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Registered South Carolina voters who don’t have photo identification will be able to vote in in elections in the state, a spokesman for the state Election Commission told Radio Baha’i.

“With or without a photo ID, registered voters will be able to vote and their vote will count, under certain conditions,” said Chris Whitmire, Director of Public Information and Training at the SC Election Commission. 

Voters will be allowed to vote even without a photo ID, as long as they sign an affidavit stating why they don’t have one, and citing a “reasonable impediment,” Whitmire said.

“And unless it turns out that your affidavit is fraudulent, your vote will count,” he said. Voters who have a photo ID but didn’t bring it to the polls will cast a provisional ballot, but they must present their ID to county elections officials after the election and before the election is certified.

South Carolina’s photo voter ID law went into effect in 2013. Critics of the law say that it has the effect of suppressing voting by a significant portion of the state’s population, mostly minority voters.  During this primary season in the run up the general election in November, voting rights advocates in SC and other states with relatively new photo ID laws have raised concerns about misleading messages about the laws.

The messaging from state and political party leaders is confusing, potentially leading voters without ID to stay away from the polls. In SC, posters and literature from the state Election Commission indicate in large print that a photo ID is now required to vote while the fact that a voter can cast a ballot without a photo ID is shown in fine print.

While there may be some confusion, if voters visit the state Election Commission website or read the fine print on posters and  other literature, the information found there should clear up any confusion, Whitmire said.

“What’s very important to understand,” Whitemire said, “is that no registered eligible voter that wants to vote will be turned away.”

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CHARLESTON-Jonathan Green got emotional and shed tears as he called for posthumous citizenship for all enslaved Africans that died on South Carolina's rice plantations in the 18th and 19th centuries.

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Jonathan Green, far right at the table, Dr. Edda Fields-Black of Carnegie Mellon University, and Citadel professor emeritus Dr. Richard Porcher.

Green, the internationally-renowned artist who lives in Charleston, made his comments last night at A Dialogue in Charleston from The Citadel: The Experiences of Living and Working on a Rice Plantation. The panel discussion was one of a series of dialogues leading up to Green's Requiem for Rice production in October 2017. The production will be a modern, African American-inspired take on the classic requiem and will include a full symphony orchestra and choir, as well classic West African drumming, dancing and singing.
Requiem for Rice is a "tribute to those enslaved, exploited and brutalized on Lowcountry South Carolina and Georgia rice plantations, and remain unburied, unmourned, and (their resting places) unmarked," according to the Requiem for Rice website.
"Whenever I talk about rice, I get emotional. It's very personal," Green said in an interview after the event in the packed Bond Hall on The Citadel campus. "You know, a requiem is a mass for the dead, and we simply believe that all those people whose bodies are scattered under those rice fields need a requiem. We need a requiem."

Green, founder and chairman of the Lowcountry Rice Culture Project, also said that the Requiem and the dialogues leading up to it are "a way to strengthen cultural connections and build a new infrastructure for our youths, especially African American youths. To bring back the cultural connections we have to West Africa. They need to know about Africa."

The call for posthumous citizenship for enslaved people who worked on rice plantations is a request to the state's leaders, he said. "It shouldn't have to be a demand."
Thousands of enslaved people made South Carolina rice planters the richest and largest slaveholders in the nation during the 18th and 19th centuries. West Africans brought the knowledge of cultivating rice with them from their homeland, where it had been grown for hundreds of years. Life for the enslaved on rice plantations was extremely harsh. Diseases such as chronic malaria, respiratory ailments, and cholera proliferated in the swamps and stagnant water on all Lowcountry rice plantations. Overall death and infant mortality rates were very high. Many enslaved people who died were buried in graves that today are unmarked and untended, Green said, adding that the requiem is "a lamentation for the repose of their souls."

The Requiem for Rice is a collaboration between The Colour of Music, Charleston's Black Classical Music Festival and the Lowcountry Rice Culture Forum sponsored by the Lowcountry Rice Culture Project. Carnegie Mellon University's Center for the Arts in Society of Pittsburgh, Pa., selected Requiem for Rice as its Performance Initiative for 2015-2017.

The requiem will premiere in October 2017 in Charleston. For more information, visit requiemforrice.com. Also, stay tuned to Radio Baha'i in the coming weeks for an in-depth interview with Jonathan Green about the project on the public affairs talk show, Insight.

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Here are the new songs added for the week of January 2nd, and playing in heavy rotation. Please tell us what you like on Facebook and Twitter

General Rotation
Ain't Goin' Nowhere, Euclid Gray
New Day, Jonathan Butler
Give You Praise, Alkendria
Will You Be There, Omari Shabazz
Father I'm Coming Home, Omari Shabazz
In Time, Beverley Knight
All I Can Do Is Pray, Danetra Moore
Got a Feeling, Deitrick Haddon
Love Remains, Gail Holmes
Say a Prayer, Michael Speaks
Believe in Yourself, Original Television Cast of the Wiz LIVE! & Uzo Aduba
We Got It, Shanice Williams, Elijah Kelley, David Alan Grier, Ne-Yo & Original Television Cast of the Wiz LIVE!
Tomorrow Is Ours, XO-IQ

New for Morning Inspiration
God Will Deliver, Williams Brothers
Brand New Blessing, Evelyn Turrentine-Agee
If I Were You, Daryl Coley and Sandi Patty
Smile, The Jackson Southernaires
The Word, Brian Courtney Wilson
I Can Make It (feat. Byron "Mr. Talkbox" Chambers), Bryan Popin
If God Be For You, Danetra Moore

Jazz Rotation
Thy Kingdom Come (Album Version), Kirk Whalum
Last Train Home, Gilad Hekselman
All That Jazz, Don Diego
Whisper to the Wind, John Klemmer
In My Life, John McLaughlin & Mahavishnu Orchestra
Strength and Beauty, Ben Williams
I'll Be Around, Fareed Haque

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"The Gardener, the award-winning film from Iranian director Mohsen Makhmalbaf, is now available for free viewing online, according to the Baha’i World News Service. The film, which debuted at film festivals in 2012, is set in the gardens at the ‪#‎Bahai‬ World Center and explores the power of faith and the role of religion in society."
Read the story here: http://news.bahai.org/story/1075

via Baha'i Office of Public Affairs

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We were able to greatly improve the sound of Radio Baha'i over the past week, both on air and streaming, and we brought back the RDS data on your radio by replacing several pieces of equipment that were old and not performing well any more.

We now have a much better sound on air and in our live stream. The station is more crisp sounding, more open, and with some serious thump to it. The vocals are clear and sharp, and the announcers are easier to understand.

We also have greatly improved our ability to send out the song data to your RDS capable car radio, if you have one. We had some of this capacity before, but it was limping and it finally broke. You can see the song title and artist, and find our basic contact information: phone number, website, and email (on some radios you may need to press the Message button to see this). If your radio allows it, we can also keep your car's clock on accurate time.

We are also slowly building our capacity for staying on the air, both streaming and broadcast, when there is a power outage. We won't be able to manage full transmitter output on backup power, that would take a seriously large and expensive generator. In a few weeks, though, we'll be able to continue to live stream on the Internet without interruption, and within a year or so, we'll be able to run a low power transmitter for over the air broadcasts in emergencies.

Please tell us what you think of the new sound and RDS data on Facebook and Twitter.

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