As we look to regroup after a year marked by an inordinate dose of divisiveness and negativity, Microsoft’s “Art of Harmony” Xmas campaign spotlights a group of eight real-life people:
- Joel Artista is an artist, educator and advocate for social change through community-based public art.
- Zianna Oliphant is a child activist, who pleaded to the Charlotte City Council for equality and for the fighting to stop.
- Bobby White is a Florida police officer nicknamed the “basketball cop” after a video of him playing ball with local kids, rather than busting them after a complaint, went viral.
- Hawa Diallo is a West African refugee artist who discovered her need to create in her mid-40s to express the beauty and pain of her experiences.
- Jazz Jennings is the youngest person to publicly identify herself as transgender, and is now a national role-model and activist for transgender youth.
- Zea Bowling is a 7-year old first grader who stood firm in the face of hate during a celebration of the Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex marriage.
- Christopher Catrambone is an entrepreneur who founded the Migrant Offshore Aid Station, a global search and rescue charity for migrants crossing the Mediterranean Sea.
- Mona Haydar is a Muslim-American activist who invites people to come “ask a Muslim” over free coffee and doughnuts.
Microsoft wanted to lift people up and remind them that ordinary folks can make a difference. The message focuses on the spirit of the holidays, people coming together and celebrating what is good and right with the world—what unites us, instead of what divides us. An anthem commercial–directed by Jake Scott of RSA Films–shows this group of seven proactive people working together using Microsoft Surface Studio to create a peace mural. The film ends with the words, “When the world seems divided, coming together can be a beautiful thing.”