Bangkok Post

Singer John Legend talks about justice at Bahrain concert

- REEM KHALIFA

Award-winning American singer and songwriter John Legend took to the stage in Bahrain on Monday night, performing to a sold-out crowd of more than 2,000 people despite calls by some activists to cancel the concert due to concerns over human rights abuses in the Gulf Arab nation.

“When you look at me you might see internatio­nal superstar John Legend, but I’m also the descendant of slaves... but we fought for change,” he told the concertgoe­rs before singing his Oscar-winning song Glory, the anthem for the film Selma, which is based on the historic 1965 march in Alabama led by Martin Luther King Jr.

While not addressing the turmoil in Bahrain directly, Legend explained he was at the festival “to celebrate art and its power to bring us together and help us see each other’s humanity”.

“I feel like it’s part of my job to express myself freely and passionate­ly about the issues that I care about,” he said, as the crowd cheered in support.

“A just society is not one built on fear or repression or vengeance or exclusion, but one built on love,” added Legend, who has spoken out in support of freedom of expression and civil rights issues in the United States.

Bahrain, a close US ally that hosts Navy’s 5th fleet, has seen nearly daily protests by members of the Shiite majority demanding a greater say in the Sunni-led monarchy. Several thousand protesters have been jailed and dozens killed in the tiny-island nation over the last four years.

The concert was guarded by anti-riot police vehicles outside the entrance to the historic open-air Arad Fort in Bahrain’s capital.

Several Bahraini activists took to Twitter to urge Legend to boycott the 10th annual Spring of Culture festival, organised by the Bahrain Authority for Culture and Antiquitie­s.

In a statement to The Independen­t newspaper before the concert, Legend addressed calls for him to back out of the Bahrain show, and said he has “spent quite a bit of time thinking about human rights, civil rights and other issues of justice”. He said that he felt participat­ing in the conversati­on was the best way to drive progress.

Bahrain’s leading human rights activist, Nabeel Rajab, took a softer stance toward Legend’s visit than others. He said that he is a fan and welcomes Legend to the country, but would also like to introduce him to relatives of political prisoners.

“I am not against any kind of cultural event and I see that the US civil-rights movement is an inspiratio­n to many Bahraini human rights figures,” Rajab said.

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John Legend.

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