
A partner of the WHO-housed Stop TB Partnership, Icons of Europe participates in
the global fight against tuberculosis. |
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Keats, Weber, Chopin, de Tocqueville,
Kafka, Orwell
and many other Icons died early in their life of TB.
"Their legacy provides an opportunity
to call attention to the
re-emergence of TB as a
massive global challenge in the 21st century."
Cecilia and Jens Jorgensen
Founders and managers, Icons of Europe |
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Icons of Europe
TB Fund
A good deal of the TB-related work
of Icons of Europe uses the life and music of Fryderyk
Chopin as well as Jenny Lind as a platform for advocacy, insight and dialogue.
The work is funded by Icons of Europe (pro.bono),
and by contributions to the Icons of Europe TB FUND.
To propose a donation, please
contact us. |
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OUR INITIATIVES SINCE 2003 |
World TB Day 2008 at
New York
On
the occasion of World TB Day, the U.S. premiere of Icons
of Europe's “Chopin and The Nightingale” takes place at
the Marcella Sembrich Opera Museum, Bolton Landing (Lake
George) in New York State on 25 and 27 July 2008. >>
MORE |
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| Advocacy 2006-2007 |
- Editing of various Wikipedia
pages related to tuberculosis, so that the legacy of
TB victims such as Chopin, John Keats, Alexis de
Tocqueville, and apparently the
Chinese emperor in the nightingale story of Hans
Christian Andersen would be better understood.
- We wrote a letter to the editor
of the International Herald Tribune on the editorial
"Extreme
tuberculosis" (15 September 2006) to comment on
its conclusion “Generosity is needed to fix it”.
We emphasized: "It is not a matter of charity
and a patch-up. It is about a global objective
of investing in people and the security of nations."
>>
BBC
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Icons
of Europe signed
The Call to Stop TB in early 2006. We continue to convey information
on this subject to a wide
audience.
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On 31 January 2006, the Stop TB Partnership named Icons of Europe
"PARTNER OF THE WEEK" and placed information on our association at the
Stoptb.org home page.
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| World TB Day 2005 at
Toronto |

In Toronto, the musical drama "Chopin and
The Nightingale" and a Chopin / Bellini concert were produced pro bono to promote World TB Day
2005. The Royal Museum of Ontario, the Royal Conservatory of Music, Toronto Public
Health, Stop TB Canada, the British High Commission to Canada,
the Embassy of Canada in Brussels, and the Fryderyk Chopin
Institute in Warsaw participated in this transatlantic initiative (>> poster).
A Chopin biography, with an inscription by the Director-General
of the World Health Organization, was given free to all VIP guests
attending the event. |
As a tribute to Poland and Canada, an essay
by Icons of Europe was published
in Chopin in the World on the fate of Polish art treasures during
WW2. The conclusion of this essay refers to World TB Day 2005 and "the
dangerous global epidemic". |
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"Did the emperor suffer from
tuberculosis?", 2005
An
essay on the occasion of World TB Day 2005 by
Cecilia Jorgensen,
Icons of Europe, related to The Nightingale story
by Hans Christian Andersen. |
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Swedish Embassy, Warsaw, 2004
Following an expert roundtable and
press conference at the Philharmonic on 1 March 2004 (Chopin's birthday), the
Chopin / Jenny Lind musical
drama was performed at the Swedish Embassy in
Warsaw on 6
April 2004 for an international VIP audience to celebrate the new Europe.
Rothschild
Europe was main sponsor of this event. |
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| Premiere at Brussels,
2003
The musical drama had its first
premiere near Brussels
in 2003. With patronage by six ambassadors, this event was sponsored by BP, Royal
Danish Embassy, LOT and Telefonica. |
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| Chopin biography,
2003
The biography
Chopin and The Swedish Nightingale (2003),
written and published by the founders of Icons of Europe
call attention to how Chopin died of TB.
It conveys a TB message from the Director-General of
the World Health Organization, the late Dr J.W. Lee.
Book income is dedicated to the Icons of Europe TB Fund. |
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| Danes Worldwide, 2003
The global TB threat, including the HIV/AIDS and MDR
risks, was noted in our general
programme folder and
in Danes Worldwide
(November 2003).
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- Stop TB Partnership
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Our listing as a partner
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The Call to stop TB
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International TB rates
- The Global Plan
- The Kochon Prize
DG / WHO
The Director-General of the World Health Organization signed in 2003 this message
on the inside cover of Chopin and The Swedish Nightingale:
"The fight against the great infectious killers -
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria - must remain among WHO's highest priorities."
>>
Inscription |
Biography

"In Europe, the revolutions of the 19th century were to a large extent driven by fury
over political oppression and despair over the poor living conditions of the growing urban
centres."
"These conditions bred public health
scourges such as tuberculosis and cholera."
Source: page 66 of Chopin and The
Swedish Nightingale.

CHOPIN / JENNY LIND
Chopin suffered from tuberculosis. When Jenny Lind sang for him in 1848-1849, he
felt better and he called her "my nurse". Jenny Lind raised funds to fight
the disease. |
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