


By Uncle Monty.
Photos By Alex Albion.
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Three in one it was of a night under the stars, 
of a night at the opera, and of an ever so glittering 
night at last night’s Royal Festival Hall celebration
of the 30th anniversary of The Passage homeless 
day centre that has truly helped the truly home-
less of Central London year in and year out. 
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I was glad to enjoy such a wonderful night and to
I was glad to enjoy such a wonderful night and to
know at the same time that the 10th Year Concert 
of "A Night Under The Stars" also marked so much 
good for the homeless while such godless outfits like
The Big Issue have for years raked in profits at the ex-
pense of the exploited homeless on the cold streets of
what is now Broken and almost Third World Britain.
The Passage seeks no profit from the homeless, only
giving the homeless aid and comfort on the road to
their personal recovery for each and every per-
sons knocking on its open door. While corporate 
profit is the sole and bottom line of The
Big (Pig) Issue's Peter & John Bird.
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The 10th Anniversary Concert for The Passage.
Almost every seat of the 2,800 seats at the
Royal Festival Hall was taken up last night by
the huge paying supporters and generous 
fans of The Passage, which also saw warm
royal greetings on behalf of Her Majesty 
The Queen sent via her private secretary to
the Charity Concert that is under the patron-
ship of the Most Rev'd Vincent Nichols, 
Archbishop of Westminster. Other patrons
include Lord Michael Carey, Archbishop-
Emeritus of Canterbury; Lord Jonathan 
Sacks, the Chief Rabbi of Great Britain; 
The Greek Orthodox Archbishop of 
Thyateira & Gt. Britain, His Eminence
Gregorios (Theocharous) ; the Bishop of 
London, The Rt. Rev'd Richard Chartres,
and Sir Sigmund Sternberg.
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Food & Wine Reception After Concert.
and the best artists such as renowned soprano
and recitalist John Rodgers; gorgeous mezzo-
soprano Victoria Simmonds; fabulous tenor
Jesús León; and David Kempster the superb
baritone, all perform without charge to raise
the £4 Million, yes four million quid, needed
each year to successfully run The Passage 
for the truly homeless men and women
of Central London.
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Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves from Nabucco 
(1842) by Giuseppi Vedri (1813-1901) was
sensational in its presentation at the ever so 
glittering night for me and the thousands
of supporters for The Passage. Here are the
exact Verdi words sang to us all at last 
night's Royal Festival Hall:
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"Fly, thought, on golden wings;
go settle on the slopes and hills
where the warm gentle breezes
of our native land waft fragrantly.
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"Greet the banks of the Jordan
and Zion's fallen towers.
O my country, so beautiful and abandoned!
O precious and fateful memories!
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"Golden harp of the prophetic seers,
why do you hang silent on the willow?
Rekindle memories in our hearts
and tell about times gone by.
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"Like Jerusalem calling upon the fates,
may you give forth bitter lamentation,
or may the Lord inspire harmony in you
to give us courage to bare our sufferings!
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Such also included some of the classical
masterpieces of Mozart, Rossini, Puccini, 
Tchaikovsky, and Bizet with English texts 
and translations for us concert goers that
saw, too, Radio 3's Sean Rafferty appearing 
among the evening's line-up of fine present-
ers. Capping the evening was the singing ap-
pearance of The Streetwise Opera that
included a couple of my own homeless 
friends singing on stage last night. Bravo!!
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The End of the Two-Hour Non-Stop Concert
The End of the Two-Hour Non-Stop Concert
with host Griff Rhys Jones and the Orion
Symphony Orchestra & Chorus under the
skillful baton of conductor Toby Purser.
Due to the fact that I must leave for Brussels
in a few hours times for the weekend there, I 
will now close this my latest story as I head
right to Brussels for the weekend and at where
I shall visit the European Union Parliament, etc., 
ect. I'll be back with you all fairly soon, no doubt
... So have a nice weekend, everybody!
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Kudos, Uncle Monty. 
+Eve of James The Deacon, 2010.
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Opera star Dame Joan Sutherland dies.
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2010/1011/breaking49.html
Updated: Oct. 11th, 2010.
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2010/1011/breaking49.html
Updated: Oct. 11th, 2010.
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"How America Kicked Ass of Smart Ass John Bird."
By Jennafer Yellowhorse. Edited By Uncle Monty.
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"Everything The Big Issue does seems to come out
looking like rubbish compared to The Passage. It
does good year in and year out for the homeless in
in London. I ask myself: What has Big Issue really
done for the homeless? Selling only magazines is all
it does for some ... The homeless are only a con-
venient appendage for its company profits ." 
Charity worker, Ida.
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"Big Issue is SHIT ..." says Cliff, age 60.
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"Big Issue is SHIT ..." says Cliff, age 60.
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:: Feedback & Comments ::
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The Beatles Forever. By Alex Albion.
My next big concert date and invitation is The 
Beatles 50th Anniversay Royal Philharmonic 
Orchestra Tribute that is set for October 28th, 
2010, at London's Royal Albert Hall. Bravo! I 
am going with three friends who are mad about
the songs and records of The Beatles. Then on 
Armistice Day, I'll attend The Order of St.
Larazus of Jerusalem Concert at Cadogan Hall. 
Earlier on the same day, I shall be present at
the Annual Commemoration Service to the 
Homeless Dead at St. Martin-in-the-Fields.
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{ Click on any image to Enlarge }
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Greetings to you Monty,
ReplyDeleteI have never given to Big
Issue. I suppose I never
will to be honest with you.
As for "The Passage",
however, I have given them
my full support for at least
the past 10 years or more.
Therefore, Monty, it was lovely
to read your cogent story "an
ever so glittering night". You
were absolutely right on the
dot. You no doubt also attended
the after concert reception like
I did. I must say I just loved
those handsome young men dressed
in their Elizabethian-styled
costumes serving us champagne and
finger food. I am sorry we didn't
get to chat with each other there.
Perhaps at next year's concert
we will at another night under the stars? Kindest wishes, Helen.