The Passion of Octavius Catto
Facts - Uri Caine composed a breathtaking hymn to freedom. - Homage and tribute to Octavius Catto (1839 - 1871), civil rights activist in Philadelphia and extraordinary force for equality in the USA, who was killed at the age of 32. - World premiere in Philadelphia in front of 20.000 listeners - Musical Declaration of Principles for Human Rights - After the biography "Tasting Freedom: Octavius Catto and the Battle for Equality in Civil War America" by Daniel R. Biddle and Murray Dubin. The Hymn to Freedom In a deeply impressive and magnificent synthesis of gospel, jazz and contemporary music, Uri Caine tells the moving story of Octavius Catto, born in 1839 in South Carolina to free African-American parents. Catto's family moved to Philadelphia in 1844, where he studied, became an educator, humanities scholar, top cricket and baseball player, and civil rights activist. Together with his fellow campaigners, he achieved the abolition of slavery and discrimination in elections based on race, color, or former serfdom, as well as the creation of educational institutions for African-Americans. Catto was murdered by Frank Kelly during riots on election day in 1871. Quote Octavius Catto: “We shall never rest at ease, but will agitate and work, by our means and by our influence, in court and out of court, asking aid of the press, calling upon Christians to vindicate their Christianity, and the members of the law to assert the principles of the profession by granting us justice and right, until these invidious and unjust usages shall have ceased.”