Thursday, November 4, 2010

23 arrested over German neo-Nazi radio station

23 arrested over German neo-Nazi radio station

By Melissa Gray, CNN
November 4, 2010 -- Updated 0922 GMT (1722 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • They are arrested after 22 raids around the country
  • Accused of operating an online radio station that played neo-Nazi songs
  • Some of those arrested are appearing in court Thursday
RELATED TOPICS
  • Germany

(CNN) -- German authorities have arrested 23 people from around the country suspected of being involved in a right-wing extremist radio station that played neo-Nazi songs, Federal Criminal Police said Thursday.

They were arrested after raids of 22 homes in 10 German states, police said. Some 270 officials were involved in the searches, most of which were in the states of Rhineland-Palatinate and North Rhine Westphalia, along Germany's western border, police said.

Some of those arrested were appearing in court Thursday, but a spokeswoman for the Federal Criminal Police would not specify the charges they face.

Police said those arrested are between the ages of 20 and 37. They operated an online station called Widerstand-Radio (Resistance Radio) that played music by skinhead bands about killing people and broadcast racist and hate-filled comments.

It is illegal in Germany to play Nazi songs, said the police spokeswoman, who asked not to be named in line with policy.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Where Are Our Fellow Jews

Almost every week Makedah and I are bombarded with mailings for donations, requests to pay for tickets to attend this or that conference, gala event, Jewish summer camps, hungry Jewish children and seniors in Israel and political or other social causes.  The problem is we do not fit the typical Jewish profile.  Yes, we both have a college education, but never had a job; yes, we are both physically disabled.  But, it is also true we do not have well paying employment, so we cannot afford temple or synagogue membership dues. In fact, we have never had jobs in our fields of study. If it were not for the good graces of Adonai, including guidance and miracles we could not live in this town.  Our mere existence in this semi-rural community irritates our Christian White Euro-American neighbors and many businesses in our "red neck" community. One of the most uncomfortable questions we are asked is " Do you two go to synagogue or temple?" Another question is, "Where do you go to temple?" When we say no, and our Rabbi is in Florida, people doubt we are real Jews.

 

These are difficult questions to answer because we have never step foot in a synagogue or temple. We have never been invited and even if we were invited, we can never save the forty-eight thousand dollars to purchase a handicapped equipped van to drive the one hundred miles to get to Minneapolis or St. Paul Minnesota area temples or synagogue. None of these Jewish communities or houses of worship has sought out us or addressed any of our needs.  We must beg and play the "pity game" just to get our lawn cut every two weeks. I had to suffer being marginalized by these Euro-American men and their sexual advances towards Makedah. If I ask for help, it hits deaf ears. When Makedah ask, it is usually done for free, but at cost for me.

 

Where are our fellow Jews? Large sums are spent sending young people and young adults to Israel to experience our history first hand. Yet, who has offered a free trip, free meals and tour for disabled Jews, Jews over forty?  Our rabbi asked us to take an oath to defend a country we may never see, at the time when we converted. We have only one Jewish friend.  He is from Canada.  He has helped us financially, come to our home and shared a meal.  We speak to him almost weekly over the Internet. We are so thankful to him.  This Jew made us feel not only Jewish but included with world Jewry.

 

Our dreams are to afford a Jewish Internet Radio Station. It would provide a call in so people can share ideas with other Jews and get feedback. Story time for children and adults.  It would play all types of music including Jewish artists who speak English as we and most isolated Jews do not speak, write or understand Hebrew.  Also discussing weekly parasha on the open Internet, which will compete with Israel National Radio, which does not speak for non-Orthodox Jews.  We would like to get a large Braille Embosser Printer to provide free of charge prayers and celebrations, for the blind Jewish communities. Instead of requesting money from us, how about sending us money so we are not dependent on pity or the not so good will of strangers.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Fw: CNN---because they are Roma, or gypsies

 
Sent: Friday, June 25, 2010 11:03
Subject: CNN---because they are Roma, or gypsies

Vitkov, Czech Republic (CNN) -- Natalka Kudrikova is a bright-eyed, three-year-old girl recovering from the severe burns she suffered when far-right extremists threw a Molotov cocktail into her home.

Her family and authorities say she was targeted because they are Roma, or gypsies. Natalka lost 80 percent of her skin, two fingers (a third was later amputated) and spent months lying in an induced coma following the attack last year in Vitkov, in the Czech Republic. She is still recuperating after 14 major surgeries.

In May, Natalka returned to Ostrava Hospital for rehabilitation sessions so that one day she may be able to get around without support. "I'd rather not take her back to the hospital," said her mother, Anna Sivakova, "but if she must return, my dream is that she learns how to walk without any help."

The very next day, four young men accused of attacking Natalka, filed into Ostrava District Court to hear the indictment: a racially motivated attempted murder.

According to the prosecutor, the attack was planned for the 120th anniversary of Adolf Hitler's birth. Court experts confirmed swastikas and other Nazi memorabilia were found in the defendants' homes.

Video: Hate attack scarred Roma girl
Video: Wall segregates Roma settlements
Video: Czech Roma student faces discrimination
Who are the Roma?
Europeans with Indian roots
Term encompasses gypsies, travellers, manouches, ashkali, sinti
Biggest ethnic minority in Europe; population about 11 million
Romani language is an Indian-Aryan mix
Source: EU

In court, Ivo Muller and Vaclav Cojocaru described their coordinated Molotov cocktail attack. Their only excuse -- they said they thought they were attacking an empty storehouse of stolen goods.

Under cross-examination, Muller and Cojocaru admitted attending anti-Roma demonstrations organized by right wing extremists.

The other defendants, Jaromir Lukes and David Vaculik, did not take the stand. Lukes is accused of being the ringleader, a claim his defense counsel strongly denies although he concedes Lukes drove the getaway car. His lawyer also vehemently denies there was any racial motivation to the attack.

An anti-fascist website published a photo of Lukes walking next to the leader of the far-right Workers' Party. Another photo showed Vaculik wearing the armband of the Workers' Party, the public face of the Czech far right.

The leader of the now banned Workers' Party, Tomas Vandas, denied any involvement.

"Yes, we may have used those people as organizers of our public meetings but how could we know they would commit a crime?" said Vandas. "I hope Natalka gets better soon," he added.

Miroslav Mares, from Masaryk University in Brno, is the leading academic specialist on Czech extremist groups.

He thinks it's unlikely that the Workers' Party was directly involved in the arson attack, but he says they were responsible "for inflaming anti-Roma sentiment."

"Maybe some youngsters from the neo-Nazi scene said to themselves, 'If the whole population is against Romas we are justified in carrying out such attacks,'" he said.

And surveys do show anti-Roma sentiment is widespread. The European Union EURoma website says Czech Romas endure extremely high unemployment rates, low educational standards, isolation, and the prejudices of the majority population.

"In regions with high unemployment and poor social conditions, the rise of extremism is popular with unemployed young men but we can see more and more women on the neo-Nazi scene," Marek said.

Lucie Slegrova, 20, is a flag-waving militant of the now renamed Workers' Social Justice Party. She denies her party is inspired by Hitler's Nazi ideology.

Instead, she says, they follow their own nationalist ideas. "The Czech Republic should be for people who know how to behave. If the gypsies don't want to follow the rules, they're free to leave," she said.

Only one percent of Czech voters supported the Workers' Social Justice Party in the last elections, but Czech Prime Minister Jan Fischer worries that 7 percent of Czech students voted for the far-right party, according to an unofficial nationwide poll.

"A lot of people are frustrated with politicians, and have troubles due to the crisis and recession. My message to them is please think it over and don't believe these very bad prophets," Fischer said.

The far-right movement has made bigger gains in neighboring Hungary where 17 percent of voters chose the Jobbik party in the last elections.

Violence has been much worse as well. In the last two years, nine Roma have been killed in Hungary in unprovoked night-time attacks, according to the European Roma Rights Centre (ERRC).

Roma bashing also became an issue in the Slovakian election campaign. The far right Slovak National Party commissioned billboards showing a dark-skinned man with tattoos and an inflammatory message: "Vote SNS so we don't feed those who don't want to work."

In eastern Slovakia many Roma live in segregated communities like the village of Ostrovany where municipal authorities spent some $16,000 to build a wall separating the Roma from their white neighbors, because of fears of "alleged Roma crime," said Stanislav Daniel from ERRC.

"To me the wall is a symbol of segregation because public finances were used to target a stereotype, not what's real," Daniel said.

The wall separates a tidy town from a rural slum. Roma, living right next to the wall, have no sewage or garbage collection and there's just one tap with drinking water for dozens of families.

Back in the Czech Republic, Natalka's father, Pavel Kudrik, has chosen to stay in the region and rebuild a comfortable home for his wife and four daughters.

After police asserted that Natalka's family were victims of a racist attack, many Czechs opened their wallets and their hearts.

Prime Minister Fischer's wife and son spearheaded a nationwide campaign to help them -- a move that led to the Fischer family having full-time police protection after they received anonymous death threats.

But the current climate is not the only reason Fischer wants to clamp down on right wing extremism.

Everyone in his family died in the Holocaust except for his father and grandmother. "Sixty-five years after WWII, the societal memory is getting weak," he said.

And Roma activists complain that recognition of their sacrifices under the Nazis has never been properly acknowledged.

Half-a-million Roma perished in what they call the "Devouring" -- Hitler's campaign to eliminate them as a people.

Last May, several hundred Czech Roma gathered at a memorial for the victims of the Lety concentration camp. Hundreds of Czech Roma children died there and are buried nearby in a mass grave.

Jan Vrba is one of the camp's last survivors. He was born there. His sister perished there.

"What happened in Vitkov made me cry", said Jan. "Little Natalka reminded me of my sister who died in this camp."

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Planet Earth & Earth Song

Planet Earth (poem)

Michael Jackson

 

Planet Earth, my home, my place

A capricious anomaly in the sea of space

Planet Earth are you just

Floating by, a cloud of dust

A minor globe, about to bust

A piece of metal bound to rust

A speck of matter in a mindless void

A lonely spaceship, a large asteroid

 

Cold as a rock without a hue

Held together with a bit of glue

Something tells me this isn't true

You are my swweetheart soft and blue

Do you care, have you a part

In the deepest emotions of my own heart

Tender with breezes caressing and whole

Alive with music, haunting my soul.

 

In my veins I've felt the mystery

Of corridors of time, books of history

Life songs of ages throbbing in my blood

Have danced the rhythm of the tide and flood

Your misty clouds, your electric storm

Were turbulent tempests in my own form

I've licked the salt, the bitter, the sweet

Of every encounter, of passion, of heat

Your riotous color, your fragrance, your taste

Have thrilled my senses beyond all haste

In your beauty, I've known the how

Of timeless bliss, this moment of now

 

Planet Earth are you just

Floating by, a cloud of dust

A minor globe, about to bust

A piece of metal bound to rust

A speck of matter in a mindless void

A lonely spaceship, a large asteroid

Cold as a rock without a hue

Held together with a bit of glue

Something tells me this isn't true

You are my swweetheart gentle and blue

Do you care, have you a part

In the deepest emotions of my own heart

Tender with breezes caressing and whole

Alive with music, haunting my soul.

Planet Earth, gentle and blue

With all my heart, I love you

 

---

 

Earth Song

Michael Jackson

 

What about sunrise

What about rain

What about all the things

That you said we were to gain.. .

What about killing fields

Is there a time

What about all the things

That you said was yours and mine...

Did you ever stop to notice

All the blood we've shed before

Did you ever stop to notice

The crying Earth the weeping shores?

 

Aaaaaaaaaah Aaaaaaaaaah

 

What have we done to the world

Look what we've done

What about all the peace

That you pledge your only son...

What about flowering fields

Is there a time

What about all the dreams

That you said was yours and mine...

Did you ever stop to notice

All the children dead from war

Did you ever stop to notice

The crying Earth the weeping shores

 

Aaaaaaaaaaah Aaaaaaaaaaah

 

I used to dream

I used to glance beyond the stars

Now I don't know where we are

Although I know we've drifted far

 

Aaaaaaaaaaah Aaaaaaaaaaaah

Aaaaaaaaaaah Aaaaaaaaaaaah

 

Hey, what about yesterday

(What about us)

What about the seas

(What about us)

The heavens are falling down

(What about us)

I can't even breathe

(What about us)

What about the bleeding Earth

(What about us)

Can't we feel its wounds

(What about us)

What about nature's worth

(ooo,ooo)

It's our planet's womb

(What about us)

What about animals

(What about it)

We've turned kingdoms to dust

(What about us)

What about elephants

(What about us)

Have we lost their trust

(What about us)

What about crying whales

(What about us)

We're ravaging the seas

(What about us)

What about forest trails

(ooo, ooo)

Burnt despite our pleas

(What about us)

What about the holy land

(What about it)

Torn apart by creed

(What about us)

What about the common man

(What about us)

Can't we set him free

(What about us)

What about children dying

(What about us)

Can't you hear them cry

(What about us)

Where did we go wrong

(ooo, ooo)

Someone tell me why

(What about us)

What about babies

(What about it)

What about the days

(What about us)

What about all their joy

(What about us)

What about the man

(What about us)

What about the crying man

(What about us)

What about Abraham

(What was us)

What about death again

(ooo, ooo)

Do we give a damn

 

 

 

Earth Day

    Earth Day was started in 1970 by then U.S. Senator of Wisconsin, Gaylord Nelson.  He proposed the first nationwide environmental protest, addressing such related issues as endangered species and pollution.  On April 22, twenty million Americans took to the streets, parks, and auditoriums to demonstrate for a healthy, sustainable environment.  The first Earth Day led to the creation of the United States Environmental Protection Agency and the passage of the Clean Air, Clean Water, and Endangered Species acts.

    As I sit here and write what Earth Day means to me, I am reminded of a poem and a song Michael Jackson wrote--Planet Earth and Earth Song.  The video to Earth Song illustrates well what Earth Day is all about, as it shows the various ways Earth has been destroyed and the affects of the destruction.  The words to his poem and song will follow.  For me, Earth Day is not only a day to commemorate addressing environmental issues and the establishment of environmental organizations.  It is also a day to thank G*d for our planet and to remind us how we should appreciate and take care of what G*d has given us--trees and plants, animals, water, air, and soil, and each other--rather than just take all these for granted.  We all need each other and all these things around us to survive.

    In the small community that I live in in south central Minnesota, there are people who are trying to make a difference, such as the use of wind power and solar power.  For example, solar powered street signs are being installed.  The streets are also cleaned on a regular basis to remove the litter, dust, and other debris.  Every spring, I look forward to hearing the birds as they return from the south.  Micaiah and I always have a bowl of water and bird food scattered in our yard.  We have counted at least ten or more species of birds who come to partake of our generosity.  It is amazing when we forget to put food and water out.  The birds peck at our screen and chirp loudly until we respond.  They even seem to know what room in our house we are in at the time.  Geese also fly overhead, and we see the older geese teach their young.  Every summer, Micaiah and I always walked to the dam, which is two blocks from our house, to watch the fish swim and watch people fishing.  On Rosh Hashanah, we performed our ceremony at the dam.  However, instead of throwing the fish back into the water, like the fishers used to, people started leaving the fish they caught on the grass to die.  Micaiah and I started seeing an increase of dead fish.  Then, last year, the dam was turned off, leaving the water to remain stagnant instead of free flowing with the waterfall created by the dam.  We enjoyed going to the dam because listening to the waterfall was like being in a different world.  Now, that "different world" seems to be out of our reach.

Earth Day is not only for demonstrations and speeches, but it is also for Tikk olam, which is Hebrew for "making the world a better place".  We can make the world a better place in numerous ways--planting more trees and other plants, picking up litter in your yard and the streets, teaching people about the different kinds of birds they hear in their backyards so that they know what they are, etc.  As The Late Michael Jackson said, "make a better place for you and for me." (Heal The World)

 

Makedah bat Leah. 

 

 

 

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Passover/Pesach 1476 B.C.E. & 2010 C.E.

                                                  Passover/Pesach 1476 B.C.E. & 2010 C.E.

 

 

Moses returns to Egypt, where God again says his name to Moses. God instructs Moses to appear before the pharaoh and inform him of God's demand that he let God's people go. Moses and his brother Aaron do so, but pharaoh refuses. God causes a series of plagues to strike Egypt, but whenever pharaoh begins to relent God "hardens his heart". God instructs Moses to institute the Passover sacrifice among the Israelites, and kills all the firstborn children and livestock throughout Egypt. The pharaoh then agrees to let the Israelites go. Moses explains the meaning of the Passover: it is for Israel's salvation from Egypt, so that the Israelites will not be required to sacrifice their own sons, but to redeem them. [1]

Moses advised the Hebrew slaves to sacrifice unblemished lambs and then painted the their door post with the lamb's blood so that the Angel of Death would passed over the homes of the Hebrews and kill the First Born of Egypt. Whether they were members of the royal family or a lowly servant, first born and not living in a house with lamb's blood on their door post, they were not spared the raft of G*d's avenging Angel. It was the tenth and final plague that broke the resistance of Pharaoh and he let the Hebrews go.  Passover is our holiday to remember we were "passed over" by the Angel of Death and we were slaves in Egypt.  When the Hebrew slaves left Egypt they did so in great haste before Pharaoh could change his mind. This is why we are commanded to eat only unleavened bread for seven days.  In "Exodus12:37 refers to 600,000 adult Israelite men leaving Egypt with Moses, plus an unspecified but apparently large "mixed multitude" of non-Israelites; Numbers 1:46 gives a more precise total of 603,550.  The number of Hebrews and non-Hebrews who fled Egypt is not what is important but their reason for leaving was.  For generations they suffered under the Egyptian's inhumane and cruel bondage.  They were slaves as were their ancestors and if Pharaoh had been allowed to have his way; their future descendents would have also been slaves.  Our Deliverance has been celebrated by Jews ever since.

This Passover 2010 C.E., Makedah and I had our grandchildren.  We were giving our daughter a break. The three boys are eighteen months, three years and six years old. They are being raised as Christians. We introduce them to the meaning of Passover.  Before the three boys came, Makedah and I were informed there is strong evidence two of the boys could have Autism.  This revelation did not really hit home until I began thinking about Passover.  Makedah and I are both minorities in a country, state, county and community that are overwhelmingly white (European), Christian, Anti-Semitic, xenophobic and racist.  Just as the Egyptians feared the increase in Hebrews could one day lead to an uprising and the over throw of their society. This same fear is resurfacing and growing among many whites here in America. The election of a Black man to be President looks good on the world stage but nothing has changed on "Main Street".  Our grandchildren will have to endure the same social isolation, racism, segregation and unequal treatment as Makedah and I do now.  They will have to accept this yoke of oppression as their ancestors have for centuries, with no certain hope of an end to their social and economic slavery.  The iron chains may have been removed from our wrists, ankles, and or necks however, newer, stronger and invisible chains have taken the iron ones place and they are even more restrictive.  The two of us already know from personal experience these invisible chains use social pressure and social isolation on White American who dares to want interracial sex, interracial dating, and interracial families.  Non-whites already earn less than their white counterparts, live in slum like conditions and die long before their time. 

Passover comes and goes each year. But, the memories of slavery remain fresh in the minds and collective conscience of most non-White Americans.  Our grandchildren will have no Moses to lead them out of bondage. All of our most respected and trusted leaders have been killed or disgraced; our institutions and community support systems have been all but eliminated. The brown, yellow, red and black communities have been played on off one and the other, until they cannot or will not unite for the betterment of all. If our grandchildren are to make it to The Promised Land, we cannot wait on another Moses.  Makedah and I are determined our children will not suffer as our ancestors did and as we do now. We do not paint lamb's blood on our doorpost, but we do fly the Magen Star flag outside our home. It is probably the only one for one hundred or more miles. But when the Spirit of G*d Passover our home, it will know we are His & Her children and all are welcome join our Caravan of Love.  We do not have to imagine servitude in ancient Egypt; we live it each day of our lives.

 

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Exodus

Monday, March 22, 2010

Micaiah & Makedah’s Conversion Story

                                                Micaiah & Makedah's Conversion Story

                                                            Faribault, Minnesota U.S.A.

 

On the 7th day, in the Jewish month of Av, the Jewish calendar year of 5765 (Friday, August 12, 2005 on the Gregorian calendar) in St. Paul, Minnesota, a very special and deserving couple accepted the yoke of the Jewish People.  Behind them, lay nearly five years of individual study, many hours of soul searching, social and personal isolation from most Jewish clergy and Jewish communities, subvert and overt racism from other Jews, elitism within the Jewish communities, their disabilities and other barriers had been placed in their way to hinder their conversion to Judaism. The couple completed their conversion studies with the help and guidance of Rabbi Celso Cukierkorn.  What made them special? Micaiah ben Malachi (formerly John) was a forty-nine-year-old Black and Native American male and quadriplegic.  His life partner, Makedah bat Leah (formerly Linda) was a thirty-five-year-old Asian American female and blind.  Micaiah is the eyes for Makedah and Makedah is the legs for Micaiah.  The two said, "We make up one complete person".  They are a team.  Each of them sought out Judaism before knowing one another and decided to continue their journey together. This Black man and Asian female turned their backs on their families, cultures and people they had known all their lives; to assume a religion, culture and to struggle with a "people" who largely appear not to want them in their synagogues or communities as members.  They took an oath of allegiance to support and protect the Jewish people and Israel first, not their own people and country.  Special, unique, inspiring are some words used to describe this pair. However, they describe themselves as "Jews".

 

Thursday, February 25, 2010

"We Are The World 25"--Commentary

            The original We Are The World was written by Lionel Richie and the Late Michael Jackson, and was produced by Quincy Jones.  It came out in 1985.  Some of the many artists featured were Kenny Loggins, Diana Ross, Cindy Lauper, Stevie Wonder, Bruce Springsteen, The Late Ray Charles and The Late Michael Jackson.  In Response to the earthquake in Haiti on January 12, 2010 and its victims, Quincy Jones and Lionel Richie thought it would be a great idea to release a new version of We Are The World, entitled We Are The World 25.  Though the lyrics have not changed, all new artists, such as Justin Bieber, Lil Wayne, Wyclef Jean, Josh Groban and Will.I.Am are featured in this new version.  In the same way proceeds of the sales of We Are The World were to go towards fighting famine in Ethiopia, the proceeds from sales of We Are The World 25 are to help the earthquake victims in Haiti.

            Two weeks ago, Micaiah and I were watching the winter Olympics opening ceremony.  During a commercial break, an abridged version of the video to We Are The World 25 was aired.  The tempo was the same, but the drums thumped out a hip-hop beat.  In the first refrain, saying, "We are the world, We are the children…," the original track from the original version in which Michael Jackson was singing was spliced in.  That was, then, followed by the new artists singing the rest of the song.  In addition, there were brand-new lines inserted by rap singers to serve as extra verses of the song.  Having heard the original We Are The World numerous times, and now having heard the new version, there is nothing that can ever compare to the original We Are The World.  Not only did the original grab our attention and held it there, but the solo parts backed up by the choir made-up of many other artists gave it a heavenly quality.  The way it was composed gave the audience assurance that the production was well-thought out before it was recorded.  To this day, We Are The World maintains the same quality and feelings to those who heard it many times when it was originally released as well as to the younger crowd who were not born yet or were too young to understand at the time of its release.  We Are The World 25, on the other hand, made the song sound like a composition that was put together adhoc.

            I believe that inserting Michael Jackson singing, "We are the World, We are the children" may be to remind people that Michael Jackson co-wrote the song With Lionel Richie as well as to honor The Late Michael Jackson.  I thought it was tactless and insensitive to the public feelings of respect for the late singer.  In addition, it also did not take into account the feelings of his children.  The Hip-Hop beat and the rap singers who  added their own verses dramatically changed the integrity of the song.  The new versus and beat may have been to make the song more contemporary with the times.  However, the changes took away the awe-inspiring feeling the original version evoked.  

 

Makedah bat Leah

 

PS.:  Below is the complete information about the two versions.

 

------

 

 

"We Are the World"

"We Are the World" cover

Single by USA for Africa

Released

March 7, 1985

Recorded

January 28, 1985

Label

Columbia Records

Writer(s)

Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie

Producer(s)

Quincy Jones

Chart positions

"We Are the World" is a 1985 song written by Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie, produced and conducted by Quincy Jones and recorded by a supergroup of popular musicians billed as USA for Africa. The charity single was intended to raise funds to help famine relief efforts in Ethiopia.

Harry Belafonte initiated the idea for a fundraising effort. His manager, Ken Kragen, suggested the multi-artist approach, inspired by the success of the British supergroup Band Aid and their 1984 fundraising single "Do They Know It's Christmas?"

The performers gathered at A&M Recording Studios in Hollywood, California, on January 28, 1985. Kragen selected the night of the American Music Awards to ensure as many artists as possible could attend. Jones famously advised them, in his written invitation, to "check your egos at the door." In all, 45 musicians attended the recording session, including Bob Geldof, who had arranged the Band Aid effort in the United Kingdom. Lead vocals were rotated among 21 of the performers, including Kenny Rogers, Lionel Richie, Michael Jackson, Tina Turner, Billy Joel, Steve Perry, Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen.

Columbia Records donated their manufacturing and distribution costs to the effort. "We Are the World" hit stores on Tuesday, March 7, 1985, and all 800,000 copies sold out before the end of the weekend. It debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 chart at number twenty-one. On April 5 (Good Friday in that year), more than 5,000 radio stations played the song at the same time. It became the United States' number one single on April 13 and held the position for four weeks.

The song went on to win 1985 Grammys for Song of the Year, Record of the Year and Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group.

Ultimately, the single sold 7.5 million copies in the US. It was released on an album, We Are the World, which sold over three million copies. In addition to "We Are the World," the album included previously unreleased songs by Prince, Springsteen, Rogers, Turner and other artists. It also included another famine relief fundraising song, "Tears Are Not Enough", which was performed by Canadian supergroup Northern Lights.

Including revenues from the single, the album, the video and related merchandise, "We Are the World" raised about $50 million for famine relief.

On November 15, 2006 Michael Jackson performed the song in the World Music Awards.[[1]] Kenny Rogers has also performed a solo version of the song, which is featured on a 1986 concert video at Texas stadium.

 

 

  • The group name U.S.A. for Africa actually stands for United Support of Artists for Africa.

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org../../../w/e/_/We_Are_the_World_ef64.html"

 

 

 

 

 

 

the 2010 version will be headlined by Justin Bieber, Lil Wayne, Wyclef Jean, Josh Groban and Will.I.Am. It features a newly penned hip-hop break written by the Black Eyed Peas leader that makes reference to the January 12 earthquake in Haiti, the victims of which will benefit from the song's proceeds.  Among the rap artists making the cut for "We Are the World — 25 for Haiti" are T-Pain, Kanye West, Bizzy Bone, Kid Cudi, LL Cool J, Snoop Dogg, Drake, Mann, Nipsey Hussle, Busta Rhymes and Swizz Beatz.  The sessions did feature a number of current stars such as Miley Cyrus, Keri Hilson and Best New Artist Grammy winner Zac Brown.  There were the requisite classic artists who pitched in, including Barbra Streisand; Carlos Santana; Natalie Cole; BeBe Winans; the members of Heart; Freda Payne; Harry Connick Jr.; Earth, Wind & Fire; the Beach Boys' Brian Wilson and Al Jardine; Tony Bennett; "Slumdog Millionaire" film score composer A.R. Rahman; "American Idol" judge Randy Jackson; Patti Austin; Celine Dion and Gladys Knight. A few actors were in the studio (Jeff Bridges and Vince Vaughn), as well as the offspring of co-producers Lionel Richie and Quincy Jones, Nicole Richie and "Parks and Recreation" star Rashida Jones, and the members of 3T (the sons of Tito Jackson), Taj, Taryll and TJ Jackson.  Joel and Benji Madden were on hand, as were Akon, Brandy, Melanie Fiona, Mya, Musiq Soulchild, Katharine McPhee, Trey Songz, Faith Evans, "Heroes" actor Jimmy Jean-Louis ("the Haitian") and former Michael Jackson guitarist Orianthi.  Also pitching in according to a press statement from organizers were the members of Sugarland, Jennifer Hudson, Jason Mraz, India.Arie, Mary Mary, Tyrese Gibson, Raphael Saadiq, Pink, Jordin Sparks, Rob Thomas, Usher, the Fray's Isaac Slade, child prodigy pianist Ethan Bortnick, Enrique Iglesias, Robin Thicke, Jamie Foxx, Maroon 5's Adam Levine, the Jonas Brothers, Nicole Scherzinger and Julianne Hough.

 

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