Todd taught one group of students in-person at Kakuma Refugee Camp in Kenya and another group as a hybrid course, blending an in-person class in Kakuma with a Zoom class for students from the Dadaab Refugee Complex, also in Kenya, and from Jordan. (OSUN)
From December 2020 through March 2021, we have been working with other scriptwriters from South Sudan, Kenya, and the United States to create Sawa Shabab Season 5.
A Radio drama series originally from South Sudan, the Sawa Shabab was introduced in Kakuma refugee camp in 2021 as its journey started in late 2020.
Sawa Shabab is a bold new peacebuilding radio drama series for South Sudanese (and Kakuma's) youth.
The drama series follows the daily lives of four young South Sudanese: Rose, Taban, Winnie, and Richard, four very different characters facing common issues: tribalism, poverty, gender inequity, and insecurity but also issues that affect youth all over the world: school, work, friendships, family, love and future ambitions.