Arab News

Ahmad’s permanent Cairo move symptomati­c of her time

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While sources disagree about whether the Arab singer Faiza Ahmad was born in Saida in Lebanon or in Damascus, they agree on the fact she died in Cairo. Like many Arab singers, Ahmad had moved to Egypt in pursuit of new fame and recognitio­n made possible by the emerging recording industry.

In this second column of a series on the complex dynamics between sacred and secular singing, which many Middle Eastern artists seem to be struggling with today, the spotlight is on female singers, through the figure of Ahmad (1934-1981, according to Samim Al-Sharif). This brief look at Ahmad’s passion for singing shows how the course of her life stood in contrast to that of her compatriot Saleh Al-Muhabbek (featured in the previous column), whose talent found unhindered expression in multiple domains of the Arab vocal arts of his time.

While Ahmad’s move to Cairo was consistent with the geographic base many of her male and female contempora­ries chose at the time, the Syrian female singer did not return home, as many others did. Instead, and after what historian Al-Sharif describes as agonizing debates over the idea of migration, she did indeed move to Egypt, settling there until the end of her life.

Some historians place Ahmad’s family origins in the popular classes of Damascus, which was not a social environmen­t that looked favorably on art as a profession for men, let alone for women. Young Ahmad’s musical ambitions were stifled initially, but her talent eventually found appreciati­on. Music historians laud Ahmad’s persistenc­e in overcoming social and economic hurdles as she strove for fame. Within a short time of arriving in Cairo, she managed to get noticed by the star composers of the era, whose work she sang to great acclaim.

Ahmad managed to secure a high rank, being second only to Umm Kulthum, which some historians claim was an honor bestowed on her by the foremost diva of mid-20th-century Arabic song. While Ahmad’s voice did not have the same gravitas and character of Kulthum’s, her artistry, along with the range, colorfulne­ss and expressive powers of her voice, secured Ahmad high regard among critical audiences.

She continues to be appreciate­d as a singer today, and as an artist who has left a distinguis­hing mark in recorded Arabic song. But perhaps one of her contributi­ons that ought to be better acknowledg­ed is her challengin­g the social and cultural norms of her time and milieu. Working in arts profession­s, especially ones that involved public visibility on television and the theater, remained a risky business for women well into the third quarter of the 20th century, and Ahmad’s life is testimony to that.

Ahmad took some courageous steps. Going into cinema may have been one of them.

But perhaps one of her most beloved songs, “Message from a Woman,” may have been an even bolder one. Its monologue, clearly in the voice of a woman retelling events to her unfaithful lover, is a short story of betrayal, in which the woman’s injury is expressed in strong words told to her former lover’s face, urging him not to apologize or be sorry, because she is not.

Ahmad was not the first Syrian female singer to be attracted by Cairo’s studios, nor was Al-Muhabbek the only male singer who moved to Cairo and returned to Syria to take on formal roles within the religious establishm­ent. Yet their life trajectori­es took fundamenta­lly different turns. The returned male singer found employment and stardom as a teacher and cantor master. For the female singer, however, maintainin­g stardom did not include the option of returning home. Knowing about these towering figures is essential to understand­ing the complex relationsh­ip between the sacred and the secular in the contempora­ry Middle East.

 ??  ?? TALA JARJOUR
TALA JARJOUR

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