From MJWN & mjjjusticeproject
On July 2, 2014, Dr. Patrick Treacy posted a copy of his interview with The Sun on his @peege twitter, after prudently taping off the offensive British term that Michael Jackson truly detested and felt was a disrespectful term. That is what a true friend of Michael’s would do and Dr. Treacy has proven time and again through his words, behaviour and actions that he remains a true Vanguard of Michael Jackson.
The mjjjusticeproject published the interview and quotes of Dr. Treacy stipulating that the interview and quotes are worth sharing, but since they loathe to direct anyone to the links of tabloids like The Sun, they have typed out the article’s text.
Here it is for you to read,
“The day Dr Patrick Treacy met Michael Jackson he told him: “To be honest, I prefer listening to Prince.”
Eight years later and the Irish cosmetic surgeon in one of Michael’s highest-profile defenders and is adored by King of Pop fans worldwide.
As ambassador for the Michael Jackson Legacy foundation, Patrick has opened two orphanages, in Liberia and Haiti, in the name of the star and will keep working in his memory for the rest of his life.
Speaking after the fifth anniversary of Michael’s death last week, Dr. Treacy said he was “blessed” to have known Michael. The Coi Fermanagh medic said the singer was a man of “love hope and compassion.” And one of the greatest humanitarians of the century”
Plus Dr. Treacy added the controversial musician was not “anything that has been said about him,“ drawing on the two court cases around child abuse claims against Michael.
What sealed that friendship was not that they were doctor and patient during the Michael’s stay in Ireland in 2006, but that they both wanted to make big bold humanitarian statements.
By the time Michael was making his fourth of seven visits to Dublin’s Allesbury Clinic for cosmetic work, the men were pulling together a plan for a huge concert in war torn Rwanda to raise money to fight HIV. Dr Treacy remembers the day when it became clear just how much influence the pop star had.
The doctor said,
“He said someone was on things at the African end” and he handed me his mobile phone, I was busy working on his leg’s at the time giving him depigmentation treatment and I thought it was a concert promoter on the line. “The guy was chatting away and I just thought “who is this” and ended up saying I’m up to my eyes here at the minute and passed the phone back” Jackson told him, hanging up “that was Mandiba and it hit me.. I’d been speaking to Nelson Mandela.”
In terms of lasting humanitarian influence, Patrick puts Michael up there with Mandela. And even above the likes of Mother Teresa, John Lennon , Lady Diana, Bono and Dahli Lama, He said;
“His body of work carries a spiritual message for all of the injustice of the human race.. racism, inequality, disease, hunger and corruption.”
Michael donated so much to charity.
“This was a man who donated all of the money from so much of his work to charity, he gave all the countless profits from dozens of concerts to the Heal the World Foundation and much much more. The man I knew was a man who shocked me because he was such a gentle trusting person, not at all the man people like to think he was.”
Read More: http://www.mjworld.net/news/2014/07/09/michael-the-humanitarian-2/
Source: mjjjusticeproject & MJWN
Partial Repost by MJ-Upbeat.com











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