Home Musician/activist Stephan Said to join Susan Bro, Khizr Khan at We Are Here diversity festival
News

Musician/activist Stephan Said to join Susan Bro, Khizr Khan at We Are Here diversity festival

Contributors

newspaperSinger, activist and host of ‘borderless’ Stephan Said will lead Charlottesville youth in a conversation about social change, empowerment, and unity at the We Are Here diversity festival this Saturday at Ix Art Park, as well as lead the audience singing his new song “We The People.”

The Virginia-raised Iraqi-American artist who Billboard Magazine calls “this generation’s Woody Guthrie,” filmed the music video for his upcoming single “We The People” working with Charlottesville and Richmond, VA youth, community organizations, and Richmond’s acclaimed One Voice Chorus this past winter.

“We The People” to be distributed globally by The Orchard/Sony this summer, is a powerful statement for equality and unity rising from the front lines. The video and accompanying mini-documentary will be featured in an upcoming episode of borderless, the docu-series that follows Said as he travels the globe meeting people who are changing the world.

Sponsored by the University of Virginia and the City of Charlottesville, the We Are Here Diversity Festival will bring together members of the University and the local community through creative expressions of diversity. In addition to Said, the festival will feature keynote speeches by Susan Bro, the mother of Heather Heyer, and attorney Khizr Khan, the father of U.S. Army Capt. and University of Virginia alumnus Humayun Khan, who was killed while deployed in Iraq in 2004.

“Charlottesville is particularly poised to make a statement of diversity and inclusion on the national stage – this is the festival’s goal,” says Vanessa Braganza, the organizer. Said says, “the mission of We Are Here Festival and “We The People” are closely aligned –my inspiration for ‘We The People” was to lift a positive message up from front lines of political divisiveness to bring us together for change.”

Sponsored by the University of Virginia and the City of Charlottesville, the We Are Here Diversity Festival will bring together members of the University and the local community through creative expressions of diversity. A spectrum of local non-profit organizations that serve minority groups will offer “flash talks” on their missions at the April 14 festival, which will feature the live assembly of a community mural, a Google Earth Virtual Reality space to explore the world, and other cultural activities.

Marketplace




Support AFP



 

Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

uva baseball max stammel
Baseball

UVA Baseball: #10 ‘Hoos show ‘grit’ in come-from-behind win over Liberty

sam lewis uva basketball
Basketball

UVA Basketball: Rumor mill has ‘Hoos hooking up with UConn in MSG

There’s some smoke on the interwebs about a Virginia-UConn game at Madison Square Garden next season, which, if it happens, we’re headed to Midtown Manhattan, who’s coming with us? UConn just played in a national title game for the third time in four seasons, losing this time, 69-63, to Michigan, to wrap a 34-6 season....

robin von seldeneck
Schools, Arts, Media

Robin von Seldeneck to step down from Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library

Robin von Seldeneck is leaving her post as president and CEO at the Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library & Museum to take over as executive director of the Frontier Culture Museum.

police court law
Politics

Bumfart MAGA judge issues another injunction trying to block referendum

government money
Politics

Dominion Energy CEO makes Top 10 list of most overpaid power utility guys

billy strings
Schools, Arts, Media

Billy Strings broke his leg at end of JPJ show: Staff at UVA are ‘angels’

missing person
State/National News

Good news: Authorities locate missing Richmond man with dementia