(Re-posted from the Research for Development. Click HERE for original article)
"Hunt Emerson, British comic book legend and renowned Beano contributor, is just back from working with the team behind an innovative youth communication initiative in Kenya. Hunt said "Shujaaz is one of the most exciting comics projects I've seen in 35 years in the business. It breaks new ground with its concept, and is so totally worthwhile that I feel privileged to be involved!"
February saw the launch of Shujaaz, a new monthly comic designed to entertain young Kenyans whilst providing them with positive messages and ideas to improve their lives. Shujaaz means 'hero' in Sheng, a mixture of Swahili and English widely spoken by cool young Kenyans and the language in which the comic is written.
Shujaaz has received funding from the DFID-funded Research into Use (RIU) Best Bets programme because of its unique approach to communication and its potential to disseminate messages, including those based on agricultural research outputs, to young people. The monthly comic is complemented with daily FM radio broadcasts and a television spin-off is planned. Shujaaz also has in place an SMS system through which it can engage directly with its youthful readers and listeners as well as a website. Additional mobile phone-based applications are also in the pipeline.
The print-run for 'chapta 1' of the comic was more than 500,000 copies. These were distributed as free inserts in the Daily Nation newspaper and also through mobile phone giant Safaricom’s nationwide network of Mpesa (money transfer) dealers. This combination ensures distribution to urban as well as rural areas and also makes them available throughout the month.
With the first issue on the streets, the project has the opportunity, briefly, to reflect on the success of the first issue – but more importantly to plan the next 12. Planning is important; the messages are embedded into the stories of the lives of four characters based on archetypal young Kenyans and also, in the case of agricultural issues, to ensure they are seasonally relevant.
As part of their support to the project, RIU introduced Well Told Story (WTS), the Nairobi-based company behind Shujaaz, to another Best Bets project, Farm Input Promotions Africa, which is now their major source of agricultural story lines. RIU also introduced WTS to British comic book legend and Beano contributor, Hunt Emerson.
Hunt is very excited about the Shujaaz initiative:
"Shujaaz is one of the most exciting comics projects I've seen in 35 years in the business. It breaks new ground with its concept, and is so totally worthwhile that I feel privileged to be involved! I have just returned from a week in Nairobi working with the comic's artists on realising the stories they have devised. The atmosphere at the Well Told Story office is stimulating; the cartoonists are producing work that is enthusiastic, fresh, very professional, and comes from the same street level as the young readership it is aimed at.
My part has been to help discover and inspire young, new artists, and to work with them on how best to produce a comic book. This has included showing them how to work as a 'studio', collaborating with each other to produce strips on time, to deadline, using each other's talents in the best ways, with the notion that the finished pages are more important than the individual contributions. I am very impressed with the talents that are coming to light, resulting in work that stands comparison with anything drawn in the UK.
My trip included a visit to a school in a rural area, where the pupils were given copies of the comic for the first time. The way they were immediately and obviously drawn in, and recognised the relevance of the stories and characters to their own lives, proved without doubt that there is something happening here that could actually have an effect."
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