The live performance hosted by Sudanese Canadian artist Mustafa benefited Sudan and Gaza reduction work, with Clairo, Omar Apollo, Lucy Dacus, Raphael Saadiq and plenty of extra.
If you happen to’re ever invited right into a Palestinian dwelling, you’ll by no means depart with out dessert.
“You’re greeted with so many kinds of cookies and teas,” mentioned Bella Hadid, the Palestinian American mannequin, activist and co-host of Saturday night time’s Artists For Assist profit present on the Shrine Auditorium. “But also love, hugs, and compassion. Palestine is one of the most beautiful places in the world. My dad never taught me to hate anybody — it was always about love and understanding that everyone’s history is exactly what it was.”
That embodied the temper that Hadid and a sprawling forged of collaborators and musicians tried to domesticate on the third annual profit present produced by the Canadian Sudanese artist Mustafa. Joined by co-host Pedro Pascal and a roster of musicians together with shock visitor Chappell Roan, together with Shawn Mendes, Omar Apollo, Raphael Saadiq, Clairo and plenty of others, they took a interval of profound grief and fury concerning the intractability of the world’s present crises and tried to refocus on fast reduction for kids and medical care in war-ravaged Palestinian territories and Sudan.
“I always knew that an artist’s power did not come from their musical knowledge,” Mustafa mentioned, introducing the night time. “I always knew that an artist’s power comes from the expansion of their empathy.” The performers that night time tried to make use of that ethical connection to assist repair what they might.
Chappell Roan, left and Lucy Dacus, proper carry out onstage throughout Artist for Assist profit live performance at Shrine Auditorium and Expo Corridor Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026 in Los Angeles , CA.
(Ronaldo Bolanos/Los Angeles Occasions)
Mustafa — the richly baritoned Toronto singer-songwriter whose 2024 LP “Dunya” drew vast reward — has change into a big determine straddling world folks music and activism. His songwriting poignantly speaks to third-culture-kid longing over intimate acoustic guitar work, like on “Name of God.”
But he acknowledged onstage Saturday that he’s maybe extra comfy as an organizer than performer. His humanitarian work with Artists For Assist is equally exact and broadly accessible — Saturday’s present raised $5.4 million for the Palestine Kids’s Aid Fund and the Sudanese American Physicians Assn. In a second when even humanitarian work round these areas may be wrenched by bad-faith political agendas, Mustafa’s framing of the aim of Saturday’s present was savvy and measured. I didn’t recall the phrases “Israel” or “Trump” spoken a single time onstage.
As a substitute, Mustafa hosted greater than 4 hours of music from a variety of artists that spanned pop, folks, rock, R&B and nicely past. Few causes might deliver the clamorous noise-rock of Geese onto the identical stage as Mendes performing his pop hit “Stitches,” however such was Mustafa’s attain as an artist and magnetism as an activist.
Fairly than converse on to the craze at world humanitarian disasters — or to a current ICE killing of a younger mom and the U.S. invasion and ouster of Venezuela’s president — the music was unfastened and tender for the breadth of the lengthy night time. From the primary notes of Cameron Winter’s bleary piano ballad “If You Turn Back Now,” the place he sang “The devil will love you to death if you let him,” Saturday‘s show was about harnessing communal feeling rather than incendiary gestures.
Mustafa performs during onstage during Artist for Aid benefit concert at Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026 in Los Angeles , CA.
(Ronaldo Bolanos/Los Angeles Times)
The sentiments were more hopeful than one might expect, given how it’s really easy to succumb to despair proper now. ICE took a neighbor of mine final week — I got here dwelling from errands to search out my avenue pasted with indicators saying a person was kidnapped right here. 1000’s of Angelenos and People have absorbed the identical and worse losses day by day of the final yr. Gazans and Sudanese have felt them, at an infinitely extra brutal scale, for years.
But amidst all that, underneath Mustafa’s aspirations on the Shrine, there have been pearls of hard-fought compassion within the music, like when Lucy Dacus of Boygenius, certainly one of rock music’s nice wits at the moment, introduced out her pal Chappell Roan to raucous gasps type the gang.
Roan has caught some grief for her ideas on the 2024 presidential race, however quite than dive into that fraught terrain right here, the 2 as an alternative lined the Magnetic Fields’ “The Book of Love,” a tune concerning the small presents and clumsy gestures that make a relationship safe.
They harmonized superbly over a tightly-apertured commonplace about reciprocated sweetness — a tune carried out on the scale of a deal with within the dwelling of a refugee.

