music

  • art,  foreignness,  human rights,  human rights practice,  literature,  music,  poetry,  racism

    Alain Locke su Identità e Diritti Umani

    Of Alain Locke,  Martin Luther King Jr. said: “We’re going to let our children know that the only philosophers that lived were not Plato and Aristotle, but W. E. B. Du Bois and Alain Locke came through the universe.” In this article we explore an idea in the work of Alain Locke – the idea that identity and oppression are related to each other.  That the pathway to emancipation is through re-imagining our identity.  Early on he explored these themes in the introduction he wrote to his 1925 anthology titled “The New Negro“. The tribute above, particularly from Martin Luther King, calls for greater attention to Alain Locke’s philosophy and…

  • United We have to bring the world together and learn to live as one 7 billion
    foreignness,  human rights,  music,  Videos

    We have to bring the world together and learn to live as one

    Sometimes our musicians capture in few words ideas at the heart of human rights.  This article is dedicated to the song “United”, which was produced by a group of musicians “Playing for Change”.  They wrote the song in cooperation with 7 billion actions, bringing together musicians from around the world. Where some might see the figure of 7 billion as a cause of alarm, these musicians see 7 billion human hearts. As 7 Billion Actions say on their webpage: 7 Billion Actions is connecting people and creating positive change through the universal language of music. Music has the power to break down boundaries between people. Music transcends geographical, political, economic, spiritual and ideological distances, uniting people…

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  • music,  racism

    Only Water in a Stranger’s Tears

    ‘It’s only water in a stranger’s tears.’  I start with this line partly because I’ll always get in a musical reference if I can (it’s a lyric from the song Not One of Us, by Peter Gabriel), but also because it sums up to me what defining ‘the other’ (the foreigner) seems to be all about: denying the humanity of a particular group of people.  And perhaps nothing defines our humanity as much as our tears, whether from grief, distress, fear, or even happiness.  We shed tears when emotion, that quintessentially human experience, overwhelms us.  We cry with sympathy, too, and not just for people we know.  You’d be forgiven…