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News
LOS ANGELES YOUTH UNVEILS MUSIC VIDEO FOR
HUMAN RIGHTS
Celebrities
and multi-ethnic cast in youth organization project
November 14, 2004
At the age of 19, Los Angeles resident and director Taron
Lexton has completed a brand new educational tool a
music video that tells a moving tale of children fighting
for their rights.
A rare fusion of hip-hop edge and a powerful human rights
message, UNITED has already proved immensely popular with
young and old alike.
The 5-minute film also features cameo appearances from a
host of celebrities: soul legend Isaac Hayes, movie
actress Erika Christensen ("Traffic") and
TV actresses Catherine Bell ("JAG"), Jenna
Elfman ("Dharma and Greg"), and Lynsey Bartilson
("Grounded for Life").
Lexton crossed 14 countries to obtain footage for UNITED,
from Japan to India to South Africa to Venezuela. Because
everyone involved donated their time and talents, including
the entire multi-ethnic cast and crew, the production was
executed at minimal expense, with more than 2,000 people volunteering
for the cause of human rights education.
People are incredibly willing to contribute to this
kind of project, said Lexton, Human rights are
more important to people than you might think.
The music video has also won praise from United Nations officials.
Mr. Craig Mokhiber, Deputy Director of the Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights at the United Nations in New
York, described the work as "brilliant. An important
contribution to human rights education." The Mayor of
Los Angeles, James Hahn, declared the film praiseworthy.
According to civil rights leaders, the video has the potential
to dramatically curb youth violence. In California alone,
the Department of Justice estimates there are 300,000 gang
members. Six thousand young people in the state are hospitalized
each year for some form of violent injury.
Lexton utilized the full facilities of his production company,
TXL films, to create the music video as a project for Youth
for Human Rights International (YHRI), an organization that
teaches kids human rights and encourages youth-to-youth mentorship.
Lexton received support in all phases of production from both
YHRI and the Human Rights Department of the Church of Scientology
International. At the UNITED Premier event in New York City,
Lexton earned the prestigious Outstanding Youth Humanitarian
Award award from YHRI.
The song, UNITED, on which the video is based,
was written by up-and-coming artists Charles Gee and Chris
Thomas, with additional lyrics by 14-year-old female rapper
Lai Lai. It was produced by Hiroko Hayata and award-winning
musician Geoff Levin.
YHRI, founded in 2001 by Scientologist and educator Mary
Shuttleworth, is making the work available to schools, youth
organizations, and others concerned to advance human rights
for youth.
Shuttleworth, Director of Youth for Human Rights International,
sees UNITED as a musical enactment of how to apply Article
1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which declares
that all human beings are born free and equal and should act
towards another in a spirit of brotherhood."
International distribution is now underway. With tens of
thousands of copies in circulation in 15 languages, UNITED
is already generating an international grass roots movement
for human rights.
>>Click
HERE to see the video
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