It symbolizes both Libya's divisions between west and east, and the rebirth of the country's National Theater Festival, which staged a comeback this week in Tripoli after a 15-year hiatus.
When it last took place in 2008, the festival was to be held again in four years.
Before that could happen, a NATO-backed uprising led to the overthrow and killing of longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. With a myriad of militias subsequently vying for power, more than a decade of stop-start conflict followed before a period of relative stability.
Taking to stages in the capital Tripoli and Misrata, about 190 kilometers to the east, performers came from 11 cities around Libya — a country split between a United Nations-backed government in the west and a rival administration supported by military strongman Khalifa Haftar in the east.
Performed at Tripoli's Scouts Theater by a group who travelled from Marj in eastern Libya, "Hassituha" was well received by an audience of more than 1,000 people.
"Some of them burst into tears" over the actors' performances, Muhammad al-Khaitouni, a spectator, said after seeing the play. He said the actors "mostly used gestures and other non-verbal expressions, but they quickly conveyed the meaning to us."
Accompanying his father and two brothers, Khaled al-Muwadhaf, 14, said the actors demonstrated the suffering brought by the chaos, poverty, and political corruption that has gripped the North African nation despite its oil wealth.
Ali al-Qadiri, who directed the play, said he believed the show was a success because it touched on the circumstances of ordinary Libyans, including a "lack of opportunities, and the economic stagnation that most cities in Libya suffer from."
'Uniting Libyans'
Anwar Alteer, director of this year's festival, told AFP, "we want to rekindle the flame and celebrate great artistic figures that the public must not be deprived of."
More than 60 playwrights and performers took part in the festival, alongside dozens of directors and authors.
Like "Hassituha" other performances touched on the painful aftermath of Gaddafi's fall and the chaos that ensued.
Salwa al-Maqsabi, a Libyan actress who came from the eastern city of Benghazi to perform in Tripoli, said arts and theater were a means of overcoming divisions among Libyans.
"I am happy to be present in this sweet gathering," she said. "Theater unites and does not divide, and it will succeed where politicians have failed."
"Ajyal" (Generations), a theatrical group from the eastern city of Derna, said they were optimistic about reviving the country's theater despite the many challenges Libyans face.
On September 10-11 a flash flood in Derna swept entire neighborhoods into the sea, leaving thousands dead or missing and more than 40,000 displaced.
On top of the country's other challenges, Derna still faces the task of rebuilding after the disaster. But Milad al-Hasadi, head of Derna's National Theater, expressed hope for Libya's future.
"Today we are here burdened, it is true, with wounds, pain and loss, but we are optimistic for our country and its artists who succeeded in reviving the national theater," said Hasadi.
"The conflict in Libya has isolated theater from artists, and today we need to encourage and support every Libyan theater, because their role is great in rejecting division, uniting Libyans, and sowing smiles and hope in our lives," Hasadi added.
The Tripoli-based government funded the festival's return, and members attended the opening.
Abdel Basset Buganda, undersecretary of the Libyan culture ministry, told AFP that Libya's theater had gained lasting momentum.
"The Libyan artist has always sought to communicate with the public, but the interruption was caused by the neglect and political strife that harmed the arts, especially theater," Buganda said.
"Today, we are united with all Libyan artists to overcome this strife."
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