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Performance is a core element of 2026WOMEN methodology. Here you will find the original soundtrack of our performance ‘صوتي | Mijn Stem, premiered at Arenberg Theatre (Antwerp, Belgium) in March 2026 during the 50th Anniversary Tribunal on Crimes Against Women.

We are the voices of our days and tomorrow

All voices unite, voices united

Resilient and strong – We take a stand

We break every wall, unstoppable, hand in hand

 

We are the voices of our days and tomorrow

All voices unite, voices united

Resilient and strong – We take a stand

We break every wall, unstoppable

Hand in hand

 

They shame us into silence

Oppress us to despair

They try their best to posses

To judge, to repress, even tell us how to dress

 

They won’t buy us

Won’t divide us

Women for women

We are here / we are here / we are here

So fuck their / fuck their / fuck their fear

 

We are the voices of our days and tomorrow

All voices unite, voices united

Resilient and strong – We take a stand

We break every wall, unstoppable, hand in hand

2 x

 

Juntas em círculo, em escuta e presença

Nossas conexões tecem redes de apoio

A confiança entre mulheres constrói sororidade

Na rua a gente brilha (brilha) e espalha consciência

2 x

 

We are the voices of our days and tomorrow

All voices unite, voices united

Resilient and strong – We take a stand

We break every wall, unstoppable

 

Credits:

Text and music: 2026WOMEN Collective (Antwerp)

Arrangements: Céline di Maccio

Why is it is so hard to accept

That equality is a simple fact?

I’m not yours, I am mine (mine)

I’m not told what to do and that’s fine

 

I am her and she is I / she is I

الثورة هي امرأة

I don’t need a father nor a chief

Why is that so hard to believe?

 

I am her and she is I / she is I

الثورة هي امرأة

I don’t need a father nor a chief

Why is that so hard to believe?

 

Won’t be told what to do

Won’t be told where to go

Won’t be told what to say

Won’t be told to obey

 

Won’t be told how to think

Won’t be told not to drink

Won’t be told what to eat

Won’t be told to be sweet

 

Won’t be told how to dress

Won’t be told not to stress

Won’t be told who to see

Won’t be told who to be

 

I am her and she is I / she is I

الثورة هي امرأة

I don’t need a father nor a chief

Why is that so hard to believe?

 

I am her and she is I / she is I

الثورة هي امرأة

I don’t need a father nor a chief

Why is that so hard to believe?

 

Credits:

Text: Petra on Fire

Music and arrangements: Céline di Maccio

Listen to the recorded version HERE!

She’s been relegated from goddess to slave

She’s been made to suffer at the hands of men, cruel and depraved

She’s been forsaken, respect from her taken, trapped, killed and beaten

When will mankind be enlightened

When will mankind be enlightened

When will man

 

What is woman, is she just a gender

Is she just a word… or a feeling, but caring and tender

کیا چیز ہے عورت

 

What is woman, Is she just a gender

Is she just a word… or a feeling, but caring and tender

کیا چیز ہے عورت  ,  کیا چیز ہے عورت,

 

وہ ہیں ستارے / وہ ہیں ستارے

وہ ہے فطرت / وہ ہے فطرت

وہ ہے رات / وہ ہے رات

وہ ہے رات / وہ ہے رات

 

وہ ہے چاند / وہ ہے چاند

وہ ہے شمش/ وہ ہے شمش

وہ ہے آتش / وہ ہے آتش

وہ ہے آگ/ وہ ہے آگ

 

She is sister, she is daughter, she is wife and mother

Goddess to whom, all surrender

She is nature, she protects and enfolds,

She is nature, daring and bold

She is nature, daring and bold

 

She is the sun, she is warm in her embrace

She is the moon, full of beauty and grace

She is the night, whispering secrets untold

She is the stars, a tapestry of gold

2 x

 

This is an entreaty, a prayer, a plea / وہ دنیا ہے۔

She is life giver / Zij is de wereld

to all that can be / Ye nde mokili

She doesn’t ask for much /

Just equality / She’s the world

And never to be treated / هي الدنيا

with indignity / Ela é a terra

2 x

 

O tüm Dünya / Es el mundo / Ona je svet

 

Translation and languages

وہ دنیا ہے۔ (Urdu)

Zij is de wereld (Dutch)

Ye nde mokili (Lingala)

She is the world (English)

هي الدنيا (Arabic)

Ela é a terra (Portuguese)

O tüm Dünya (Turkish)

Es el mundo (Spanish)

Ona je svet (Slovak)

 

Credits:

Text: Shabnam Muqbil

Music and arrangements: Céline di Maccio

Mudança

تغيير تغيير تغيير

2 x

 

Mujeres unidas jamás serán vencidas

4 x

 

Woman is memory, woman is the flame (Woman is the flame)

She has written history, she gives the future a name (She gives the future a name)

Woman breaks every chain, stands after the fall

She knows pain and struggle — yet she is (yet she is)

Dreaming (dreaming) for all

2 x

 

You have to keep fighting, to keep standing, to keep dreaming, to keep going on

2 x

You have to keep fighting, to keep standing

(You-have-to-keep-stan-ding)

 

And go on

 

Mudança

تغيير تغيير تغيير

2 x

 

Credits:

Text and music: Céline di Maccio

Summa summa summa

 

Kianda, Durga-Kali, Rainha Oya

Nantosuelta, Shakti, Athena

Artemis, Freya, Sarashwati

Cibèle, Ala, Gaïa (2 x)

Yemanja, Nana, Oxum

Yara, Pachamama

Yemanja, Nana, Oxum

Yara, Pachamama

 

Pachamama, Amalur, Parvati, Ashtar

 

We rise from the ashes like a phoenix, transformation of the witch

We rise from the ashes like a phoenix, transformation!

2 x

 

Credits:

Text and music: Céline di Maccio

 

Note on the goddesses named

Kianda comes from Angola and belongs to traditional Kimbundu spirituality. She is a water spirit or sea goddess connected to the ocean, fertility, and the protection of fishermen and coastal communities.

Durga is an important goddess in Hinduism in India. She symbolizes strength, protection, and the victory of good over evil. She is often depicted as a warrior goddess who defeats demons.

Kali, also from Hinduism, is a goddess of destruction and transformation. She is revered as the Divine Mother, Mother of the Universe, and the Divine Feminine Energy. She destroys evil and the ego, but is also seen as a protective mother figure who makes renewal possible.

Oya is a goddess from the Yoruba religion in West Africa, especially in Nigeria. She is associated with storms, wind, and change, and is seen as a powerful protector who also guards the transition between life and death.

Nantosuelta comes from Celtic mythology of Gaul (present-day France). She is associated with nature, earth, fire, water, and fertility.

Shakti in Hinduism is not a specific goddess but the concept of universal feminine energy. She represents the creative force of the universe and is the foundation of all divine feminine forms.

Athena is a goddess from Greek mythology. She is the goddess of wisdom, strategy, warfare, and crafts, and was considered the patron deity of the city of Athens.

Artemis, also from Greek mythology, is the goddess of the hunt, the wilderness, wild animals, transitions, nature, vegetation, childbirth, the care of children, and chastity. She is often regarded as a protector of young girls and is associated with healing and disease.

Freya comes from Nordic mythology. She is a goddess of love, beauty, fertility, and magic, but is also connected to war and the death of warriors.

Saraswati is one of the most important goddesses in Hinduism. She is the goddess of knowledge, education, learning, art, speech, poetry, music, creativity, purification, language, and culture. She is often depicted with a musical instrument and symbolizes intellectual and creative development.

Cybele (Cibèle) is a mother goddess from Anatolia who was later also worshiped in Roman religion. She represents nature, mountains, and fertility.

Ala is an earth goddess in the religion of the Igbo people of Nigeria. She represents fertility, morality, and the connection between humans, nature, and ancestors.

Gaia comes from Greek mythology and is the personification of the Earth itself. She is considered the primordial mother from whom all life originated.

Yemanja is an important goddess from the Yoruba religion and Afro-Brazilian religions such as Candomblé. She is the mother goddess of the sea and represents motherhood, protection, and fertility.

Nanã (often called Nana Buluku) is a primordial mother goddess from West African traditions, especially among the Fon and Yoruba peoples. She is seen as a creative force and a symbol of wisdom and old age.

Oxum is a Yoruba goddess of rivers, love, beauty, and wealth. She is often associated with feminine charm, fertility, and care.

Yara comes from the Indigenous Brazilian mythology of the Tupi people. She is a water nymph or siren who lives in rivers and symbolizes the power and allure of nature.

Pachamama is an important earth goddess from the Andes, worshiped by peoples such as the Inca and Quechua. She represents Mother Earth, nature, agriculture, and life itself.

Toi ma soeur

Tu es mon dos, ma valeur et ma vie

أختي في ظهري

أختي في ظهري

2x

 

Toi mon amie, reste debout

Yow sama xarit

Taxawal

Yow sama xarit

Taxawal

2x

 

نوركِ يلمعُ كالهلال،

نوركِ يلمعُ كالهلال

4x

 

نوركِ يلمعُ

كالهلال

 

Credits:

Text and music: 2026WOMEN Collective (Marseille)

Arrangements: Céline di Maccio

Ma voix porte ce chant, celui d’un monde meilleur

Ma voix, trace un sillon droit

dans l’ombre de la peur

Ma voix couvre les cris

les coups, apaise le chaos

D’un rêve libre et doux, devient le flambeau

2 x

Oh

Ma voix, ma voix, ma voix

 

Mi voz lleva este canto

el de un mundo mejor

Mi voz traza un surco recto en la sombra del miedo

Mi voz cubre los gritos

los golpes, calma el caos

De una libertad suave, se hace el faro

2 x

Oh

Mi voz, mi voz, mi voz

 

صوتي يعلو في فضاءِ اللا تمييز،

يترددُ صوتي خلف الثعبان الأبويّ العنيف،

الخانقِ بِلا يدين

 

صوتي
صوتي يُعطيكم سلام، مستقبلٍ وحب،

صوتي، صوتي، صوتي، صوتي
صوتي – ي – ي، صوتي، صوتي

 

Aaah – iya – Aaah

Aaah – iya –iya

2 x

 

Mijn stem

stijgt op in stilte van onverschilligheid,

Mijn stem weerklinkt voorbij de crashes van geweld

van de patriarchale slang die alles verstikt en verslindt .

Mijn stem geeft je woorden van vrede, toekomst en liefde

Mijn stem, mijn stem, mijn stem, mijn stem

 

Oh oh oh oh

 

Mi voz / Ma voix / Mijn stem / صوتي / …

Credits:

Text and music: Céline di Maccio

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