Episode 41: When Art Becomes Shelter: Sahba Aminikia on Music, War, and Healing Children
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About this listen
What happens when music becomes an act of resistance and love becomes a form of education?
In this deeply moving and unflinchingly honest conversation, host Jill L. Ferguson sits down with composer, TED Fellow, and founder of the Flying Carpet Festival, Sahba Aminikia, to explore how art can heal what politics and war have broken. Raised in Tehran during years of cultural repression and conflict, Sahba shares how underground music, storytelling, and community became lifelines and how those early experiences now fuel his life’s work.
As the artistic director of the Flying Carpet Festival, Sahba has helped bring music, performance, and joy to more than 400,000 children living in war zones and conflict-affected regions.
In this episode, he speaks candidly about growing up amid bombs and beauty, why limitation fuels creativity, how children suffer for adult decisions, and why investing in imagination may be the most radical peace-building act of all.
Together, Jill and Sahba unpack big ideas with rare nuance: the danger of dehumanization, the failure of cultural institutions, the difference between information and wisdom, and why “only through love is education possible.”
This is not a conversation about politics; it’s a conversation about humanity, empathy, and what it means to bring light into the darkest places. If you believe art can change lives, if you’ve ever wondered how hope survives in impossible conditions, or if you’re searching for a reminder of what truly connects us across borders—this episode is essential listening.