The Star Malaysia

Arab singer wows Israelis

Nissren Kader is the first Arab to win a Hebrew singing show. She has stirred mixed feelings among Israelis, with some criticisin­g host Eyal Golan for picking an Arab to win.

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JERUSALEM: A young Arab woman who won a popular Israeli music competitio­n has become an unlikely star, capturing hearts in a country where suspicion and hostility often mark relations between Arabs and the Jewish majority.

Nissren Kader recently won first place on Eyal Golan is Calling You, a popular television show hosted by one of Israel’s most successful entertaine­rs.

On the programme, Golan, the host, chooses over the course of a 3month-long competitio­n the best performer of Mizrahi songs, the musical tradition of Middle Eastern Jews.

In winning the show, the 25-yearold Kader seems to have pulled off a difficult balancing act: She touched on the nostalgia that many first and second generation Mizrahis, or Jews of Middle Eastern origin, feel for their ancestral homelands, even though most proudly identify as Israeli.

And by singing beautifull­y in Hebrew, she charmed her audience by showing that she too was moved by their cultural traditions.

“I am so proud: I’m the first Arab to win a Hebrew singing programme,” said Kader, who is from the northern Israeli city of Haifa.

“I never imagined that they (Jews) would like me to the degree that they did. I’m an Arab citizen in a state that has troubles and disagreeme­nts between Jews and Arabs, and they saw something else,” she said. “They saw another side.” Kader, who before competing on the show worked as a wedding singer in the Arab community, shared her win in late March with Maor Ashwal, a Jewish Israeli.

The finals, on a cable TV music channel, was the second mostwatche­d show on television that night, according to an economic magazine that publishes Israeli television ratings.

During the finals, her audiences sang along, cheered and clapped to songs in Hebrew – and Arabic.

Israel’s Arab minority makes up about one-fifth of the population and occupies an uneasy place.

They are citizens of a Jewish state who identify with their Palestinia­n brethren in the West Bank and Gaza. Arabs in Israel are generally poorer, less educated and complain of discrimina­tion.

In recent years, Jewish and Arab politician­s have used increasing­ly harsh rhetoric against each other, further polarising relations.

Kader, for her part, has stirred up mixed feelings among Israelis. They marvel at the power of her voice, but areuncerta­in about howto deal with her Arab ethnicity.

“My friends criticised (host) Eyal Golan: ‘Why did you pick an Arab? You chose an enemy and let her win the show,”’ said Moshe Alfassi, an Israeli of Moroccan descent who works with troubled youth. Alfassi, 27, said he found it strange to see an Arab woman singing Mizrahi music, but like many other Israelis, was quickly won over by her voice.

Eliyahu Haviv, a 70-year-old Iranian-born Israeli, said Kader deserved her victory, and shouldn’t be viewed through the prism of the Israeli-palestinia­n conflict.

He noted, as many Israelis did, that Kader sang in Hebrew to God to protect the people of Israel in a song that was originally written to commemorat­e slain Israeli soldiers.

“She sang our prayers, and I think it was very good because she sang them with emotion,” Haviv said.

“I say yes, there are Arab terrorists, but this is something else. We need to be as one heart.”

“We are taught that in the house of Israel, there will be a prayer for all people,” said Eliyahu Dahan, 50, a Jerusalem bar owner. “That was her song.” The popularity of Golan’s show also highlights just how far the Mizrahi culture has come in Israeli society.

When Middle Eastern Jews fled en masse to Israel in the years following the Jewish state’s establishm­ent in 1948, they encountere­d a European Jewish establishm­ent that regarded them and their cultures as inferior and threatenin­g because they resembled their Arab enemies.

That included Mizrahi music, which was seen as lowbrow – a stigma that still lingers.

The music ranges from soaring liturgical chants to cheesy pop that is indistingu­ishable from top-40 tunes in the Arab world.

In an echo of that Arabic heritage, many Mizrahi Jews enjoy classic Arabic songs – tunes that Kader belted out to the delight of the audience in the studio for the show’s final.

Golan said he faced criticism for his choice, but said Kader’s talent couldn’t be ignored.

He is currently producing an album for her.

It will likely have Mizrahi and Arabicmusi­conit, and golan believes Israeli Jews are ready to hear it.

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