Jérémy Gabriel

Jérémy Gabriel
Born (1996-12-10) December 10, 1996
Charlesbourg, Quebec City, Canada
Occupation(s) Singer
Website www.jeremygabriel.com

Jeremy Gabriel, also known as Le Petit Jeremy, in Quebec, is a French Canadian singer born December 10, 1996, in Charlesbourg, Quebec City.

Biography

Gabriel was born with head, facial, ear and skull deformities which included deafness. At age 6 months he was diagnosed with Treacher Collins syndrome. At age 5 years he was referred to Shriners Hospitals for Children where he met with Dr. Lucie Lessard.[1] At age 6 (2003) he received a bone anchored hearing aid and discovered his passion for singing.[2][3] In 2006 he sang for the Pope.[4] In 2011, he sang the Canadian National Anthem, "O Canada", for a Montréal Canadiens NHL game.[5]

After performing before of the pope Benedict XVI in 2006, he was received by Cardinal Ouellet and awarded the decoration of the Pontifical Swiss Guard. He performed several songs at CanadaFest between the years of 2007, 2011 and 2012 CanadaFest.[6]

During 2012-2013, Gabriel became one of the co-patients ambassadors of the Shriners Hospitals for Children. He performed for several congresses and Shrine events across North America. He sang in Toronto, London, Montréal, Calgary, Ottawa, Chatham-Kent, Regina, Atlanta, Lewiston, Charlotte, Tampa Bay, Dallas, Chicago, Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

Jérémy's parents filed a complaint with the Quebec human rights commission against Mike Ward for jokes Mike Ward performed in regards to Jérémy's handicap and singing, in his shows from 2010 to 2013. The commission brought the case in front of Quebec’s Human Rights Tribunal seeking $80,000 in damages from Ward. The tribunal ordered Ward to pay him $35,000 and his mother $7000 in July 2016 thus finally winning his claim against Ward [7] However, Mike Ward has expressed that he would appeal the decision of the court and was granted an hearing.

On September 10, 2016, Gabriel released his first single, 'I Don't Care', on JLMMUSIC. That release is distributed by DEP and Believe Digital, and supported by Universal Music Canada. An extended play is scheduled for 2017.[8][9][10]

Notes

External links

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