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Turkey's stage-struck grannies act to save the planet
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A 62-year-old聽grandmother from rural Turkey who rose to national fame with her聽all-women village theatre group is聽now set to stage a play raising awareness about climate change.
Ummiye Kocak from聽the village of Arslankoy in the Mediterranean province of Mersin recently began rehearsals for her new聽play聽"Mother, the Sky is Pierced!"
She told Anadolu news agency聽that she wanted "".
The climate crisis is "not only our problem, it is the world's problem", she says. "I am shouting as loud as I can - this world is ours, we need to take good care of it!"
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Ummiye Kocak has written plays for many years, always aiming to change perceptions. Her previous works have tackled issues from poverty and domestic violence to Alzheimer's Disease, which has been聽a frequent target for mockery in Turkish TV dramas.
And her portfolio isn't limited to village theatre productions. In 2013 she with a film focusing on the difficulties of women's lives in a Turkish village.
Her stardom even led to an .
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Educated 'by chance'
Ummiye Kocak grew up in a conservative rural area, and only got primary education "by chance" - as each family was required to send one girl to school.
But she says her father was open-minded enough to take all his聽children to the cinema聽at a time when no other dad in the village would, sparking her love of drama.
She says that when she first arrived in the village of Arslankoy as a young bride, she noticed that women there had to do all the work - in the fields as well as in the house. She thought that wasn't right and told herself: ""
Her village doesn't have a stage, so she gathers her performers under a walnut tree in her garden for rehearsals while they do their domestic聽chores.
Her聽love of theatre is apparently聽contagious. "When I see Ummiye calling me on my mobile, I come running," one of her actresses says.
And people in other parts of the country want a piece of the action, .
One woman in Istanbul wrote: " every time I see you, Aunt Ummiye鈥 I hope all women lead their lives knowing they have this power like you do."
Reporting by Dilay Yalcin and Krassi Twigg
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