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Á¶È¸¼ö : 6 exe3cutive [Homepage] ´ÔÀÌ 2019-12-15, 03:04:39 ÀÌ ÀÛ¼ºÇØÁÖ½É
 This October over a million people took to the streets of Chile to call for the government to address chronic economic 
inequality. At the forefront of those protests were the nation¡¯s artists and musicians, including Grammy Award-winning singer 
Mon Laferte.
<a href="http://kachi.co.kr/product/list.html?cate_no=51 " target="_blank">´ä·Ê¶±</a>=´ä·ÊÇ° ´ä·Ê¶± Çà»ç¶± ±îÄ¡¶±<br />
Mon grew up poor in the coastal city of Vina del Mar where she left school at 13 to work and <a 
href="https://sikwionnd7.tistory.com/135" target="_blank">¿øÈ¿·Îµ¿¿ë´ÞÀÌ»ç</a><br /> help her mother to pay the bills. She 
found stardom after appearing on a television singing contest in 2003.

This year she was part of an initiative of musicians who have visited slums with lawyers and psychologists to try to help the 
vulnerable. On the red carpet of the Latin Grammys she staged a one-woman protest against alleged human rights violations 
in Chile. She uncovered her chest which was emblazoned with the words: ¡°En Chile torturan violan y matan¡± ? ¡°In Chile they 
torture, rape and kill¡±.
<a href="https://ririoewo33.tistory.com/133" target="_blank">È­¾çµ¿Æ÷ÀåÀÌ»ç</a><br />
Listen to Mon Laferte interviewed on The Cultural Frontline
<a href="https://spred.tistory.com/20" target="_blank">ÀÎõÀÌ»ñÁü¼¾ÅÍ</a><br />
5. Ilya Kaminsky (poet, Ukraine)
2019 saw the Ukrainian poet Ilya Kaminsky release an extraordinary new collection of poetry called Deaf Republic about a deaf 
boy being shot in an occupied country. A haunting narrative that feels more like a drama than a poetry collection, Ilya 
describes it as a fairy tale in verse. The collection reflects Ilya¡¯s own life.
<a href="https://siolkwi8732.tistory.com/137" target="_blank">µµºÀ±¸Æ÷ÀåÀÌ»ç</a><br />

Ilya was born in the former Soviet Union, in the city of Odessa in Ukraine. Although he lost most of his hearing at the age of 
four, he did not have his first hearing aid until he was 16. In 1993, his family was granted political asylum by the United States 
and after his father¡¯s death in 1994 Ilya began to write poems in English. Through his lyrical work he questions the nature of 
silence, and what it means to be truly heard.





 

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