• Give a Gift
  • Customer Service
  • Promotions
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • Win
  • Games

January 20, 2009

Queen of Soul

Talk about cool: R&B diva Alicia Keys is helping provide HIV/AIDS drugs to 45,000 people in Africa.

Share
alicia keys

Photo Credit: Theo Wargo/Wire Image

Special Offer

MORE THAN A PRETTY FACE

Alicia Keys was fresh off her first hit album when she agreed to hold a concert half a world away in Africa. She had no idea what she was in for.

"It was 2002, and I was 22, just stepping out of Harlem for, like, the third time ever," she says, sitting down with Marie Claire after belting out a soulful tune on a television talk show in New York City. "That trip was my wake-up call. As soon as I got off the plane, everything hit me: driving from the airport and seeing the shantytowns right next to the golf courses, being asked if I wanted to go to a 'colored' club ... And I met these kids who were younger than me who didn't have any parents — they said they were HIV-positive," she says in a low voice, her hands folded in her lap.

"Right after that, I went on vacation in the Seychelles islands; it was all sexy and amazing, and I ordered breakfast — eggs and orange juice — and it came to $85. I was like, Whoa! That smacked me so hard in the face," she says. "I knew I wanted to do something."

Within a year, she had cofounded a humanitarian group with filmmaker and activist Leigh Blake called Keep a Child Alive, which helps build clinics and provides medicine for kids and their families with HIV/AIDS across Africa. The two women have taken a creative, "rebellious" approach to raising money and awareness, says Blake, who is hanging out with Keys after the TV performance. Case in point: At a recent concert, Keys asked fans to donate $5 each by punching in a number on their cell phones and texting the word alive. She collected $40,000 on the spot. Keys also made a documentary with Blake called Alicia in Africa, then posted it online for free. The women have signed up Somali-born Iman and India native Padma Lakshmi as global ambassadors as well.

So far, the group has saved an estimated 45,000 lives by getting antiretroviral drugs to people in need. On the agenda for the year ahead: an expansion into India. "This organization has so much heart and truth and honesty and integrity," says Keys, getting set to shed her electric-blue dress for jeans before heading to a rehearsal across town. "It's genuine and personal. It helps me be clear on things that are way bigger than the walls we have around us."

To donate time or money to Keep a Child Alive, go to keepachildalive.org. To watch Keys's documentary, go to aliciainafrica.org.


Share
Connect with Marie Claire:
Advertisement
daily giveaway
Win One Hearts on Fire Diamond Shooting Star Pendant!

Win One Hearts on Fire Diamond Shooting Star Pendant!

enter now
Latest blog entries
Marie Claire On The Go
  • Start receiving the day's headlines from topics you choose and get the latest posts from our bloggers. Sign up for RSS feeds now.

  • Take Marie Claire with you everywhere you go. Our mobile site has the latest 'it' items of the season. Including: Blogs, Hair & Beauty, Nutrition, Health & Fitness, Horoscopes and so much more!

    Here's how:

    1. Start a mobile session on your phone
    2. type m.marieclaire.com into your browser
    3. that's it!

  • In Every Issue:
    The one-stop shop
    for the very best in
    fashion & beauty


    Give a Gift
    Customer Service
    Marie Claire Magazine
horoscopes
  • Sponsored Links
More From Inspirational Women
Jessica Buchanan: Kidnapped!

On October 25, 2011, 32-year-old aid worker Jessica Buchanan and a Danish colleague were ambushed en route from a land mine awareness training program in southern Somalia and taken by pirates who had moved their ransom schemes from sea to land. Their price? $45 million. Here, she recounts the harrowing abduction that led to 93 days in captivity and a dramatic rescue by the elite U.S. Navy SEAL Team Six.

Queens of the Hill

Connections are currency in the nation's capital. So if you want to get in with D.C. power players, start with these in-the-know women.

Risky Business

Think your workday is stressful? Imagine leaping from 10 stories, hand-feeding sharks, or dismantling bombs. For these professional badasses, danger is just part of the job description.

post a comment

Special Offer
Link Your Marie Claire Account to Facebook
Welcome!

Marie Claire already has an account with this email address. Link your account to use Facebook to sign in to Marie Claire. To insure we protect your account, please fill in your password below.

Forgot Password?

Thanks for Joining

Your information has been saved and an account has been created for you giving you full access to everything marieclaire.com and Hearst Digital Media Network have to offer. To change your username and/or password or complete your profile, click here.

Continue
Your accounts are now linked

You now have full access to everything Marie Claire and Hearst Digital Media Network have to offer. To change your settings or profile, click here.

Continue