Portrait of cellist and United Nations Messenger of Peace Yo-Yo Ma in UN studio.
Portrait of cellist and United Nations Messenger of Peace Yo-Yo Ma in UN studio.
Yo-Yo Ma, world renowned cellist, performs at the sixty-third United Nations Day Concert. UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe
Yo-Yo Ma speaks at the student observance of the 2006 International Day of Peace, at United Nations Headquarters in New York. UN Photo/Marco Castro
Yo-Yo Ma performs for the observance of the International Day of Peace at United Nations Headquarters in New York. UN Photo/Marco Castro
UN Messengers of Peace Yo-Yo Ma and Midori Goto, and Jayathma Wickramanayake, UN Secretary-General's Envoy on Youth, attend the ceremony in observance of the International Day of Peace (21 September) at UN headquarters. 20 Sep 2019/ UN Photo/Mark Garten
Secretary-General Ant¨®nio Guterres speaks with Yo-Yo Ma, UN Messenger of Peace, at the Peace Bell ceremony in observance of the International Day of Peace (21 September). 20 Sept 2019. United Nations, New York/UN Photo/Mark Garten
Yo-Yo Ma, UN Messenger of Peace, at the Peace Bell ceremony in observance of the International Day of Peace (21 September). 20 Sept 2019. United Nations, New York/UN Photo/Kim Haughton
About
Renowned cellist Yo-Yo Ma is expanding his efforts to expose young audiences to music and promote the work of the United Nations among young people. Born in Paris to Chinese parents and educated in the United States, Mr. Ma is the recipient of countless honours and awards. Believing that music can act as a magnet to draw people together, he created the Silk Road Project in 1998 to promote the study of cultural, artistic and intellectual traditions along the ancient Silk Road trade route, which sweeps through cultures from the Mediterranean Sea to the Pacific Ocean. In 2007, he contributed music for a DVD produced in support of the Stop TB Partnership Campaign with the World Health Organization.
Focus Area: Youth
Young people between the ages of 15 and 24 represent approximately 18% of the global population, or nearly 1.2 billion people.
Young people are effective agents of change. They contribute to development by addressing society¡¯s most challenging issues, such as combating poverty and hunger in their communities, stemming the HIV/AIDS pandemic through peer education and championing the protection of the environment.
Resources