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Wednesday, September 07, 2005

David Banner, in Support of Victims of Hurricane Katrina, Heals the Hood with Benefit Concert Atlanta, GA September 17th

David Banner, in Support of Victims of Hurricane Katrina, Heals the Hood with Benefit Concert Atlanta, GA September 17th

NEW YORK, Sept. 7 /PRNewswire/ -- Who: David Banner, through his "Heal The Hood" foundation

What: Benefit Concert for Hurricane Katrina victims

When: September 17, 2005

Where: Philips Arena; 1 Philips Drive; Atlanta, GA 30303

Time: 3PM

Donations: Donations are set at a minimum -- the price of the ticket, however there is no limit on monetary donations. There will be a truck at the venue accepting food, clothing and supplies as donation as well.

Guest Appearances/Performances: David Banner, T.I., Nelly, Young Jeezy, 8Ball & MJG, Twista, and more.

Here is what Banner has to say about Hurricane Katrina (taken from Ozone Magazine):

"I think Hurricane Katrina has exposed America for what it is. I think it's bigger than Black and White. I think it has a lot more to do with rich and poor. We've always known that America is a racially driven country. We front like it's all good, but we know the levels of racism that are in America. It shows that America doesn't give a damn about people in the hood, period.

If this same thing happened in New York, they'd probably be out there mopping up water themselves. When 9/11 happened, there was help on 9/12. We sent billions of dollars overseas when the tsunami happened. We break our necks to help other people, and we fight for oil, but we can't help our people right here in Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana. Mississippi is definitely not getting the relief funds that they really need because we're not getting the TV time. There are cities in South Mississippi like Pass Christian, Long Beach, Biloxi, and Gulfport that are gone. And these are just regular, ordinary folks. White, Black, Hispanic, rich, poor. These are places where our grandmothers and grandfathers stay. There's history in these towns.

America is the most powerful country in the world, but it takes us four days to get to hurricane victims? The things that took the government four days to do are the same things they could've been done as soon as the hurricane hit. They could have flown helicopters in there or something. America is the most powerful country and the proudest country when it feels like it. They said they couldn't get down there for different reasons, but those were just excuses. I sent a tour bus full of water and supplies to Mississippi. My bus driver paid with his own MasterCard. I told him to go ahead and buy whatever they needed and I'd pay him back. He filled the tour bus up twice with water, food, and supplies before the American government did. He drove down there from Memphis. If I can dispatch help from my troops while out of town, then why couldn't Bush?! Following that I immediately came down there myself and I sat and signed autographs and passed out water to the kids for four, five hours myself. How can David Banner, a so-called "gangsta rapper," react quicker to a crisis than our own government?

There's still people in Mississippi without power right now. The water is still not drinkable from the faucets. There's no gas from Jackson down to the coast. There are lines for two miles to get gas, and the gas prices are out of control. Then you've got places like the Red Cross using preferential treatment with the stuff people have donated. I had kids from the streets telling me they gave all the better clothes to the little white kids. There's people who are coming city to city and can't get water or food from the Red Cross without a little armband. We're having a national crisis. If people need food and supplies, you should give it to them.

The bigger picture is that we're gonna have to take care of our own people. We're having a big benefit concert September 17th at Phillips Arena in Atlanta. We're trying to raise $1.5 million. T.I. got on the radio station and challenged everybody -- all the football players and record company execs -- and he raised $255,000 in two hours.

I'm glad Kanye said what he said on NBC. The President never gave a damn about black folks. I mean, we knew that already. That's not a surprise. It was the perfect time for him to say it. Personally, I believe that if CNN had showed more white people stuck in New Orleans, the government would've reacted quicker.

I blame Bush for the time it took for them to react to the situation. I blame Bush for not taking this situation as seriously as they did after 9/11. This is ten times worse than 9/11. These are communities; whole cities of people, just gone. We're talking about cities, not just a building. We're talking about a whole coast of people. These are the same states that helped assure that Bush was going to get in office, and then he turned his back on them. Where was he when we needed him? This is our President!

In the Art of War they tell you that the best way to control the people is through chaos. Most people make their decisions when something happens that sways them emotionally. So maybe this is God's blessing. We as American people, no matter what race you are, we see that now we're going to have to set up better systems to protect the poor. All these organizations that we're forming now need to stay in tact. We're going to have to be prepared to take care of our own. And we're going to have to make sure that these relief funds go to people who buy our records and support us and come to our concerts. Those are the families that I have to be concerned about first, because those are the families that put me in the position I'm in now.

There's a lot more we can do as artists, but I'm really, really proud of the rappers who have stepped up to help. I can honestly say that we've concentrated so much on helping because it's in our hearts and it's the right thing to do, but we don't get the publicity for it. We're going to have to make sure people see the efforts these rappers are making, because every time somebody gets shot or something negative happens at one of our concerts, they make sure they publicize it." -- David Banner

Banner is currently visiting Mississippi shelters giving away food, water, clothing and supplies. "Mississippi is an area that has been hard hit but not getting much attention from the media. My heart goes out to all those affected, however, I needed to see about home first, I carry it on my back," states Banner. His foundation, through its internet site, http://healthehood.com/, recently helped a family displaced from the hurricane find a new home.

Donations of canned goods, clothing and supplies can be sent to Heal The Hood Foundation; P.O. Box 13185; Jackson, Mississippi (http://healthehood.com/). For more information or to speak to David Banner, contact: Tremedia: Tresa Sanders or Tam Layton at 845.623.2325 or email respectively at tre@tre-media.net or tremedia1@optonline.net.

Source: SRC/Universal Motown Records Group

CONTACT: Tresa Sanders, tre@tre-media.net, or Tam Layton, tremedia1@optonline.net, both of Tremedia, +1-845-623-2325

Web site: http://healthehood.com/

------- Profile: Ent

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