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Vanessa Hernández, known by his artistic name Nezza, sang a Spanish interpretation of the United States National Anthem at the Dodger Stadium on Saturday night, and said the team wished not to do so.
“The starry banner”, the official interpretation of the national anthem commissioned by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1945, was sung by Nezzza during the Los Angeles game of Los Angeles on Saturday against the Giants of San Francisco.
Nezza, with a Dominican Republic shirt while acting, published a video about Tiktok from a team employee who said: “Today we are going to do the song in English.”
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Nezza attends a projection of creators in support of “IF” in the London West Hollywood in Beverly Hills on May 9, 2024 in West Hollywood, California. (Jesse Grant/Getty images for Paramount Pictures)
“I’m not sure if that was not transmitted,” said the employee in the video.
Nezza decided to sing the Spanish version anyway, saying in a posterior Tiktok video that was in response to the presence of immigration and customs control (ICE) of the United States in Los Angeles that has led to protests and disturbances in the city.
“I didn’t think they would meet any kind,” Nezza said in his video. “Especially because we are in Los Angeles and with everything that happens. I have sung the national anthem many times in my life, but today, of every day, I could not.
“I felt that I needed to do it. For my people (for my people).”
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Pak Gazette Digital contacted the Dodgers to comment.
The team has not made public statements about the protests that have been happening last week in Los Angeles.
The manager of the Dodgers, Dave Roberts, was asked about the protests, and maintained a neutral position.
“Honestly, I don’t know enough, to be honest with you,” he said, through athletics. “I know that when you have to bring people and deport people, all the riots, it is certainly disturbing for everyone. But I have not fallen enough and I cannot speak intelligently about it.”

(Hailey Archambault/Icon Sportswire/Corbis/Icon Sportswire through Getty Images)
Meanwhile, one of Roberts’s players, the veteran public service man Kiké Hernández, made a publication on social networks on Saturday night before the game about the protests.
“I may not be born and grown, but this city adopted me as one of his,” Hernández wrote on Instagram. “I am sad and enraged by what is happening in our country and our city. Los Angeles fans and Dodger have received me, have supported me and have shown me nothing more than kindness and love. This is my second home. And I cannot bear to see that our community is raped, profiled, abused and destroyed.
“All people deserve to be treated with respect, dignity and human rights.
Other professional sports teams based in Los Angeles have adopted a position, including the Angely City FC of the NWSL, which gave fans “Immigrant City Football Club” t -shirts in their game on Saturday. The players were also heating with the shirts before their match to show support to those who protested.

Nezza made a claim on Los Angeles Dodgers. (Getty images/imagn)
The Spanish interpretation of Nezza’s anthem came the day of numerous protests of “No Reyes”, which were against the military parade in Washington, DC, which coincided with the birthday of President Donald Trump, throughout the country.
Trump’s birthday was also the celebration of the 250th birthday of the United States army.