Dah sees itself as a theatre that can open doors to victims to seek justice; it is also a space where people can reconsider their views. As a theatre, it employs techniques that allow the crossing of borders between the rational and the irra- tional, and between reality and metaphor: these techniques inherent to transfor- mational and devised theatre can at times open up a much larger space for potential reconciliation than formal justice mechanisms. Through its work, Dah crosses not only ethnic lines, but also more insidious lines that divide people, who hold opposing or antagonistic views on a range of crucial matters. Dah’s aim is to maintain direct contact with its audience. For this reason, its audience, as a rule, is positioned in a circle or in a way that makes members of the audience mirror each other—as in The Story of Tea, The (play).