Abdullah Ibrahim, dubbed "South Africa's Mozart" by Nelson Mandela, has passed away at the age of 91.
In 1962 Ibrahim and his then wife to be, singer Bea Benjamin, fled to Europe as refugees from the apartheid state.
Back home, his music played a part in the apartheid freedom struggle. His tune Mannenberg, recorded during a return visit in 1974, became an anthem of the movement.
Wow, Ibrahim was so in his prime on that video, Maestro. I’m still investigating the radical life extension research, meanwhile. Intermittent fasting and walking-off what I’ve eaten each day seems to be working. According to longevity proponents, we’ve reached a point, with our technology, where we gain a year in life extension for each additional year lived. So, they’re thinking they’ll be able to reset the cells and keep us at relatively the same age going forward.
Well, folks didn’t believe in the possibility of the horseless carriage or the airplane, but science figured it out.
If we believe in the scriptures, it says in the Millennium if one dies at 100, it will be as one accursed. Maybe Harvard Professor David Sinclair knows what he’s talking about. I know it’s a long shot, but following their health benefits suggestions makes sense.
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Abdullah Ibrahim, dubbed "South Africa's Mozart" by Nelson Mandela, has passed away at the age of 91.
In 1962 Ibrahim and his then wife to be, singer Bea Benjamin, fled to Europe as refugees from the apartheid state.
Back home, his music played a part in the apartheid freedom struggle. His tune Mannenberg, recorded during a return visit in 1974, became an anthem of the movement.