Magicians Without Borders
performs magic shows for children in refugee camps, orphanages and hospitals
around the world -often in war torn places where love, laughter and magic are
desperately needed.
Magicians Without Borders began when Tom Verner, a professor of Psychology, was traveling through Eastern Europe in 2001 and did some magic shows in the refugee camps of Kosovo and Macedonia. The shows were so well received, that Tom decided to take a leave from his teaching and perform full time.
Tom has set up a non-profit organization,
Magicians Without Borders, to allow him to accept contributions
to fund his work. The trips would not have been possible without the support
and contributions of generous individuals, corporations, organizations, friends
and family.
Since that first trip in 2001, Tom and his wife Janet,
a visual artist and teacher, performing as a mime and clown in the shows, have
taken six trips a year. They have traveled to Ethiopia numerous times, Sudan,
Uganda, Tanzania, Somalia, India, Bangladesh, Macedonia, Kosovo, Serbia, Bosnia
Croatia, Ukraine, Haiti. They performed for a month in Thailand and Burma after
the Tsunami.and traveled through Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana after Hurcane
Katrina.
Tom and Janet, along with other magicians and theater teachers travel to El Salvador every three months where they perform for children in the countryside and are teaching magic and theater skills to a group of very poor teenagers. Magicians Without Borders sponsors a week long Magic, Theater and Art Camp for these chidlren who live in grinding poverty surrounded by brutal gang violence. These young magicians have already begun to perform in orphanages, hospitals and disaster areas in El Salvador. One day some of them may travel with Tom and Janet to bring magic and laughter to other poor chidlren in other parts of the world.
At the invitation of the Unted Nations, Magicians
Without Borders created a magic show that teaches childeren and adults
about HIV/AIDS. They perform this educational and inspiring show in refuge camps
around the world.
Tom says, "I like to think that the magic brings
not only laughter and surprise, but on some deeper level perhaps, magic plants
seeds of hope. Hope that the impossible is possible. Hope that after years of
waiting in a refugee camps, the waiting will end and the people will go home
again."
On Thanksgiving Day, 2007, The Hallmark Cable Network broadcast a piece on Magicians Without Borders. This cameo piece gives a good sense of our mission to bring hope to some of the most forgotten children in many of the most troubled places in the world.
Magicians Without Borders, 100 Geary Road, Lincoln, Vermont 05443 802-453-5425 verner@gmavt.net