Jameel Arts & Health Lab stages NYC festival alongside UN General Assembly 

NYC Health + Hospitals/Metropolitan Mural. Artwork by Priscila De Carvalho. (Photo by N. Knight. Image courtesy of NYC Health + Hospitals Arts in Medicine department)
Short Url
Updated 19 September 2025
Follow

Jameel Arts & Health Lab stages NYC festival alongside UN General Assembly 

JEDDAH: The Jameel Arts & Health Lab — a collaboration between Saudi, US and UK organizations — is staging its annual UNGA Healing Arts Week festival in New York from Sept. 20 to 26, alongside the 2025 UN General Assembly and in collaboration with the World Health Organization.  

The festival, which will feature events in venues across New York, is centered, according to a press release, around “a bold new vision: to recognize arts engagement as a health behavior — on par with physical activity, nutrition, sleep, time in nature, and social connection.” 

Stephen Stapleton, a founding co-director of the lab, elaborated. “As the burden of health challenges grows, traditional healthcare systems — designed primarily to treat illness — are proving insufficient on their own,” he told Arab News. “Arts and health interventions can offer a complementary, preventive approach; one that builds community connection, strengthens resilience and engages directly with the broader determinants of health. By integrating these approaches into our health systems, the arts can become a vital health asset, supporting both individual and population well-being. 

“Over the past two decades, the arts and health evidence base has grown dramatically across clinical, population, and neuroscientific research,” he continued. “These include randomized controlled trials which have demonstrated efficacy in mental health, stroke rehabilitation, and palliative care.” 

Highlights of this year’s festival include a keynote speech from Daisy Fancourt, author of “Art Cure: The Science of How the Arts Save Lives”; a roundtable that will “explore social prescribing as a pathway to realizing the economic, clinical, and public health potential of the arts as a driver of care innovation and health equity”; a concert from Mexican-American jazz singer Magos Herrera “exploring music’s role in supporting emotional regulation, connection, and mental health”; a participatory session “exploring how theatre can build social connection, trust and coalition”; an interactive tour of the Metropolitan Museum of Art that includes an art-making workshop; and the unveiling of a photo essay for the Jameel Arts & Health Lab–Lancet Global Series on the Health Benefits of the Arts which will have its regional launch during next month’s Global Health Exhibition in Riyadh.  

Another of the lab’s co-directors, Prof. Nisha Sajnani, said in the release: “UNGA Healing Arts Week is about turning evidence into action — bringing together artists, educators, researchers, and policymakers to … embed creativity into the fabric of clinical and public health.” 


‘Happy faces’: Karachi’s Down syndrome students gain confidence through culinary training

Updated 22 min 23 sec ago
Follow

‘Happy faces’: Karachi’s Down syndrome students gain confidence through culinary training

  • Students learn practical kitchen skills from boiling eggs to making chicken sandwiches under guided instruction
  • Parents say the program has helped children become more independent at home, including preparing simple meals

KARACHI: In a bright training kitchen in Karachi, young adults with Down syndrome chop vegetables, measure ingredients and prepare sandwiches under the guidance of their culinary instructor, skills their parents once believed were beyond their reach.

The medical condition, caused by the presence of an extra chromosome, can affect learning, motor coordination and speech.

Experts say structured, hands-on training, especially in practical life skills such as cooking, significantly improves independence and confidence, which is what the Karachi Down Syndrome Program (KDSP) aims to deliver through its “Education for Life” initiative.

“Parents say their child could not even turn the stove on earlier,” Shayan Zafar, General Manager Communications and Awareness at KDSP, told Arab News on Friday. “They were scared of a mishap when the child entered the kitchen. Now, thanks to the kitchen and KDSP, they make evening tea for their parents at home.”

Launched three years ago for individuals aged 16 and above, the three-year program offers weaving, sewing, stitching, arts and crafts and a dedicated culinary stream taught in small, supervised groups.

Students learn everything from boiling an egg to baking cupcakes as they progress through the curriculum.

“At the end of the day, when the class concludes and you see their happy faces, it makes you happy too,” Zainab Durrani, the culinary and pastry instructor guiding the class, said. “And that motivates you to do all of this.”

Student Dua Shahid is dicing chicken in Karachi, Pakistan, on Dececmber 12, 2025. (AN Photo)

Trained at the College of Tourism and Hotel Management (COTHM), Pakistan’s leading international hospitality college, she said the facility did not have a proper kitchen when she first joined it.

However, that changed as its management decided to introduce culinary classes.

“In the first year, we teach them the basic skills enough for them to make their breakfast at home. For instance, boiled egg, toast and fried egg,” she continued.

The 10 students taking the class said they enjoyed working with Durrani who helps them acquire cooking skills.

“Today, I am making a chicken cheese sandwich and cupcakes along with it,” 20-year-old Dua Shahid, one of Durrani’s students, said while slicing spring onions with careful focus.

“[My most favorite is] chicken cheese sandwich,” she added. “[It is made with] onion, capsicum, chicken, cucumber, bread, mayonnaise [and some] sauce.”

Dua said she also cooks the dishes she learns at home.

“I made chicken vegetable pasta at home. It was very delicious, everyone liked it.”

Another student, Nauroz Khan, 21, shared proudly: “I know how to make pizza, burger [and] eggs. I make all of these at home. I really enjoy [being part of the class].”

Durrani said students often struggle initially with motor skills or coordination, requiring gradual introduction.

“For instance, they may have a problem holding the knife,” she added. You can give them a toy knife and I suggest giving them play dough to begin with,” she said, adding that visual aids help them identify ingredients.

Zafar, who leads communications and awareness programs, said the initiative has demonstrated tangible outcomes.

“We have had a previous batch who just graduated with us, and they are running their own businesses. They have their own Instagram pages which they are running by themselves. Each of them has their respective niche, from weaving to block printing.”

KDSP, now in its 11th year, operates five facilities nationwide — three in Karachi, one in Islamabad and one in Faisalabad — with new centers planned for Hyderabad and Lahore.

Under its KDSP Café brand, the organization also provides a platform for students to promote and sell their work in corporate settings.

“There would be 30,000 individuals with Down syndrome in Karachi while the number would be 300,000 in the entire Pakistan,” said Zafar.

“At this point, we are serving 2,800 of them,” he added. “The goal is to get to every individual, and we have plans to do that through the development of an app and other initiatives across the country.”