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'War in the east, / War in the west, / War up north, / War down south - / War - war - / Rumours of war. / And until that day, / The African continent / Will not know peace, / We Africans will fight - we find it necessary / - And we know we shall win / As we are confident / In the victory Of good over evil -/ Good over evil, yeah!
"La La Peace Song" Al Wilson, O. C. Smith: 1980 "Last Chance" Shooting Star: 1950 "Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream" Ed McCurdy: 1973 "Lay Down Your Arms" Doron Levinson (Israel) 1986 "Lay Down Your Guns" Emerson, Lake & Powell: 2013 "Letters Home" Radical Face: 1979 "Little Boy Soldiers" The Jam: 1983 "A Little Good News" Anne Murray: 1986 ...
We should protect/guard our Community We should be committed and stand strong Our unity is our anchor Long live our community Oh God we pray For preservation of the East African Community; Enable us to live in peace May we fulfil our objectives Patriotism and togetherness Be the pillars of our unity May we guard our independence and peace
The song entered the UK Singles Chart at No. 48 in September 1971 and peaked at No. 13 the following month. [3] The song peaked at number 97 in Australia. [4] Like the group's debut single, "In the Summertime," and following singles, it was a maxi-single playing at 33 rpm, issued in a picture sleeve.
"Lay Down Your Arms" is a peace song originally in Hebrew language as תפילה לשלום (i.e. "Prayer for Peace") composed by the Israeli Doron B. Levinson in 1973 in the aftermath of Yom Kippur War when Levinson was temporarily blind at the time, having been injured during the war. The Hebrew lyrics are by Hamutal Ben Zeev-Efron.
"Weeping" is an anti-apartheid protest song written by Dan Heymann in the mid-1980s, and first recorded by Heymann and the South African group Bright Blue in 1987. [1] The song was a pointed response to the 1985 State of Emergency declared by President P.W. Botha , which resulted in killings of violent demonstrators against racial ...
Dubul' ibhunu" (Xhosa: [dəbʊliːbuːnuː]), translated as shoot the Boer, [1] kill the Boer [2] or kill the farmer, [3] [4] is a controversial South African anti-Apartheid song. It is sung in Xhosa or Zulu. The song originates in the struggle against apartheid when it was first sung to protest the Afrikaner-dominated apartheid government of ...
"Fight for You" is an urban-pop [9] ballad [10] with a length of four minutes and two seconds. [6] According to Meena Rupani of DesiHits, the song finds Derulo as the male protagonist singing "that he's got a girl in his life he isn't ready to let go of just yet". [2] The song contains a sample of the song "Africa" (1982) by American rock band ...