Tell me why?  Declan Galbraith song

  

In  my dream, children sing
a song of love for every boy and girl
The sky is blue
and fields are green
and laughter is the language of the world
Then I wake and all I see,
is a world full of people in need

Chorus:
Tell me why (why) does it have to be like this?
Tell me why (why) is there something I have missed?
Tell me why (why) I don't understand
When so many need somebody,
we don't give a helping hand
Tell me why?

Everyday I ask myself,
what will I have to do to be a man?
Do I have to stand and fight,
to prove to everybody who I am?
Is this what my life is for,
to waste in a world full of war?

Chorus:
Tell me why (why) does it have to be like this?
Tell me why (why) is there something I have missed?
Tell me why (why) I don't understand
When so many need somebody,
we don't give a helping hand
Tell me why?

Chorus:
children: tell me why?(Declan)tell me why?
children: tell me why?(Declan)tell me why?
(together: just tell me why, why, why?

Chorus:
Tell me why (why) does it have to be like this?
Tell me why (why) is there something I have missed?
Tell me why (why) I don't understand
When so many need somebody,
we don't give a helping hand
Tell me why?

Chorus:
(why,why,does the tiger run)
Tell me why  why, why do we shoot the gun
Tell me why  why,why do we never learn
Can someone tell us why we let the forest burn?
(why,why do we say we care)
Tell me why  why,why do we stand and stare
Tell me why  why,why do the dolphin cry
Can some one tell us why we let the ocean die?
(why,why if we're all the same)
Tell me why  why,why do we pass the blame
Tell me why  why,why does it never end
Can some one tell us why we cannot just be friends?

(why, why?)

دانلود آهنگ

 

 ترجمه آهنگ در ادامه مطلب

Graham David Hughes

  Graham David Hughes (born 1979) is a British adventurer, filmmaker, television presenter and Guinness World Record holder.

Hughes successfully visited all 193 United Nations member states and several other territories across the world without flying.

He recently commemorated his accomplishment with a Esquire Network.

In answer to the controversial question:"Any  lessons from your journey?He said: My main lesson from all of this: You can't judge a people by the actions of their government. The friendliest country I went to, by a mile, was Iran. I just wasn't expecting that. I was on this overnight bus, and this little old Persian grandmother was sitting in front of me, nattering away on a mobile phone. She turned around and waved at me and gave me her phone. I didn't know what she wanted me to do with it. I said "Hello," and there was a guy on the other end, perfect English. He said that his grandmother was concerned about me—the bus gets in very early in the morning, and she's worried that you won't have anywhere to go or anything to eat, so she wants to know if she can take you home with her so she can cook you breakfast. Faith in humanity, restored. That's the lesson: People are good. The spirit of common decency is everywhere you go.