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Lighting a candle in toxic air.

Sarah MacLachlan (1968)

Sarah MacLachlan

Sarah MacLachlan

It was on this date, January 28, 1968, that Canadian musician Sarah McLachlan was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia. She started singing at age four. Not only does her voice attract fans, with songs like "Adia," "Angel," "Hold On," and "Sweet Surrender" — yielding three Grammy Awards — but McLachlan has also distinguished herself as an activist.

McLachlan founded and held the first annual Lilith Fair in 1996, to spotlight women in music, with proceeds going to charities benefiting abused women. For advancing the careers of women in music, in 1998 McLachlan was awarded the Elizabeth Cady Stanton Visionary Award. Since 2001 the Sarah McLachlan Music Outreach Program has provided free music education classes to inner city youths whose school music programs have been cut. She also visited Thailand and Cambodia in 1992 to draw attention to poverty, hunger and child prostitution in the region.

When asked what religion she follows, she replied in a 1996 interview, "I don't follow any organized religion, but I do believe in the idea of god as a verb — being love and light, and that we are part of everything as everything is part of us."* McLachlan covered the British Punk/New Wave band XTC's song "Dear God" in a 1996 tribute CD—

Dear God, hope you got the letter and
I pray you can make it better down here
...
You're always letting us humans down
The wars you bring, the babes you drown
Those lost at sea and never found
And it's the same the whole world 'round
The hurt I see helps to compound
The Father, Son, and Holy Ghost
Is just somebody's unholy hoax
...
If there's one thing I don't believe in
It's you
Dear God.

Although she didn't write it, when asked if she had "any reservations from an ideological standpoint about covering the song," McLachlan replied, "None whatsoever."**

* 28 May 1996 SprintChat. Online source: Celebrity Atheist List, at this link.
** Ibid.

Ronald Bruce Meyer

Our Fearless Leader.


Daily Almanac

February 28: Michel de Montaigne

Montaigne was a Deist, but refrained from candor about his beliefs due to the mutual slaughter between Catholics and French Huguenots of the time. "It is setting a high value upon our opinions," he wrote, "to roast men and women alive on account of them."



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