Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Our Friends At Rock A Mole--
Talking ‘Bout the Black and The Brown

That's why we need to sit downAnd talk about the black and the brown
--Xzibit, “Black & Brown,” from Weapons of Mass Destruction

On February 17th, Rock A Mole Productions staged the very successful festival Common Roots, Common Visions: A Celebration of the Commonality of Black and Mexican Culture and History. Now Rock A Mole is rehearsing a one act play, The First Embrace, which depicts the embrace of fugitive slaves by Mexico in 1829 over the fierce opposition of the slaveowner-dominated U.S. government. This is far from being ancient history. See below:

From Wikipedia:

"Phylicia Rashād - who played Claire Huxtable on "The Cosby Show" - was born in Harris County, Texas, to a full-blooded Cherokee father (Andrew Arthur Allen) and an African-American mother (Vivian Ayers).[1] Arthur was a dentist and Vivian was a Pulitzer-prize nominated artist, poet, playwright, and publisher. Rashād's siblings are jazz-musician brother Tex (Andrew Arthur Allen Jr, born 1945), sister Debbie Allen (1950), and brother Hugh Allen (real estate banker in North Carolina). Debbie Allen is an actress,
choreographer
, and director.

While Rashād was growing up, her family moved to Mexico to escape U.S. racism; as a result, Rashād speaks both English and Spanish fluently.

Also....

Juanes Preaches Peace on U.S. Tour; free concert on Colombia/Venezuela border

By SIGAL RATNER-ARIAS

NEW YORK (AP) — Juanes kicked off the U.S. leg of his world tour at Madison Square Garden, bringing a message of peace and a giddy enthusiasm to be performing in "the temple of music."
He opened Thursday night with his hit "A Dios le pido," and kept the public on its feet with more than 20 songs, including "Mala gente," "Fotografia," "Volverte a ver" and the megahit "La camisa negra."

The Colombia star showed his activist colors, preaching peace between his homeland and its neighbors amid a diplomatic crisis over a deadly Colombian cross-border raid into Ecuador last week that killed a senior Colombian rebel and 24 others.

"This night as a Colombian, I want to extend my right hand and embrace all my Ecuadorean brothers, I want to extend my left hand and embrace all my Venezuelan brothers," Juanes said. "Only we can come together under a single flag, the flag of peace."

A hush fell over the stadium as Juanes led a tribute to land-mine victims, singing "Minas piedras" while two giant screens carried images of the victims of anti-personnel mines by photojournalist Gervasio Sanchez.

Leading a band of seven, guitar in hand, Juanes briefly lost his way while singing "Mentira" — but the crowd was forgiving.

"I forgot the lyrics and it's my turn to improvise," Juanes confessed to wave of applause.
For an encore, Juanes played a rousing rendition of Colombian Joe Arroyo's "La rebelion."
Juanes is planning a free concert at the Colombian-Venezuela border to foster peaceful resolution of the crisis embroiling both nations and Ecuador, his public relations firm said Friday.
The concert is to take place at the border between the Colombian city of Cucuta and the Venezuelan city of San Antonio de Tachira within the next three weeks, firm Rogers & Cowan announced in a statement released in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, where the presidents of Colombia, Venezuela and Ecuador met Friday to try to resolve their differences.

Juanes will ask musicians from Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador and other Latin American nations to join with concertgoers "in demanding that the region's governments find a diplomatic solution to ease the growing military presence along area borders," the firm said.

The rocker has previously performed as part of the Nobel Peace Prize awards ceremony and to raise awareness and money for an anti-landmine foundation in Colombia.

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