For Palestinians, Arab Idol offers welcome escape

Arab Idol held auditions for the first time in Palestine on Monday. Hundreds showed up, hoping to follow the example of last year’s winner Mohammed Assaf.

Palestinian singer and the last season's Arab Idol winner Mohammed Assaf, centre, joins hundreds of Palestinian youths cheering, while waiting for a chance to compete in the Arab world's premier talent show Arab Idol, at the luxury Grand Park Hotel, in the West Bank city of Ramallah on Monday, March 17, 2014. AP
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Hundreds of Palestinian youths lined up outside a luxury hotel at the crack of dawn on Monday for a chance to compete in the Arab world’s premier talent show, hoping to follow the unlikely example of last year’s winner and sing their way out of a life of conflict and poverty.

It was the first time that the top rated Arab Idol show has come to the Palestinian territories, marking an important milestone for an area that is not accustomed to celebrating.

“We have to put Palestine on the map. This is the first Arab contest to come here and recruit people, and the other programmes will follow,” Mohammed Assaf, the feel-good winner of last year’s competition said.

Assaf, a young wedding singer for a refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, became an overnight sensation across the Arab world thanks to his bright smile, warm tenor and personal story of overcoming adversity.

Assaf said he had to plead with Gaza’s Islamic Hamas rulers to let him leave the territory, then bribe Egyptian border guards to enter the country en route to Lebanon to compete. A fellow Palestinian gave up his slot during the audition phase because he believed Assaf had a better chance at winning. Many of Assaf’s songs touched upon the Palestinian struggle for independence.

Assaf said his success helped persuade the producers of Arab Idol to hold Monday’s tryout.

“I told them, ‘Look at me. I won, and there are hundreds of other gifted singers in Palestine and they need to get the chance like their other Arab fellows,’” he said.

Some 500 hopefuls showed up for Monday’s tryout, huddling in a large tent outside the Grand Park Hotel waiting for their turn to perform. Each contestant was given one minute to sing in front of the cameras, and the tryout ran from 7am until well into the evening.

Most of the singers, from ages 15 to 30, said they were inspired by Assaf. All expressed the hope of leaving behind their lives of dead-end jobs and conflict with Israel.

Musafa Ayyash, 22, who makes his living as a construction worker in a settlement near Bethlehem, said he left his house at 4am to make sure he would get a chance to compete.

“I have a good voice, I sing in the house, I sing for my friends, and they all told me I should come, and I will try my luck,” he said. “This could change my whole life. I do a very difficult job. I work in construction to earn US$600 (Dh2,202) a month. If I get a chance and win, then my whole life will change.”

Nidal Basma, 23, a physiotherapist from a village near Ramallah said he struggles to get by on a salary of $500 to $600 a month.

“I can’t live a good life with such a small salary. If this show gives me the chance to enter the world of singing, I might become like Assaf, who was nobody and now has become a star in the Arab World.”

MBC, the pan-Arab TV station that airs the programme, sent a five-member production crew from the show’s Lebanon headquarters for the tryout. The team entered the West Bank, whose border with Jordan is controlled by Israel, on French passports. The producers were not permitted to speak to the media.

Mohammed Zumlot, the chief executive of the hotel, said the station told him it had never considered entering the Palestinian territories because it considered the West Bank too unstable.

“They asked if we have private security companies, space, halls, media companies, and to their surprise everything was available,” Zumlot said. “I told them we have the Israeli occupation, but we have life, we have nightlife, hotels, companies everything.”

For Assaf, though, the competition was simply about bringing a small piece of normality to the region.

“Being under occupation doesn’t prevent you from singing and playing soccer and creating a good life. I’m singing in the Arab world and tell our story wherever I go,” he said.

* AP