The Jerusalem Post

Alan Parsons’s advice for Nick Cave: Ignore BDS

Parsons on Roger Waters: ‘I made it very clear that I was not interested in his views on cultural enterprise­s within Israel... I told him I’m going to go. I like Israel and Israeli people’

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LOS ANGELES – Calling the BDS movement “a minority conspiracy that has no foundation,” veteran recording artist Alan Parsons advised fellow performer Nick Cave to ignore the appeals he is receiving to cancel his shows in Israel next month.

“Please ignore it. It is an appeal for a boycott, not an actual boycott,” Parsons said near the end of a panel discussion on Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions held on Sunday in Los Angeles. Cave is slated to perform in Tel Aviv on November 19 and 20, a few days after Parsons himself gives concerts on November 9 and 11 in Haifa and Tel Aviv, respective­ly.

On the panel with Parsons was his bassist, Israeli-born Guy Erez; entertainm­ent attorney Ken Hertz; writer, director and producer David Zucker, known for Airplane and the Scary Movie; and actor Mark Pellegrino, who plays Lucifer in the TV show Supernatur­al.

Moderator Lana Melman, who works as a liaison between the entertainm­ent community and Israel as head of Liberate Art Inc., said the elephant in the room was Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters’s support of BDS and the very public debate Waters had with his former producer and engineer Parsons, calling on him to boycott his concerts in Israel four years ago.

“I made it very clear that I was not interested in his views on cultural enterprise­s within Israel,” Parsons said. “I told him I’m going to go. I like Israel and Israeli people. I’ve grown up my whole life with Jewish and Israeli people. It was a very unpleasant and awkward situation with FROM LEFT: Guy Erez, Lana Merman, Alan Parsons, Ken Hertz, Mark Pellegrino and David Zucker participat­e in a panel discussion on Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions in Los Angeles on Sunday. Roger, and we’ve fallen out since.”

Hertz pushed back, saying the real elephant in the room was whether a boycott is an appropriat­e response to the current Israeli government’s policies.

“At some point the appropriat­e response to the behavior of a government is to boycott investment in that country,” he said. “I think it’s a terrible thing to say artists should not express their artistic freedom, but similarly, people who oppose the behavior or the conduct of the Israeli government, particular­ly in the occupied territorie­s – this is not altogether the worst response one might expect.”

Erez responded, saying that there are a lot of Israelis who think like Hertz when it comes to criticizin­g certain Israeli government policies, “but what I think we need is more people to explain to the world what is going on [in Israel]. It’s really comfortabl­e for the Arab world to make us look bad, and they will sacrifice the Palestinia­ns.” To huge applause, Erez said, “A lot of people don’t know Gaza has a border with Egypt. Why doesn’t Egypt open up its borders to them? Because they don’t want to deal with them.”

Circling back to Waters, Erez asked how Waters could possibly take a side on such a complicate­d situation. “It’s even hard for me,” he said, “and I was born and raised in Israel and served in the army.”

Nearly 100 people attended the panel discussion hosted by the Wilshire Boulevard Temple, Israel Bonds and Liberate Art Inc.

“It’s very important to have this discussion. The economic impact [on Israel] is not significan­t, but it’s really a moral issue, and moral voices are very important,” said Consul-General in Los Angeles Sam Grundwerg, who opened the discussion.

Speaking about Scarlett Johansson and her soda stream campaign, as just one example, Melman said the BDS movement “hijacks the name and likeness of celebritie­s in order to get basically free publicity for their misinforma­tion and lies associatin­g Israel with destructio­n and apartheid.”

Discussing the BDS narrative which depicts Israel as an apartheid state, Pellegrino – who traveled to Israel for the first time last year – said the apartheid slogan works because “it gets people feeling instead of thinking, and that’s sort of what those movements are all about. They associate you with something despicable so it makes you have a visceral reaction. It’s bumper-sticker politics. Catchphras­es are far more impactful.”

Pellegrino stood his ground in a Twitter war with Hollywood celebritie­s over his support of Israel during the Gaza War. Following the evening’s panel discussion, he told The Jerusalem Post, “Ever since I understood what liberty meant, I’ve been a fan of Israel. I think I do more political reading than a lot of actors in Hollywood. I think most actors are governed by their instincts.”

Those instincts, he said, “are an amalgam of what culture tells them is good – the weak and the impoverish­ed are probably inherently good, and the rich and the powerful are probably evil, so you’re going to throw your support behind the weak and the impoverish­ed.”

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