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Madonna, Gucci aid Malawi orphans amid controversy
Michelle Nichols
UNITED NATIONS—Pop star Madonna hosted a celebrity-studded event on
Wednesday on the lawns of the United Nations to aid Malawi orphans, the
U.N. Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and — controversially — to inaugurate a
new Gucci store.
Actors Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes, Demi Moore, Ashton Kutcher, Drew
Barrymore, Gwyneth Paltrow and a heavily pregnant Jennifer Lopez were
among many stars at the dinner that Gucci Chief Executive Mark Lee said
has already raised $3.7 million.
But critics have objected to the use of the U.N. grounds to kick off a
Gucci store opening and raised concerns about ties between Madonna’s
charity Raising Malawi and The Kabbalah Centre, a body devoted to a
mystical form of Judaism followed by the pop star.
The accusations, made mainly by bloggers, appear to stem from the fact
that Raising Malawi’s founder Michael Berg is also co-director of The
Kabbalah Centre.
“I don’t really pay any attention to that. I am grateful that Gucci has
underwritten this event — that’s all that matters to me — their
generosity. There’s always controversy surrounding anything that
involves change,” Madonna told Reuters.
“I want to put Raising Malawi on the map. I want credibility as a
philanthropic organization. I want to inspire people. I don’t want them
to just write me a check: I want them to give me a piece of their
heart,” she said.
Philippe van den Bossche, executive director of Raising Malawi, said it
was “absolutely not true” that any money raised would benefit Kabbalah.
He said the organization was a nonprofit, registered, nonsectarian
organization intended to provide support for orphans and vulnerable
children in Malawi.
GUCCI OPENING “A COINCIDENCE”
A huge tent was erected on the lawns of the United Nations for the event
and security was tight. Alicia Keys, Timbaland and Rihanna were due to
perform, while comedian Chris Rock was to auction off celebrity events,
such as aerobics with Madonna and baseball batting practice with Yankee
Alex Rodriguez.
Despite announcing the fundraising event in November as a celebration of
the opening of a new Gucci store in New York, Lee said on Wednesday that
“it’s a coincidence that we happen to be here and we’re opening an
important store on Friday.”
“Really tonight is about the charities and the money we’re raising,” he
told Reuters, while Gucci’s Creative Director Frida Giannini said that
in the end the dinner was simply a “fundraising event with glamour.”
U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who did not attend the event, said
on Tuesday that he understood the proceeds would “be used for a proper
purpose as agreed between UNICEF and the organizers.”
Gucci, which is owned by French retailer PPR, has paid for the entire
event and said all money raised will be split between Raising Malawi and
UNICEF.
Madonna’s interest in helping Malawi orphans is personal — she and her
husband, director Guy Ritchie, are raising a young Malawian boy they
hope to adopt. But the adoption has hit several stumbling blocks since
they took him from an orphanage in late 2006 when he was 13 months old.
Rights groups have accused Madonna of using her fame and wealth to
circumvent the country’s adoption rules, although the singer has
insisted she is following the law. Malawi’s High Court is to hold a
hearing this year into whether Madonna and Ritchie are suitable parents
and should adopt the child. |