Montrealer brings together Colombian artists for song in solidarity with protesters back home - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 04:09 AM | Calgary | -1.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Montrealer brings together Colombian artists for song in solidarity with protesters back home

More than 70 artists took part in the music video project to raise awareness and funds for Colombian grassroots groups.

Over 70 artists came together to raise awareness and funds for grassroots groups

Carmen Ruiz brought together more than 70 Montreal artists from Colombia to show their solidarity with the people fighting for life, justice and freedom in their home country. (Submitted by Carmen Ruiz)

More than 70 Montreal artists originally from Colombia came together to create a song and music video entitled El Grito that they hope will bring awareness to the mass protests demanding reforms in Colombia.

El Grito means "a cry" in Spanish. For the artists that participated in this collective project, the song signifies a cry of resistance, a cry for freedom and a cry of strength for the Colombian people who are fed up with the state of their country.

Originally from Cali, the epicentre of the protests, Carmen Ruiz felt a lot of anguish and anxiety about being so far away from home during this time of upheaval.

She wanted to find a way that she could help from afar.

"I was in my dance studio one day and I decided that I needed to do something about what was happening," she said.

"I contacted about 15 Colombian artists in Montreal that I knew and it had a snowball effect."

More than 70 Montreal artists gathered to express their solidarity with the protests happening in Colombia (Submitted by Carmen Ruiz)

At the end of April, mass protests began in Colombia against President Ivn Duque's tax reform bill. Protesters argued it would mostly affect the middle class and the poorest people, whose financial situation worsened during the pandemic.

After four days of protests across the country, the Colombian president withdrew the proposed tax reform, but the demonstrations only amplified. Protesters started to express their discontent for other issues in the country, such as lack of education and opportunity, structural inequality and health care.

Police brutality was added to the list of demands for change, as international human rights organizations denounced a violent response by law enforcement to the demonstrations.

The demonstrations continued up until this week. But organizers said their fight for social and economic improvements would continue, and that protests may still resume.

El Grito collective raises awareness for Colombian protests with music video

3 years ago
Duration 11:21
Carmen Ruiz talks to Catherine Verdon-Diamond about uniting more than 70 Montreal artists originally from Colombia to create the song El Grito. It expresses their solidarity with the protests in their home country.

A message of hope

Carmen tells CBC's Our Montreal that she and the other artists want to send people a message of hope and strength with their song.

"We deserve a change and every community and culture in the world deserves a chance to have peace and a society that is not so violent," she said.

All the money that this collective creation makes will be sent to Colombia to support grassroots organizations that are fighting for freedom, equality, opportunities and more.

The music video for El Grito was posted to YouTube, and the song is streaming on Bandcamp. It will also be available on Spotify next week.

With files from CBC's Our Montreal