An alternative take on the Israeli Palestinian
conflict and peace activism
(Postscript by Manuel Talens)
Rather often I face the same question when interviewed by Arab media
outlets: “Gilad, how is it that you observe that which so many Israelis
fail to see?” Indeed, not many Israelis interpret the Israeli ethical
failure as an inherent symptom. For many years I didn’t have any answer
to offer. However, recently I realised that it must have something to do
with my Saxophone. It is music that has shaped my views of the Israeli
Palestinian conflict and formed my criticism of Jewish identity.
Today I will talk about the road from music to ethics.
It is known that life looks like a meaningful event when reviewed
retrospectively from its end to its very beginning. Accordingly, I will
try to scrutinise my own battle with Zionism through my late evolvement as
a musician. I will explore my struggle with Arabic music. I will try to
elaborate retrospectively on the role of music on my understanding of the
world that surrounds me. To a certain extent, this is the story of my life
to date (at least one of them).
I grew up in Israel in a rather Zionist secular family. My Grandfather was
a charismatic poetic veteran terrorist, an ex prominent commander in the
right wing Irgun
terror organisation. I may admit that he had a tremendous influence on me
in my early days. His hatred towards anything that failed to be Jewish was
a major inspiration. He hated Germans; consequently he didn’t allow my
dad to buy a German car. He also despised the Brits for colonising his
‘promised land’. I assume that he didn’t detest the Brits as much as
he hated the Germans because he allowed my father to drive an old Vauxhall
Viva. He was also pretty cross with the Palestinians for dwelling on the
land he was sure belonged to him and his people. Rather often he used to
wonder about the Palestinians: “these Arabs have so many countries, why
do they have to live exactly in the land we want to live in?” But more
than anything, my grandfather hated Jewish Leftists. However, it is
important to mention that since Jewish leftists have never produced any
cars, this specific loathing didn’t mature into a conflict of interests
between himself and my dad. Being a follower of Zeev
Jabotinsky,
my Grandfather obviously realised that Leftist philosophy and the Jewish
value system is a contradiction in terms. Being a veteran right wing
terrorist as well a proud tribal Jew, he knew very well that tribalism can
never live in peace with humanism and universalism. Following his mentor
Jabotinsky, he believed in the “Iron Wall” philosophy. He supposed
that Arabs in general and Palestinians in particular should be confronted
fearlessly and fiercely. Quoting Betar’s
anthem he repeatedly said, “in blood and sweat, we would erect our
race”.
My Grandfather believed in the Jewish race, and so did I in my very early
days. Like my peers, I didn’t see the Palestinians around me. They were
no doubt there, they fixed my father’s car for half the price, they
built our houses, they cleaned the mess we left behind, they where
schlepping boxes in the local food store, but they always disappeared just
before sunset and appeared again around dawn. They had never socialised
with us. We didn’t really understand who they were and what they stood
for. Supremacy was no doubt brewed in our being, we gazed at the world via
a racist, chauvinist binocular.
When I was seventeen, I was preparing myself for my compulsory IDF
service. Being a well-built teenager fuelled with Zionist spirit and
soaked in self-righteousness, I was due to join an air force special
rescuing unit. But then the unexpected happened. On an especially late
night Jazz program, I heard Bird
(Charlie Parker) with Strings
.
I was knocked down. It was by far more organic, poetic, sentimental and
yet wilder than anything I had ever heard before. My father used to listen
to Bennie Goodman and Artie Shaw, these two were entertaining, they could
play the clarinet, but Bird was a different story altogether. He was a
fierce libidinal extravaganza of wit and energy. The morning after, I
decided to skip school, I rushed to ‘Piccadilly Record’, Jerusalem’s
No 1 music shop. I found the jazz section and bought every bebop album
they had on the shelves (probably two albums). On the bus, on the way
home, I realised that Bird was actually a Black man. It didn’t take me
by complete surprise, but it was kind of a revelation, in my world, it was
only Jews who were associated with anything good. Bird was a beginning of
a journey.
***
At the time, like my peers, I was pretty convinced that Jews were indeed
the chosen people. My generation was raised on the Six Day War magical
victory, we were totally sure of ourselves. Since we were secular, we
associated every success with our omnipotent qualities. We didn’t
believe in divine intervention, we believed in ourselves. We believed that
our might is brewed in our resurrected Hebraic soul and flesh. The
Palestinians, on their part, were serving us obediently and it didn’t
seem at the time as if this was ever going to change. They didn’t show
any real signs of collective resistance. The sporadic so-called
‘terror’ attacks made us feel righteous, it filled us with some
eagerness to get revenge. But somehow within this extravaganza of
omnipotence, to my great surprise, I learned to realize that the people
who exited me the most were actually a bunch of Black Americans. People
who have nothing to do with the Zionist miracle. People that had nothing
to do with my own chauvinist exclusive tribe.
It didn’t take more than two days before I hired my first saxophone. The
saxophone is a very easy instrument to start with, and if you don’t
believe me you better ask Bill Clinton. However, as much as the saxophone
was an easy instrument to pick up, playing like Bird or Cannonball looked
like an impossible mission. I started to practice day and night, and the
more I practiced, the more I was overwhelmed with the tremendous
achievement of that great family of Black American musicians, a family I
was then starting to know closely. Within a month I learned about Sonny
Rollins, Joe
Henderson, Hank
Mobley,
Monk, Oscar Peterson and Duke, and the more I listened the more I realised
that my initial Judeo-centric upbringing was totally wrong. After one
month with a saxophone shoved up my mouth, my Zionist enthusiasm
disappeared completely. Instead, of flying choppers behind enemy lines, I
started to fantasize about living in NYC, London or Paris. All I wanted
was a chance to listen to the great names of Jazz and in the late
1970’s, many of them were still around.
Nowadays, youngsters who want to play Jazz tend to enroll in a music
college, in my days it was very different. Those who wanted to play
classical music would enroll in a college or a music academy, however,
those who wanted to play for the sake of music would stay at home and
swing around the clock. Nonetheless, in the late 1970’s there was no
Jazz education in Israel and in my hometown Jerusalem there was just a
single Jazz club. It was called Pargod and it was set in an old converted
pictorial Turkish Bath. Every Friday afternoon they ran a jam session and
for my first two years in jazz, these jams were the essence of my life.
Literally speaking, I stopped everything else, I just practiced day and
night preparing myself for the next ‘Friday Jam’. I listened to music,
I transcribed some great solos, I even practiced while sleeping. I decided
to dedicate my life to Jazz accepting the fact that as a white Israeli, my
chances to make it to the top were rather slim. Without realising it at
the time, my emerging devotion to jazz had overwhelmed my Zionist
exclusive tendencies. Without being aware, I left the chosenness behind. I
had become an ordinary human being. Years later, I realised that Jazz was
my escape route. Within months I felt less and less connected to my
surrounding reality, I saw myself as part of a far broader and greater
family. A family of music lovers, a bunch of adorable people who were
concerned with beauty and spirit rather than land and occupation.
However, I still had to join the IDF. Though later generations of Israeli
young Jazz musicians just escaped the army and ran away to the Jazz Mecca
NYC, for me, a young lad of Zionist origin in Jerusalem, such an option
wasn’t available, a possibility as such didn’t even occur to me.
In July 1981 I joined the Israeli Army but, I may suggest proudly, that
from my first day in the army I was doing my very best to avoid any call
of duty. Not because I was a pacifist, not because I cared that much about
the Palestinians or subject to a latent peace enthusiasm, I just loved to
be alone with my saxophone.
When the 1st Lebanon war broke, I was a soldier for one year. It didn’t
take a genius to know the truth, I knew that our leaders were lying. Every
Israeli soldier realised that this war was an Israeli aggression.
Personally I couldn’t feel anymore any attachment to the Zionist cause.
I didn’t feel part of it. Yet, it still wasn’t the politics or ethics
that moved alienated me, but rather my craving to be alone with my horn.
Playing scales at the speed of light seemed to me far more important for
than killing Arabs in the name of Jewish redemption. Thus, instead of
becoming a qualified killer I spent every possible effort trying to join
one of the military bands. It took a few months, but I eventually landed
safely at the Israeli Air Force Orchestra (IAFO).
The IAFO was made of a unique social setting, you could join in either for
being an excellent promising Jazz talent or just for being a son of a dead
pilot. The fact that I was accepted, knowing that my Dad was amongst the
living reassured me for the first time that I may be a musical talent. To
my great surprise, none of the orchestra members took the army seriously.
We were all concerned about one thing, our very personal musical
development. We hated the army and it didn’t take time before I started
to hate the state that had such a big army with such a big air force that
needed a band that stopped me from practicing 24/7. When we were called to
play in a military event, we always tried to play as bad as we could just
to make sure that we would never get invited again. In the IAFO orchestra
I learned for the first time how to be subversive. How to destroy the
system in order to achieve immaculate personal perfection.
In the summer of 1984, just 3 weeks before I took off my military uniform,
we were sent to Lebanon for a tour of concerts. At the time, Lebanon was a
very dangerous place to be in and the Israeli army was dug deep in bunkers
and trenches avoiding any confrontation with the local population. On the
2nd day we arrived at Ansar, a notorious Israeli concentration camp on
Lebanese soil. This event changed my life.
It was a boiling day in early July. On a dusty dirt track we arrived at
hell on earth. A huge detention centre surrounded by barbed wire. On the
way to the camp headquarters we drove through the view of thousands of
inmates being scorched under the sun. It is hard to believe, but military
bands are always treated as VIPs. Once we landed at the officer command
barracks we were taken for a guided tour in the camp. We were walking
along the endless barbed wire and the post guard towers. I couldn’t
believe my eyes. “Who are these people?” I asked the officer. “They
are Palestinians” he said, here are the PLO on the left and here on the
right are the Ahmed Jibril’s ones, they are far more dangerous (Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine PFLP-GC)
so we keep them isolated.
I looked at the detainees and they looked very different to the
Palestinians I saw in Jerusalem. The ones I saw in Ansar were angry. They
were not defeated and they were many. As we moved along the barbed wire
and I was gazing at the inmates, I realised that unbearable truth, I was
walking there in Israeli military uniform. While I was still contemplating
about my uniform, trying to deal with some severe sense of emerging shame,
we arrived at a large flat ground in the middle of the camp. We stood
there around the guide officer and learned more from him, some more lies
about the current war to defend our Jewish haven. While he was boring us
to death with some irrelevant lies I noticed that we were surrounded by
two dozen concrete blocks the size of one square meter and around 1.30 cm
high. They had a small metal door and I was horrified by the fact that my
army may have decided to lock the guard dogs in these constructions for
the night. Putting my Israeli Chutzpah into action, I asked the guide
officer what these horrible concrete cubes were. He was fast to answer.
“These are our solitary confinement blocks, after two days in one of
these you become a devoted Zionist”.
This was enough for me. I realised already then in 1984 that my affair
with the Israeli state and Zionism was over. Yet, I knew very little about
Palestine, about the Nakba or even about Judaism and Jewishness. I just
realized that as far as I was concerned, Israel was bad news and I
didn’t want to have anything to do with it. Two weeks later, I gave my
uniform back, I grabbed my alto sax, took the bus to Ben Gurion airport
and left for Europe for a few months. I was basking in the street. At the
age of 21, I was free for the first time. In December it was too cold and
I went back home with a clear intention to make it back to Europe.
***
It took me another 10 years before I could leave Israel for good. In these
years I started to learn closely about the Israeli Palestinian conflict,
about oppression. I started to accept that I was actually living on
someone else’s land. I started to take in that devastating fact that in
1948 the Palestinians didn’t really leave willingly but were rather
brutally ethnically cleansed by my Grandfather and his ilk. I started to
realize that ethnic cleansing has never stopped in Israel, it just took
different shapes and forms. I started to acknowledge the fact that the
Israeli legal system was totally racially orientated. A good example was
obviously the ‘Law of Return’, a law that welcomes Jews to come
‘home’ after 2000 years but stops Palestinians from returning to their
land and villages after 2 years abroad. All that time I had been
developing as a musician, I had become a major session player and a
musical producer. Yet, I wasn’t really involved in any political
activity. I scrutinised the Israeli left discourse and realized that it
was very much a social club rather than an ideological setting motivated
by ethical awareness.
At the time of Oslo agreement (1994), I just couldn’t take it anymore. I
realized that Israeli ‘peace making’ equals ‘piss taking’. It
wasn’t there to reconcile with the Palestinians or to confront the
Zionist original sin. Instead it was there to reassure the secure
existence of the Jewish state at the expense of the Palestinians. The
Palestinian Right of Return wasn’t an option at all. I decided to leave
my home, to leave my career. I left everything behind including my wife
Tali, who joined me later. All I took with me was my Tenor Saxophone, my
true eternal friend.
I moved to London and attended postgraduate studies in Philosophy at Essex
University. Within a week in London I managed to get a residency at the
Black Lion, a legendary Irish pub in Kilburn High Road. At the time I
didn’t understand how lucky I was. I didn’t know how difficult it is
to get a gig in London. In fact this was the beginning of my international
career as a Jazz musician. Within a year I had become very popular in the
UK playing bebop and post bop. Within three years I was playing with my
band all over Europe.
However, it didn’t take long before I started to feel some homesickness.
To my great surprise, it wasn’t Israel that I missed. It wasn’t Tel
Aviv, Haifa or Jerusalem. It was actually Palestine. It wasn’t the rude
taxi driver in Ben Gurion airport, or a shopping center in Ramat Gan, it
was the little Humus place in Yafo at Yesfet/Salasa streets. It was the
Palestinian villages that are stretched on the hills between the olive
trees and the Sabbar cactuses. I realized that whenever I felt like
visiting home, I would end up in Edgware Road, I would spend the evening
in a Lebanese restaurant. However, once I started to explore my thoughts
about Israel in public, it soon became clear to me that Edgware Road was
probably as close as I could ever get to my homeland.
***
I
may admit that In Israel, I wasn’t at all interested in Arabic music.
Supremacist colonials are never interested in the culture of the
indigenous. I always loved folk music. I was already established in Europe
as a leading Klezmer player. Throughout the years I started to play
Turkish and Greek music. However, I completely skipped Arabic music and
Palestinian music in particular. Once in London, in these Lebanese
restaurants, I started to realise that I have never really explored the
music of my neighbors. More concerning, I just ignored it, though I heard
it all the time. It was all around me, I never really listened. It was
there in every corner of my life, the call for prayers from the Mosques
over the hills. Um
Kalthoum', Farid
El Atrash, Abdel
Halim Hafez,
were there in every corner of my life, in the street, on the TV, in the
small cafes in old city Jerusalem, in the restaurants. They were all
around me but I dismissed them disrespectfully.
In my mid thirties, away from my homeland, I was drawn into the indeginous
music of my homeland. It wasn’t easy. It was on the verge of unfeasible.
As much as Jazz was easy for me to take in, Arabic music was almost
impossible. I would put the music on, I would grab my saxophone or
clarinet, I would try to integrate and I would sound foreign. I soon
realized that Arabic music was a completely different language altogether.
I didn’t know where to start and how to approach it.
Jazz music is a western product. It evolved in the 20th century and
developed in the margins of the cultural industry. Bebop, the music I grew
up on is made of relatively short fragments of music. The tunes are short
because they had to fit into the 1940’s record format (3 min). Western
music can be easily transcribed into some visual content within standard
notation and chord symbols.
Jazz, like every other Western art form, is partially digital. Arabic
music, on the other hand, is analogue, it cannot be transcribed. Once
transcribed, its authenticity evaporates. By the time I achieved enough
humane maturity to face the music of my homeland, my musical knowledge
stood in the way.
I couldn’t understand what was it that stopped me from encompassing
Arabic music. I couldn’t understand why it didn’t sound right. I spent
enough time listening and practicing. But it just didn’t sound right. As
time went by, music journalists in Europe started to appreciate my new
sound, they started to regard me as a new Jazz hero who crossed the divide
as well as an expert of Arabic music. I knew that they were wrong, as much
as I tried to cross the so-called ‘divide’, I could easily notice that
my sound and interpretation was foreign to the Arabic true colour.
But then, I found an easy trick. In my gigs, when trying to emulate the
oriental sound, I would first sing a line that reminded me the sound I
ignored in my childhood, I would try to recall echoes of the Muezzin
sneaking into our streets from the valleys around. I would try to recall
the astonishing haunting sound of my friends Dhafer
Youssef and Nizar
Al Issa. I
would hear myself the low lasting voice of Abel Halim Hafez. Initially I
would just close my eyes and listen to my internal ear, but without
realizing I started gradually to open my mouth and sing loudly. I then
realised that if I sing while having the saxophone in my mouth I would
achieve a sound that was very close to the mosques’ metal horns.
Originally I tried to get closer to the Arabic sound but at a certain
stage, I just forgot what I was trying to achieve; I started to enjoy
myself.
Last year, while recording an album in Switzerland, I realized suddenly
that my Arabic sound wasn’t embarrassing anymore. Once listening to some
takes in the control room I suddenly noticed that the echos of Jenin, Al
Quds and Ramallah popped naturally out of the speakers. I tried to ask
myself what happened, why did it suddenly started to sound genuine. I
realized that I have given up on the primacy of the eye and reverted to
the primacy of the ear. I didn’t look for an inspiration in the
manuscript, in the music notes or the chord symbol. Instead, I was
listening to my internal voice. Struggling with Arabic music reminded me
why I did start to play music in the first place. At the end of the day, I
heard Bird in the radio rather seeing him on MTV.
I would like to end this talk by saying that it is about time we learn to
listen to the people we care for. It is about time we listen to the
Palestinians rather than following some decaying textbooks. It is about
time. Only recently I grasped that ethics comes into play when the eyes
shut and the echoes of conscience are forming a tune within one’s soul.
To empathise is to accept the primacy of the ear.
AN AUDIO VERSION OF THIS PRESENTATION CAN BE HEARD
BY FOLLOWING THIS LINK! (or this one)
Postscript by Manuel Talens:
Gilad
Atzmon or Exile's redemption
Ever since I met Gilad Atzmon
a few years back for a lengthy interview I've been convinced that this man
listens to the world with the ears of an artist. It wasn't by chance that
I entitled it Beauty as a political weapon, as both
his music and his writings always exude a profound and beautiful poetry,
even if they deal – as they usually do – with the unrelenting
Palestinian tragedy caused by Israel. This paper, which is the core of a
talk he delivered recently at Brighton, UK, is no exception to this rule.
Yet, instead of treating the subject from the outside – a literary
technique that establishes a distance and "cools it down" –
here the former Israeli Atzmon adopts the painful role of a subject who
places himself at the thick of things and tells us his own itinerary from
the racist hell of the Zionist state, where he was born, to the only
ethical escape he had in front of him once he heard the light
through the miracle of music: voluntary exile. Exile, as
well-informed readers of this great jazzman already know, is one of his
finest albums. To me, it is also the main argument of this current piece.
It is not by chance if other Israelis as honest as Ilan Pappe have also
chosen exile – like Atzmon – as the only way to redeem themselves from
the shame of belonging to a state where indigenous population are treated
as if they were despicable beasts. But Atzmon's recapitulation has a
wonderful plus in itself – at least for music lovers – and it is the
sharp narration of his awakening from the sinful Israeli nightmare he was
immersed in to the liberation of ceasing to belong, all this
thanks to Charlie Parker's art. Art is the communicating vessel uniting
Parker and Atzmon. But there is more: the fact that Parker was Black – a
race as looked down by all-time colonialists as Palestinians by today's
Zionists – serves symbolically to the purpose of Atzmon's redemption:
embracing the cause of Black music meant for him to kill two birds with
one stone, as he simultaneously embraced the cause of liberating
Palestinians through political activism. Texts like this one, written by
people like Atzmon who have decided to join mankind without tribal
discriminations and who define themselves as ex-Zionists help us to
maintain the hope that one day the land of Palestine will be free of this
racist post-modern plague and all its inhabitants will live in peace
regardless of religion or ethnicity.