Arab News

Gaza’s ‘Rocket’ hopes to fulfill ‘Palestinia­n dream’

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ARAB Idol is an over-thetop TV ratings smash in the Middle East, and a young crooner from a Palestinia­n refugee family, whom admirers have nicknamed “the Rocket,” is stealing the show.

The surprise breakout of the second season is a 23-year-old Gaza Strip resident named Mohammed Assaf, whose patriotic folk songs and romantic ballads — with their themes of grit, longing and love — have propelled him into the final rounds.

“I think this shows the world there are many normal people in Gaza, that Gaza is not just this place of terrorists and criminals but nice people,” said Ala’a Nabrees, 22, a longtime friend. “He is the Palestinia­n dream.”

This sounds corny, Nabrees acknowledg­ed. “But it is true,” he said. “Young people in Gaza? They want to see somebody make it.”

Assaf’s fans at home and in the Palestinia­n diaspora praise the college student and moonlighti­ng wedding singer as the complete package. He is the dutiful son who called out to his parents in the audience Friday night, telling them that they were “the crown on top of my head.”

He performed in an earlier show in a kaffiyeh, a scarf that is a symbol of Palestinia­n pride and resistance. Plus, he looks as if he just stepped out of an Abercrombi­e & Fitch ad, the fans say.

His mother, a math teacher, told CNN, “The girls don’t come here, to our house. But they are all over the Internet and Facebook.” “He is doing more than all the politician­s to unify the Palestinia­n people,” said Ahmad Awwad, 23, a close friend and schoolmate at the University of Palestine.

On the show, Assaf has avoided politics. But he has spoken to the news media against the Israeli occu- pation of the West Bank and the harsh conditions in Gaza. The Palestinia­n Maan News Agency quoted him as saying that he was inspired by the prominent Palestinia­n prisoner and long-term hunger-striker Samer Issawi. “I can’t differenti­ate between my art and my patriotic attitude,” Assaf said.

“Arab Idol,” with its glitzy dresses, exposed skin and Western-style commercial­ism, is probably not a Hamas favorite, but there has been no official word on the show from the group.

Still, the streets of Gaza empty out during the two hours when families and friends huddle to watch the song contest on Friday nights, when the singers perform, and on Saturdays, when votes from viewers are tallied.

Serving as judge, the Lebanese singer Ragheb Alama (who made the first music video in Arabic, back in the day) dubbed Assaf “the Rocket,” and the name has stuck, as a kind of honorific for his soaring voice, but with a double meaning for a kid from Khan Younes, which has been the source and recipient of deadly fire during Gaza’s many years of hostilitie­s with Israel.

On Friday night, the judges gushed all over Assaf again. “I feel when you are singing, I am the guest in a big concert and you are the star,” said Ahlam, the judge and diva from the United Arab Emirates who goes by one name and is famous for her lavish lifestyle, fabulous gowns, Qatari race car driver husband and struggles with weight.

Judge Nancy Ajram, the Lebanese songstress (and goodwill ambassador for UNICEF), teared up and said she had no word to describe the beauty of Assaf’s voice. “You are a true singer,” she sighed.

Here in Khan Younes, posters of Assaf that line the streets urge citizens to dial into the “Arab Idol” hotline and punch “3” on their cellphones to vote for the native son, the first singer from Gaza to make the show’s top 10 contestant­s.

The winner will get a recording contract from the music company that is part of MBC, the Saudi-owned, Dubai-based satellite broadcaste­r of the show, as well as a Chevrolet Corvette, which would be an unusual sight in the streets of Gaza.

The United States might not be the most popular country in the Middle East these days, but in addition to Chevrolet, the show’s sponsors include Pepsi, Twix and Kentucky Fried Chicken; until last week, KFC food was being smuggled into Gaza from Egypt through undergroun­d tunnels.

 ??  ?? Palestinia­n performer Mohammad Assaf has been dubbed “the Rocket” by the Lebanese singer Ragheb Alama, who is a judge on the show. (AFP)
Palestinia­n performer Mohammad Assaf has been dubbed “the Rocket” by the Lebanese singer Ragheb Alama, who is a judge on the show. (AFP)

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