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About |
former Soviet Union | Middle East
| Imagine Turning The Tides | ORCA | Support Turning The Tides
After extensive lobbying by Turning The Tides in Washington and Moscow and several lecture tours with Soviet
counterparts across the United States, this border opened in 1988. Coastal
During the 90's, Turning The Tides successfully brought together Christians, Muslims and Jews in musical performances in Alaska and Pennsylvania. Cultural, political and religious walls were bridged by audiences singing music from the three religions with Black gospel, Islamic and Hebrew soloists and bands. Some participants, who had never before experienced social discourse across these three faiths, have continued to sing together and discuss common issues. Turning The Tides Founder and choral director, Dixie Belcher, spent a great deal of time in the Middle East, listening to the people – Christians, Muslims, and Jews – and learning about their plight.
Turning the Tides (TTT) brings together people through music - this time with Pacific peoples, to raise awareness of the state of the Pacific Ocean, humanity's dependence on its health, and what ordinary people can do to reverse its deterioration. TTT is beginning with an internet performance, with sites in Juneau, Alaska; Seattle, Washington; Lima, Peru and Auckland, New Zealand. This performance aims to join Pacific students, activists, native peoples, and business and political leaders to celebrate the ocean and inspire action to promote its revitalization.. The performance is seen as the first of several trans-Pacific musical events, camps, conferences and workshops that feature the interconnectedness of ocean, plants, animals and humans, and inspire practices that enhance the health of all. As sites in Lima, Seattle, Juneau and New Zealand stream into
view with audiences and performers waving, they are enthusiastically
welcomed by an emcee. Through the ensuing chaos of waving and
welcoming, and as slides of the ocean appear, the first line of
Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful World" is heard, sung by a
children's choir in Spanish, from Lima. The last words to this first
sentence, in Spanish, are: "And I think to myself" - Juneau children
pick up with "What a wonderful world" and continue the next sentence
- which again ends with
So begins a proposed two hour internet performance/dance held simultaneously in Juneau, Alaska; Lima, Peru; Seattle, Washington, and New Zealand to celebrate the ocean, raise awareness about its decline, and what everyone can do to help. Proposed venues are university gyms, with pro bono university internet equipment, space to perform and to dance. Sites are projected on one wall, with changing slides of the ocean on others. Audiences and performers include children, high school and college students and adults. Presentations of the crisis of the oceans and what Pacific peoples (particularly young people) are doing about it is presented through comedy, rap, folk, rock and hip hop vocals and bands to help build enthusiasm for joint projects throughout the Pacific.
Soon we will have much information about Turning The Tides available online, including video, audio, and photographs....to help tell this inspiring story. Stay tuned! January Project donates a percentage of it's profits to Turning The Tides for its significant efforts.
About |
former Soviet Union | Middle East
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