Post by account_disabled on Mar 5, 2024 20:00:54 GMT 10
Spanish singer Alejandro Sanz interrupted his concert on Saturday in , Mexico, to ask for the expulsion of one of the attendees, whom he accused of attacking a woman. It happened during the first song of the event, while the audience shouted euphorically to the rhythm of "Music is not played." Suddenly, the Spanish singer stopped singing. He pointed his finger at a man in the audience, took off his guitar and walked off the stage. Before the astonished looks of the audience, and the choir that continued singing, Sanz faced the man. As it was later learned through the local press, the man was harassing a woman. When he goes down, Sanz says something to one of the guards, then goes up on stage and points at him again, telling him: "That's not done." The man was expelled from the concert. After the man left and the song ended, Sanz explained to the public what happened: "I apologize for the episode before, because I cannot conceive of anyone touching anyone and even less a woman," commented the singer. which was applauded by the attendees.
Hanna Jazmin has always looked for ways to help people in her life. Today, at years old, the young woman of Kurdish-Mexican origin America Mobile Number List directs a foundation that already has more than volunteers among its ranks: the Foundation. In 2013, at the age of 26, with an outstanding academic career, the daughter of the couple met with her parents and shared some news with them: —Mom, dad, after thinking about it a lot, I have decided to go live in Mexico… His father, a conservative man of Kurdish origin, and his mother, a Mexican national, were stunned. Although the couple had already gotten used to watching their daughter pack her suitcases since she was 17, when she finished high school in California, United States, to go in search of the life she longed for, they were both aware that this time it would be different. —They have taught me that I should be where people need me most, that's why I think I can contribute more to Mexico than to the United States. If I fail, at least I can say I tried.
With that phrase, Hanna began a career focused on philanthropy. A family with tradition Hanna's paternal family has been involved in Kurdish diplomatic relations for more than 900 years. His great-great-grandfather, Mohamed Pasha , who was the most important leader of Kurdistan and supreme leader of the tribe, stood out for his notable participation in the territory's politics. In addition, he is credited with the construction, in 1734, of Castle, located in the city of , in Kurdistan, northern Iraq. For her part, Adela Khanum , Hanna's great-grandmother better known as Lady Adela, was named by the British as Princess of the Brave. During the war that raged between and , Khanum rose to distinction for saving the lives of hundreds of British soldiers, as well as taking the reins of government during the absence of her husband, Osman Pasha . On her mother's side of the family, Hanna says that five generations ago her great-great-grandfather Carlos Henry arrived from France and became the precursor of the first telephone installations in Mexico, including those at Chapultepec Castle and the National Palace.
Hanna Jazmin has always looked for ways to help people in her life. Today, at years old, the young woman of Kurdish-Mexican origin America Mobile Number List directs a foundation that already has more than volunteers among its ranks: the Foundation. In 2013, at the age of 26, with an outstanding academic career, the daughter of the couple met with her parents and shared some news with them: —Mom, dad, after thinking about it a lot, I have decided to go live in Mexico… His father, a conservative man of Kurdish origin, and his mother, a Mexican national, were stunned. Although the couple had already gotten used to watching their daughter pack her suitcases since she was 17, when she finished high school in California, United States, to go in search of the life she longed for, they were both aware that this time it would be different. —They have taught me that I should be where people need me most, that's why I think I can contribute more to Mexico than to the United States. If I fail, at least I can say I tried.
With that phrase, Hanna began a career focused on philanthropy. A family with tradition Hanna's paternal family has been involved in Kurdish diplomatic relations for more than 900 years. His great-great-grandfather, Mohamed Pasha , who was the most important leader of Kurdistan and supreme leader of the tribe, stood out for his notable participation in the territory's politics. In addition, he is credited with the construction, in 1734, of Castle, located in the city of , in Kurdistan, northern Iraq. For her part, Adela Khanum , Hanna's great-grandmother better known as Lady Adela, was named by the British as Princess of the Brave. During the war that raged between and , Khanum rose to distinction for saving the lives of hundreds of British soldiers, as well as taking the reins of government during the absence of her husband, Osman Pasha . On her mother's side of the family, Hanna says that five generations ago her great-great-grandfather Carlos Henry arrived from France and became the precursor of the first telephone installations in Mexico, including those at Chapultepec Castle and the National Palace.