Jordanian band slammed by fans for touring Israel
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| Jerusalem
Autostrad, a funk-rock-reggae band from Amman, shatters the norms of traditional Arabic pop with songs about sex, drugs, and unemployment on the Jordanian street. It has also shattered the norm of how many Arabs deal with Israel.
The six-man group enjoys an ardent Palestinian fan base, but its recent tour in Israel 鈥 where it played to Palestinian fans in Nazareth, Haifa, and the Golan Heights 鈥 has stoked a tense debate about聽how Arabs can best support the Palestinian cause. Most refuse to acknowledge Israel's sovereignty over historic Palestine and critics have berated the band for accepting, or 鈥渘ormalizing,鈥 relations with Israel, rather than joining the popular Arab movement to boycott it until Palestinians are granted a sovereign state of their own.
Proponents of the cultural boycott of Israel flooded social media after learning that Autostrad obtained an Israeli visa from the Israeli embassy in Amman, under the Twitter hash tag, 鈥渃ome_to_Palestine_after_liberation".聽
"Your 'cultural communication' is for only the few鈥 welcome to Palestine, dirty, lying Arab hypocrisy," tweeted Jordanian architecht Roaa Zaidan, reiterating the argument that the band caters mostly to a Palestinian elite, while undermining the popular struggle for equality and freedom for the majority.
Many say that Arab musicians should instead apply for Palestinian permits, which don't grant access to cities such as Jerusalem and Haifa in Israel proper.
The movement known as "Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions" (BDS) has succeeded in persuading, and sometimes threatening, a slew of prominent musicians from visiting Israel, in what they claim is an effort to end the occupation and promote the right of return for Palestinian refugees.
Autostrad resisted such requests. 聽Along with thousands of local fans, they branded their shows as a form of 鈥渃ultural resistance,鈥 strengthening solidarity and bringing a sense of normalcy to a war-weary people.
They issued a Facebook statement following their Nazareth show, echoing a position expressed repeatedly by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, that 鈥渧isiting the prisoner does not legitimize the jailer.鈥澛
鈥淸The Israeli visa] is the only way for us to get to our homeland, Palestine, and no one can stop us from doing our work,鈥 said band member Hamza Arnaout to the Jordanian site Ammannet before the tour.聽
But Budour Hassan, a Palestinian citizen of Israel who , insists that fighting occupation, not improving its conditions, is what's needed.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not like if they don鈥檛 come it鈥檚 like a funeral,鈥 says Ms. Hassan in a phone interview. 鈥淲e have our own Palestinian musicians, who can鈥檛 move freely.鈥
For at least some fans at Autostrad's intimate East Jerusalem concert, however, attempts to deter the band from visiting Israel are 鈥渋ncompatible鈥 with modern Palestinians, who are weary of hollow talk of liberation.
鈥淭hat this beautiful band comes all the way from Jordan strengthens my position here as an Arab in this land,鈥 said tattoo artist Wassim Razouk, who hit three of the band鈥檚 six shows last week. 聽鈥淭his conflict will be resolved in hundreds of years, but, in the meantime, I鈥檓 not ready to waste my life.