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 LET IT BE FOUNDATION |
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 Liz Mitchell |
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| Liz Mitchell is the singer of the |
| No.1 hit song "By the Rivers of |
| Babyloni" Which is entered in the Guinness book of Records |
| as one of the tten best-selling |
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 Biography |
| Liz Mitchell the voice of Boney |
| M,Liz started her career in the |
| musical Hair in Berlin and Ham- |
| burg West Germany and she |
| sang with The Les Humphries |
| Singers from 1971-1973 |
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 Giving Online |
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| you can give through Paypal |
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THE AMERICAN AND BRITISH AFRO CARIBBEAN SCHOOL OF INFORMATION: |
The ABAC school of Information is the baby conceived through myself, Liz Mitchell-Pemberton. This foundation was formed whist I was on tour during 1989. The whole concept is that afro Caribbean children in England have been starved of the fundamental values of existence. We all know that many people are trying to save a nation, but yet we still find that our children are imprisoned and in asylum across the country, as in America and the Caribbean . Even though America and the Caribbean provide so much more facts and Information than the UK does. The visual information is psychologically very powerful, as is what we hear. |
The thought that was placed in my mind was that not only the children, but mainly the children needed to have visual contact with the beginning of their true existence. This would give the minds of the children an opening to ask the questions that will start shredding light in the darkest parts of their minds. |
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 Why Gambia |
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Alex Haley wrote a book entitled ROOTS where he told the story of a slave whose name was Kunta Kinte who was born in 1750 West Africa.In his research he discovered a village in Gambia where Kunta Kinte came from; Kunta Kinte was one of 98 slaves brought to Annapolis , Maryland , aboard the ship Lord Ligonier in 1767. |
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Today there is a celebration for the life of Kunta Kinte in this village Juffure, where his living relatives tell the story of how Kunta Kinte was stolen form his village one day. This has been the closest information for any survivors of slavery, as this is history forgotten, and vital to the existence of the descendents of the save trade to give them a sense of pride and a knowledge that their heritage did not begin with slavery. |
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