Concert Feb. 7 for Haiti relief

FALLS VILLAGE — The Salisbury Rotary Club has rallied around a local link to Haiti and is planning a concert to benefit the Haitian Hôpital Albert Schweitzer (HAS) on Sunday, Feb. 7, at 3 p.m. at Housatonic Valley Regional High School. Tickets are $15 for adults and $10 for students.

“Our community has had a long-standing relationship to HAS dating back to 1987, when we collected rubber gloves for HAS because of a worldwide shortage,� said Inge Dunham, a Rotary member and resident of Salisbury. “The Salisbury Rotary Club, with other Rotary Clubs, has supported several important projects for the hospital. Doctors and nurses from Sharon Hospital and neighboring communities have volunteered at the hospital.�

The hospital, which was not damaged in the devastating earthquake on Jan. 12, is one of the best surgical hospitals in the country. According to a press release, the hospital needs to raise $5 million to serve the needs of the Haitian population. The money will be spent on bringing injured people to the hospital, and on bringing emergency supplies, food and water, adding doctors, nurses and staff, and fuel and paying for telecommunications costs.

Sharon musician David Paton has been working with the Rotary Club to help make the concert a reality. He and his mother, Caroline, and his brother, Rob, have called on a number of friends to perform with them.

“Rob and Caroline will open the show, and then I will present a few of the groups that I play with,� David Paton said. “The music will be American and Irish folk music and will include a dozen or so of the best Celtic musicians from around the Northeast. A notable special guest will be Dylan Foley, a high school senior from Highland, N.Y., who has won first place in the All-Ireland Championships twice, making him clearly one of the best Irish fiddlers in the world.�

Paton said that while the concert is being billed as an Irish music concert, there will be a lot of variety.

Also, the timing of the concert, at 3 p.m., was chosen to avoid a conflict with the Super Bowl.

“People have plenty of time to come to our concert at 3 and then get off to their Super Bowl parties,� Paton said. “It’s a great way to go to the Super Bowl feeling that you’ve done something good for the world.�

Another local concert for Haiti will be at The Hotchkiss School on Feb. 24 from 4 to 6 p.m.

It will include performances by the Hotchkiss Gospel Choir and other local artists.

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