Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Jackson Browne given Gandhi Award for activism

- By Mark Zaretsky

Musician Jackson Browne was honored Friday night for a lifetime of activism by Promoting Enduring Peace, accepting the Gandhi Award, which previously went to Eleanor Roosevelt, Dr. Martin Luther King, Dr. Benjamin Spock, Linus Pauling and Cesar Chavez, among others.

Browne was the first performing artist to receive the award. Roosevelt was the first winner, back in 1960. Promoting Enduring Peace is based in New Haven.

“I’m happy to be here to accept this tremendous honor,” Browne told the crowd in the Lyman Center for the Performing Arts at Southern Connecticu­t State University. He added that he knew of a number of musicians he considered more deserving of the honor, but that so many of his heroes had received it in the past that he couldn’t say no.

“The measure of a good song is that it doesn’t need explaining,” Browne said.

He said that “with all in the world that needs fixing, I’ve always been drawn to those who try,” and that, as an musician who is also an activist, “my part of this has been to help bring people together. Music is good for that.”

Meanwhile, “my education has been advanced by the contact with all those committed activists, working on all those fronts,” he said.

Browne’s acceptance speech was political at times, with him saying, “the United States must rejoin the world and put the planet first.” He also suggested it’s time to move toward “enduring peace” rather than “enduring war,” saying that the U. S. hasn’t really been at peace since before World War II.

Browne was introduced by environmen­tal activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who said Browne “walks the walk” — right down to having a windmill on his farm in California.

“He understand­s that the environmen­t is intertwine­d with democracy,” Kennedy said.

Browne did not perform for this gig — although he said he was a horrible speechwrit­er and would have preferred to sing.

That honor went to Ben Grosscup and Luci Murphy of the People’s Music Network, described as “a group of people who follow in Jackson’s footprints” in terms of using music to promote activism.

“We are so happy to be part of this event, honoring Jackson” for the work he has done, said Grosscup, the group’s executive director.

 ?? Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Jackson Browne accepts the Gandhi Peace Award from Promoting Enduring Peace at Southern Connecticu­t State University in New Haven on Friday.
Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Jackson Browne accepts the Gandhi Peace Award from Promoting Enduring Peace at Southern Connecticu­t State University in New Haven on Friday.

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