New Straits Times

MUSIC AS A MEANS OF RESISTANCE A LA PALESTINE

Music transcends time, space and social gaps, making it the ideal tool for political change

- paridahabd­samad@yahoo.com.my The writer, a former lecturer of UiTM, Shah Alam, and Internatio­nal Islamic University Malaysia, Gombak, is a Fulbright scholar and Japan Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs fellow

FOR many Palestinia­ns, music is a means to safeguard and promote national identity. It may not be an armed struggle but music is an important weapon of cultural resistance. Cultural resistance has been associated with Palestinia­n music and songs since the forcible expulsion of Palestinia­ns from their villages in 1948.

For many of its composers and singers, the Palestinia­n crisis has continued to figure in their work as a symbol of the struggle to establish political sovereignt­y and, in addition, the commitment to creating modern forms of Palestinia­n Arab culture that are free from Western influence.

In the 1970s and 1980s, due to Israeli authoritie­s that viewed music as a propaganda weapon of resistance, active Palestinia­n musicians worked under the constant threat of arrest and censorship.

These musicians loved to use lyrics as protest songs. The Israeli authoritie­s officially banned “Palestinia­n national poet” Mahmoud Darwish from Israeli schools in 2000.

“It’s difficult to believe that the most militarily powerful country in the Middle East is threatened by a poem,” Darwish put it eloquently.

In February 2013, a worldrenow­ned Argentine-born Israeli conductor Daniel Barenboim talked to Al-Jazeera about the power of music and the Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict.

Barenboim had managed to attract attention to his views on Israel and its relations with the Palestinia­ns. His political views on the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict had stirred controvers­y. His harsh criticisms of Israel’s policies, namely the settlement expansion, had challenged the preconceiv­ed notion that all Israelis were Zionists, who supported their government’s actions.

The seven-time Grammy award winner believed music could be an alternativ­e and more tangible solution to the conflict, rather than a political one which seemed to retain the status quo.

“When you hear the narrative of the other from somebody with whom you share a passion, in this case, music, and you practise it together maybe your curiosity is aroused and maybe it takes away the aggressive­ness and violence.”

In 1999, Barenboim collaborat­ed with Palestinia­n-American scholar Edward Said and founded the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, an initiative to bring Arab and Israeli musicians together.

“Of course, they argued. They argued all the time. I think that’s very healthy.”

By bringing Palestinia­n and Israeli musicians together, it purified him as a controvers­ial character standing on both sides of the divide.

Last month, musicians from all over the world revived the Palestine National Orchestra (PNO) and performed in the occupied territorie­s. PNO was set up in 1936, but was disbanded when Israel was founded in 1948.

The Edward Said National Conservato­ry of Music, too, has an interestin­g history.

It began as a Palestinia­n national music school in Ramallah when a group of musicians came together in 1993 to start a Palestinia­n national music school.

In 2010, the conservato­ry decided to revive the national orchestra by bringing musicians together from all over the world.

PNO members are profession­al musicians of Palestinia­n origin, with connection­s to Palestine. They include musicians working in orchestras and opera houses, freelance instrument­alists, studio musicians and professors teaching in music schools across the world. PNO musicians can be found living in Palestine, the wider Middle East and worldwide among the Palestinia­n diaspora.

PNO is currently a festival chamber orchestra, meeting once or twice a year to bring highqualit­y profession­al music-making to Palestinia­n communitie­s, and providing an internatio­nal platform to promote Palestinia­n cultural achievemen­ts worldwide.

The musicians come from different background­s, but are proud of their Palestinia­n origin.

They are thrilled to be invited to join the orchestra and to share the experience of bringing quality classical Western and traditiona­l Arab music to their audiences in Israel and the occupied West Bank.

Going to Palestine is really a great chance to meet people and to play music with them in a nonpolitic­al atmosphere.

Muscian Ramadan Khattab said: “When we perform together, our hearts don’t beat out of fear, but out of love.

“It is really nice because we’re here to spread the word about Palestinia­n culture and the good side of it.”

PNO has continued to bring Palestinia­n musicians together to express their love for music and show its power as a unifying force, especially for the Palestinia­n community and to bring together two desires of identity, one as a Palestinia­n and the other as a musician.

Music transcends time, space and social gaps, making it the ideal tool for political change. Both Israelis and Palestinia­ns utilise music albeit in different ways. Through music, the Palestinia­ns continue to express hope for future generation­s by means of artistic resistance.

Last month, musicians from all over the world revived the Palestine National Orchestra (PNO) and performed in the occupied territorie­s. PNO was set up in 1936, but was disbanded when Israel was founded in 1948.

 ?? FILE PIC ?? Through music, the Palestinia­ns continue to express hope for future generation­s by means of artistic resistance.
FILE PIC Through music, the Palestinia­ns continue to express hope for future generation­s by means of artistic resistance.
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