Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Bring the lyrics back to music



Directed by Kerry Washington, I want you is the 3rd single off Common's Finding Forever album. While its not a conscious song about "the times", its a love song that anyone can relate to. Common reminisces on his lost love (I been thinkin bout,I been thinkin bout,I been thinkin bout u lately) wondering and then realising where he went wrong 'Things seem to come up when I hear our song/Golden brown girl, it seem so long Since I heard your voice where did the king go wrong? and 'I spent many years tryna be the heartthrob
I guess it's only right that I got my heart robbed'

With other stand out lines like 'you don't know what you've got till its gone, yeah I like such and sucho a lot but the feeling's not as strong' and 'my friends say it was a change for the better
but I say, girl u changed my forever' this song hits home for people who've had love so good and lost it, hoping that by some miracle they can have it back.

Spot the cameos in this vid

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Thursday, October 11, 2007

Worth A Click

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Wednesday, October 10, 2007

WORLD FEATURE

Its been 13 years since the systematic slaughter of Tutsis and moderate Hutus took place in Rwanda. 13 years later the country is picking itself up and forging ahead


Seeds of Change in Rwanda
By ALEX PERRY/NYAMATA for TIME magazine

We step inside Nyamata church and my guide, Josh Ruxin, points out the wall where babies were smashed up against the brick. "You can still see the blood," he says. More blood, wide dry brown stains, covers the altar cloth. Against a side wall, I find two new-looking closed coffins covered in cloth, a stack of 20 more, empty and expectant, and an open sack scattered with ribs, femurs and broken skulls. "Oh yeah," says Ruxin, looking over. "Thirteen years later, they're still finding new bodies round here every day." We walk around to the front of the church where a raised white-tiled plinth is scattered with dead flowers and plastic wrap. In its center is another stairwell. "If you want the full tour ... ," Ruxin trails off. I descend. At the foot of the stairs is a narrow corridor. The walls are lined with shelves, floor to the ceiling, stacked with neat piles of bones and skulls. "There's 50,000 people down there," says Ruxin, when I emerge.

The genocide museum in the capital Kigali concludes its description of 1994 with the words: "Rwanda was dead."

The Hutu slaughter of Tutsis and moderate Hutus in Rwanda between April and July 1994 was so quick and wholesale, it has proved impossible to find all the dead or separate their remains. It is estimated that Rwanda lost 800,000 people in 100 days. Perhaps 2 million took part in the slaughter, this in a country of 8 million. The genocide museum in the capital Kigali concludes its description of 1994 with the words: "Rwanda was dead." As a Tutsi area, Nyamata was a crucible of the killing. It was where, in a series of practice massacres after 1990, that the Hutu militia, the Interahamwe, honed their calculations of the optimum rate of dispatch. Come April 1994, around six out of every 10 people in Nyamata were killed, though again, no one is sure of the exact figure. A few miles from Nyamata, a sign at a second massacre site reads: ÉGLISE NTARAMA: +/- 5,000 PEOPLE.

A holocaust colors everything that follows, alters the essence of a nation. And it fosters a lasting mystery — an incomprehension over how man could behave so inhumanly to man. At his offices in Kigali, President Paul Kagame says: "Hutu fathers killed their own children because some of them resembled their wives, who were Tutsi. How do you explain that?" Nations that haven't just peered into the abyss, but lived in it, have a tight grasp on the price of failure. Those that survive are duty-bound to do everything to avoid a repeat. So when Columbia University public health and development expert Ruxin, 37, arrived in Rwanda and asked where to set up the Millennium Villages Project, a program to end poverty in 80 villages across the world, Kagame's government gave him an office 100 m from Nyamata church.


'It pulled itself up by its bootstraps when there weren't even any boots'

Rwanda's unbending approach since its holocaust has led it to some remarkable successes — and embroiled it in controversy. What's undeniable is that Rwanda is forging a remarkable path to development. Last week the country was named the most improved sub-Saharan nation on the Ibrahim Index of African Governance, ranking factors such as transparency and human development over the last five years. If yesterday Rwanda was Africa's great tragedy, today, to many, it is its great hope. "This is not just a nation that's emerged from the ashes," says Ruxin. "It pulled itself up by its bootstraps when there weren't even any boots. Now it's achieving a level of recognition that makes other countries salivate. It's a place of real hope."

SOURCE

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What are your views? Can a country heal itself after such acts of violence have occurred?

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