 | Wyclef
Postpones Haiti Aid Concert
HBN, NEW YORK, N.Y., Weds. Dec. 8: Haitian-born hip-hop star, Wyclef Jean,
has
| |  | | Wyclef
Jean helping unload food supplies at a World Food program warehouse in Haiti recently.
(WFP Photo) | |
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canned plans to host an aid concert in his troubled native land and has instead
settled for a New York City benefit show tomorrow night. Jean,
the son of a preacher man, postponed the December 5 Haiti concert after reportedly
failing to persuade big names and sponsors to join him for the morale-boosting
show, Contactmusic reports indicate.Instead, the New Jersey resident will kick
off a series of concerts, titled, Yele Haiti, at the GLO in Manhattan
tomorrow night. The
aim is to raise awareness and money for thousands of Haitians, who have been left
homeless following recent storms and conflict on the island.The GLO concert is
slated to be hosted by actress Susan Sarandon and will feature another reunion
with the Refugee Allstars and Roberta Flack. Jean is set to also take Yele
Haiti to Los Angeles and then to Port-au-Prince next spring. Hardbeatnews.com
Press
Release Source: Yele Haiti Musician
and Artist Wyclef Jean Launches Yele Haiti
Thursday
December 9, 10:32 am ET Non-Profit & Non-Political Movement to Focus on
Advancing Sustainable Development in Haiti
NEW
YORK, Dec. 9 /PRNewswire/ -- Grammy award winning artist Wyclef Jean is about
to embark on one of the biggest performances of his life: Tomorrow he takes the
lead in a new, non-political, international humanitarian effort to help rebuild
his native country of Haiti. Wyclef Jean has been touted as the music industry's
multicultural conscience, participating in high-profile benefit shows and charity
events. Now he is launching a movement that combines music and sustainable development
to provide the youth of Haiti with the practical tools, resources and renewed
hope necessary to rebuild their nation.
The movement is called "Yele
Haiti" and will focus on education, entrepreneurship,
 | | In
this photo supplied by the Yele Foundation, Grammy award winning artist Wyclef
Jean, left, poses with actress Susan Sarandon and actor Tim Robbins as they arrive
at a concert in New York, Thursday night, December 9, 2004 where Jean announced
the formation of his foundation, Yele Haiti. Yele Haiti is a non-political, international
humanitarian initiative the Jean hopes will help rebuild his native country of
Haiti. (AP Photo/Yele Foundation,Jeff Christensen) |
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community
development, health and the environment. Immediate programs include rebuilding
of schools in slum areas, funding community development projects, providing micro-loans
to poor and low-income people, supporting youth outreach on HIV/AIDS and assisting
with job-creating environmental projects. They will also be holding a free concert
in Haiti in the Spring of 2005 for up to 1.5 million people. To
launch Yele Haiti on December 9th, Jean will take the stage at GLO, a New York
nightclub and will perform with Roberta Flack, Nelly McKay, Cassandra Wilson,
Common, Bilal, Jeff (Tain) Watts and Ben Jelen. There will be a special presentations
by Susan Sarandon and Jonathan Demme is selling items from his private collection
of Haitian art to benefit the cause. About
Yele Haiti Yele
Haiti (http://www.yele.org) was founded by
recording artist Wyclef Jean. He is being assisted by a task force that includes
Susan Sarandon, Russell Simmons, Tyra Banks, Jonathan Demme, Roberta Flack, and
Haitians Mona Scott, Dumas Simeus, Maryse Kedar and Gepsie Metellus. This high-level
civilian task force was formed to help channel financial support and other resources
to help in the re-emergence of Haiti, while taking the steps to ensure that the
civilian population there is fully involved in the planning and rebuilding of
their communities. Yele
Haiti will play a role in facilitating dialogue in all aspects of the country's
development. Jean has already leveraged his standing among Haitians to establish
a conversation with key figures in the government, civic and business sectors,
as well with rebel and gang-leaders. "Haiti is my native country, one I know
as the first black nation to gain independence in 1804," he said. "Most
other people seem to know Haiti only by the statistics about how bad things are
there. Yele Haiti is about showing Haitians that there is a way out, and that
it starts with them. It's also about showing the international community that
there is a strong Haitian spirit that can be supported in order to foster creativity
and ideas which can prove valuable to the world for both business and culture." Haiti,
once one of the richest nations in the western hemisphere, is currently the poorest.
Barely half of Haiti's people over age 15 can read and write. The unemployment
rate is 80%. Almost 99% of its natural tree cover is gone. The average life expectancy
of a Haitian is 52. However, with the right resources and assistance they can
turn things around, as evidenced by the fact that Haiti is one of the only developing
nations to have actually reduced its HIV infection rate -- from 6% in 2001 to
3% in 2004. The
Yele programs will be managed in part by Orsa Consultants , a corporate social
responsibility consultancy. Orsa has provided Yele Haiti with plan for rollout
including program development, branding, and corporate partnerships. The consultancy
also brings proprietary project management tools including intranet where all
projects can be monitored by project partners. "Yele Haiti embodies the next
generation of nation-building where local populations, governments, corporations
and NGOs work together to create sustainable development," commented Hugh
Locke, Orsa Consultants Partner and Co-Founder. | |