SMU’s Embrey Human Rights Program to Host Triumph Of The Spirit Awards

11/7/16

Human rights concert to feature celebrity hip hop peace activist Emmanuel Jal and recognize one local and one international humanitarian leader

North Texans can support and share in the fight for rights by attending the Triumph of the Spirit Awards, themed VOICES, at Kessler Theater. The magical fundraising event will feature celebrity hip hop peace activist Emmanuel Jal, the gritty country-folk music of Austin-based BettySoo, spoken-word and live-action performances by Journeyman Ink, and a VOICES-inspired mixed-media artwork gallery created by SMU students and local professional. Monies raised will help make these voices, championed by The Embrey Human Rights Program (EHRP) at Southern Methodist University, heard the world over.

The Triumph of the Spirit Awards will be held Wednesday, Nov. 16. Opening reception begins at 6pm. Performance and awards ceremony is 7pm – 9pm. Tickets, starting at $50 including light hors d’oeuvres, valet, and cash bar, are available for purchase now through November 15 at www.prekindle.com/triumph. $5 discounted balcony tickets are available with promo code “balcony,” and additional “$35 friends and family” tickets are available with the promo code “friend.” Walk-ups are welcome the day of the event. The Triumph of the Spirit Awards will be held at The Kessler Theater located at 1230 West Davis Street, Dallas, TX 75208.

You may have heard Emmanuel Jal’s name before. A full-length documentary about his life, “Warchild,” won 12 prestigious film festival awards, and he starred in “The Good Lie” alongside Reese Witherspoon. His music collaborations have partnered with Nelly Furtado and Grammy-winning artist Nile Rodgers to advocate social change. His live appearances have included Live 8, Nelson Mandela’s 90th Birthday Concert and one concert for his Holiness the Dalai Lama.

The bi-annual awards ceremony will honor the accomplishment, commitment, and innovation of one international and one local humanitarian: African physician and CNN Hero Georges Bwelle, who goes the distance to offer free healthcare for his country’s impoverished, and Carol Brady Houston, who has volunteered every Friday night for the last 20 years to the Plano-based charity Friday Nite Friends. The prize total of $30,000, along with the production of the event, was graciously funded by an anonymous donor who passively serves as a role model in making the world a better place.

Bwelle and Houston were among 55 candidates nominated by people from around the world for the Triumph of the Spirit Awards. Each was selected as a winner by a group of respected academics, peace advocates and others for best exemplifying the tenets of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the EHRP credo, “There is no such thing as a lesser person.”

The uplifting celebration commemorates the 10th anniversary of the Embrey Human Rights Program at SMU’s Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences – only the seventh university in the nation to offer an undergraduate degree in human rights.

Global Winner: Georges Bwelle
$25,000 recipient

Physician Georges Bwelle has spent a decade overcoming physical, financial and political obstacles to provide free medical care and health education to people in need in his native West African country of Cameroon and beyond.

Bwelle, a general surgeon and gastroenterologist for the Central Hospital of Yaoundé in Cameroon’s capitol city, is founder of ASCOVIME (Association Des Compétences Pour Une Vie Meilleure), a non-profit that relies on donations and volunteers to fight diseases and illiteracy in rural Africa, where healthcare and education are often inaccessible, insufficient and expensive.

Since 2008, Bwelle and his team have spent most weekends in remote villages, where they provide a field clinic, operating room, pharmacy and other services for up to 500 patients – some of whom walk nearly 40 miles for treatment.

Bwelle’s work is vital to the nearly 24 million people of Cameroon, where only one doctor is available for every 5,000 people. Additionally, only 6 percent of the nation’s budget goes to fight endemic diseases ranging from malaria to meningitis in hospitals that are overcrowded, unsanitary and lack doctors, who earn very little pay.

As CNN reported when honoring him as one of its 10 “Heroes” of 2013, Bwelle was inspired to become a doctor after watching his father die from complications of poor health care in 2002. One of the last things his father said was, “Son, you see how difficult it is to see a doctor. When you become one, please help the poor.”

Now, Bwelle says, “I am so happy when I am doing this work. I hope [my father] sees what I am doing.”

Dallas-Area Winner: Carol Brady Houston
$5,000 recipient

Each Friday without fail, for the past 20 years, Carol Brady Houston and a group of trained nurses and volunteers ensure that medically and physically challenged children experience a fun evening out so their parents can enjoy some much-needed time for themselves.

As director of the Plano-Based nonprofit group Friday Nite Friends, Houston helps children with special needs engage in arts and crafts projects plus physically and mentally challenging activities. On occasion, she also brings in special entertainment ranging from musical performances to visits by pet therapy dogs.

Friday Nite Friends (FNF) was founded in 1992 by Lynda Guerrero, the mother of a child who required constant nursing care. The nation’s second respite program was started as an outreach project for Custer Road United Methodist Church, where it is still based.

FNF now serves more than 60 families from all socio-economic backgrounds. So far, an estimated 250 families have benefitted from its services, which have provided training to more than 500 nursing students and enlisted about 3,000 volunteers, half of them youth.

During her 24-year career as a special education teacher, and after two decades of working with FNF, Houston says her best training has been as the mother of a son born with Spina bifida. “I’m no stranger to the stresses of long hospital stays and too many doctors appointments,” she says. “I can relate to families’ needs and challenges.”

Southern Methodist University(SMU) is a nationally ranked private university in Dallas founded 100 years ago. Today, SMU enrolls nearly 11,000 students who benefit from the academic opportunities and international reach of seven degree-granting schools.

SMU’s Embrey Human Rights Programin Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences is dedicated to providing opportunities for promoting, defending and extending human rights. SMU is one of only seven U.S. institutions to offer a bachelor’s degree in human rights, and through its interdisciplinary program annually facilitates hundreds of learning events and immersive trips, as well as community outreach and social action campaigns.

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