[IPSM] 7pm Monday: So Ann & Kalmunity @ Bar Toc Toc
Dru Oja Jay
dru at dru.ca
Tue Jan 23 19:04:15 PST 2007
Haiti Action Montreal presents:
Sò Ann (with musical guests Kalmunity)
7pm Monday, January 29
Bar Toc Toc
6091 du Parc (corner, Van Horne)
$5-25 suggested donation
(*All proceeds go to Sò Ann's educational projects in Haiti)
“Even though they released me, I still am not free. There are other
Sò Anns still in jail."
So Ann, the legendary Haitian folksinger, activist, grandmother, and
recently released political prisoner, is touring Canada to talk about
her ordeal and Haiti’s present political struggles.
The event will include a presentation by So Ann, a performance by the
Kalmunity collective, as well as a short film and slideshow.
BIO:
Annette Auguste, 62, affectionately known as So Ann, was arrested by
US Marines on May 10, 2004 (Mothers Day), who stormed her home in
Port-au-Prince, destroying her property, killing her dogs, and
arresting, hand-cuffing and head-bagging her entire household,
including her 5-year-old grandson and 68-year-old sister.
Sò Ann spent the next two years and three months in a Petionville
prison, becoming a symbol of the arbitrary and repressive fate that
awaited Lavalas organizers. In January 2006, Amnesty International
declared So Ann a political prisoner.
Her liberation last August--after a short trial where the judge
dismissed the concocted charges against her--was greeted with
jubilation in Haiti and the diaspora. Thousands turned out to parade
in the streets of Cité Soleil when she visited the seaside slum, the
capital’s largest, on September 4.
During the 29-year Duvalier dictatorship and succeeding military
juntas, Sò Ann lived in New York, where she was a democracy activist
and protest singer. She was usually called upon to lead the singing
of the national anthem that traditionally opened the rallies and
demonstrations at which she was a fixture.
Upon returning to Haiti in 1994, Sò Ann quickly became a prominent
organizer and leader in the Lavalas Family party of President Jean-
Bertrand Aristide, whom she helped get re-elected in November 2000.
US soldiers kidnapped Aristide and his wife from their home on
February 29, 2004 and flew them into exile in Africa. US, French and
Canadian troops occupied Haiti and installed a murderous coup regime,
which drove many Lavalas Family leaders into exile. Sò Ann, however,
remained. She was recovering from recent surgery and finishing a new
album with her all-woman chorale.
For more information, see recent interview:
http://www.haitianalysis.com/2007/1/16/“i-still-am-not-free”-sò-Àn-
meets-with-new-york’s-haitian-community
7pm Monday, January 29
Bar Toc Toc
6091 du Parc (corner, Van Horne)
For more information:
haitiactionmontreal at gmail.com
or (514) 618-2253
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