Opera North – Celebrating Sanctuary, Compassion and Creativity


Opera North’s popular Refugee Week Session returns to the Howard Assembly Room on Thursday 22 June, bringing together sounds from ancient Persia and modern Iran, a Halifax-based band with members from across the globe, and spoken word.

This year’s connection and collaboration is presented by award-winning composer and vocalist Christella Litras and Leeds-based musician Fredlin Morency, who recently performed at the Coronation as assistant music director of the Reggae Roots Choir.

The central Leeds venue will also close this year’s Refugee Week with a family screening of the Disney animation Encanto on Saturday 24 June.

In 2018, Opera North became the first opera company in the UK to be awarded Theatre of Sanctuary status. The title recognises the steps taken by the company to ensure refugees and those seeking sanctuary in the City feel included, valued and celebrated through increased accessibility to the arts.

Each year, Opera North participates in Refugee Week, a festival celebrating the contributions, creativity and resilience of refugees and people seeking sanctuary, co-ordinated by Counterpoints Arts, a leading national organisation in
the field of arts, migration and cultural change.

Amir Behmanesh at Howard Assembly Room. Photograph by Justin Slee.

Headlining the Refugee Week Session, Persian singer Amir Behmanesh will premiere a new Opera North commission: two new pieces written for him by composer, ethnomusicologist and musician Farshad Mohammadi. Celebrating the rich cultural heritage of Iran, the new works set the 11 th -century poetry of Omar Khayyam to traditional Persian melodies with a contemporary charge.

Farshad, also a virtuoso santour player, will lead a six-piece ensemble accompanying the voices of Amir – who performed a memorable set at Opera North’s first ever Refugee Week Session – and soprano and Opera North regular Aimee Fisk.

The new works will be completed just before the concert, in the first instalment of a new artist residency programme that will run in parallel with Opera North’s Resonance residencies for musicians of colour. This annual programme, now in its seventh year, is part of PRS Foundation’s Talent Development Partner Network, supported by PPL.

Babak Mirsalari and Kev Cooke.

A recipient of one of this year’s residencies, Babak Mirsalari aka supermarket saint joins the line-up with a return to his Resonance collaboration with drummer Kevin Clark and visual artist Nikta Mohammadi. Composer and multi-instrumentalist Babak calls Leave to Remain, the project that he developed over a week at Opera North in March, “an aural exorcism”. Through field recordings, traditional Iranian rhythms and newly-composed music, he reflects on his childhood; his transition from Iran to the music scene in northern England; his years spent in the “maze” of Home Office bureaucracy in the UK; and finally the beautiful Yorkshire landscapes surrounding his new home in Hebden Bridge.

Also hailing from the Hebden Bridge area, Hind and the Jaffa Cakes are a group of musicians from different countries and backgrounds who got together at St. Augustine’s, a community centre in Halifax that welcomes and supports refugees and people seeking asylum throughout the Calderdale region. They return with vocalist Nelson Gómez, whose
charismatic and heartfelt performance won over the audience at the first ever session in 2021.

Nelson Gomez at Howard Assembly Room. Photograph by Justin Slee.

Interspersed with the music will be performances on the theme of happiness by spoken word poets with experience of migration and sanctuary-seeking. These new works have been created in workshops delivered by a poet from Opera North and an associate artist from Mafwa Theatre in community settings across Leeds. For most of these poets, this will be their first time sharing their work publicly.  

A relaxed afternoon of family fun rounds off Refugee Week for Opera North on Saturday 24 June, as the magical Disney animation Encanto comes back to the big screen in the Howard Assembly Room.

Ahead of the 2pm screening, children and their families can create their own Madrigal family paper candle or butterfly to take home. The whole event will be relaxed, with audience members of all ages free to sing along, move around and generally have a good time.

To open Opera North’s Refugee Week programme to the widest possible audience, tickets for both events are Pay As You Feel.

For more information and to book, visit operanorth.co.uk or call Box Office on 0113 223 3600.

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