The University of Calgary Gauntlet®
  2009-03-26
(NOTE: Archived content:
Current issue here)

[image]
Previous Issues

News
Campus Pro-Life returns
Communist leader talks economics in Calgary
Fine arts cuts staff again
U of C prof reminisces about time in Rwanda
White supremacists blocked from City Hall
MRI wait times need help
Take a stand for Darfur and the Macarena
Optimism in Afghanistan
Online Only - Video games surviving the recession
Online Only - Social networking for a cause

Opinions
Thirsting after sanity
Proper conduct towards peace
Mind Fight: Should playground zones be abolished?
The female arm of the head of state
The future of gaming: where the industry's next steps should lead
Harper's hand in the jar
Calgary police's fancy new toys
Born free, but not in Florida

Sports
Grasshopper beats old master
Sport shorts
CFL star to join Canadian Bobsled team

Entertainment
A spoken word celebration
Morpheus Theatre looks at Gilbert and Sullivan's lesser known work
April films make for a mixed bag
Talk about a bonus project
Learning the ways of the scene
As spring comes, so does Wintersleep
The Great Lake Swimmers' geography lesson
Stolen Organ Family Band
The Fray
Propagandhi
Kashiwa Daisuke



AP
Deconstructing Horsedog

  Take a stand for Darfur and the Macarena





[Print] Print this story
Live music and local art will support Doctors Without Borders. (Click for larger image.) Live music and local art will support Doctors Without Borders.

Credit: Geoff MacIntosh / the Gauntlet  


ADVERTISMENT

ADVERTISMENT

Student Activities
NEWSMoustache March
NEWSSpandex reappears on campus
NEWSSinging racism away
NEWSThere will be blood
NEWSU of C students take to the track

What does the Macarena and a deadly conflict in Africa have in common? University of Calgary students are pairing with local entrepreneurs to put a stop to both.

Night to Fight: a Benefit for Darfur will feature live local music, an interactive fashion show and a visual art installation in an effort to raise money for international humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders.

The awareness event will be held at the MacEwan Hall Ballroom on Saturday and is co-sponsored by the U of C chapter of STAND, an international club dedicated to advocating for the prevention of genocide, and by grassroots Calgary publication atbt Magazine. Art can add meaning to the distant conflict, said atbt Magazine co-founder Brendan Kane.

"We're trying to push students into activism, but into fun activism, you know," said Kane. "I think in terms of the issues in Darfur, it's a very dark subject and people have a hard time relating to it, so we're trying to put things together so people can initially relate and at least have knowledge about the situation."

STAND president Michelle Cheung is adamant that, although far away from the conflict, Calgarians can make a difference in the war in western Sudan, which has killed an estimated 400,000 and displaced over two million.

STAND, was founded in 2007 by a group of American students who were shocked that they didn't know about the conflict. Members are hopeful the genocide in Darfur can be ended, they stopped using the acronym Students Taking Action Now Darfur to emphasize its temporal nature.

"Our hope is that we can stop the genocide in Darfur and after that the organization can continue to work towards stopping other crimes against humanity," said Cheung.

She encouraged students to get angry that the Canadian government, known for its efforts to ensure peace, isn't taking action.

"I know a lot of students feel like they can't do anything in terms of affecting policy changes, but we have this huge voice that is so untapped and so many people don't know about what's going in Darfur," she said. "The more we get angry about what's going on, the more likely that Canadian politicians are going to be forced to listen to us."

Cheung encouraged students to call 1-800-Genocide, a hotline that directs callers to Prime Minister Stephen Harper's office, Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff and even the foreign minister, noting the more people that voice concerns, the higher Darfur will rise on the agenda.

Saturday's event will feature 30 local artists and their wares from Market Collective, a live visual arts installation by Art Life Gallery, an interactive fashion show put on by Split Pea Vintage and a speech given by Alberta Liberal leader David Swann, who once fasted on parliament hill for Darfur.

Kane also promised that the bands-- The Kronic Groove Band, The Fast Romantics, Platinum Alibi and Calm Asa Coma-- will be so lively and fun, the event may start a new social trend, putting an end to grooving techniques from the days of yore.

"You're going to see people doing dance moves that they've never attempted before, all brand new dance moves like the twist when that was huge and the Macarena," said Kane.

Share this story: del.icio.us digg Fark NewsVine Reddit YahooMyWeb


Reader Comments:

 Add your comment or send a letter to the editor

No comments found. Be the first!

 Views expressed are those of the posters and do not necessarily reflect that of the Gauntlet.

ADVERTISMENT

ADVERTISMENT

RSS icon RSS Feeds:
[ Main - News - Opinions - Entertainment - Sports ]
Volunteer at the Gauntlet®
.