The National - AFP, May 5, 2013
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The Syrian
contestant Abdel Karim Hamdan sang about the plight of his
hometown, Aleppo, on
Arab Idol. AFP
|
Every
Friday night, on the live broadcasts of Arab Idol, the contestant Abdel Karim
Hamdan receives a standing ovation from judges and audience members alike. But
when he sang about his homeland Syria, and particularly about the plight of his
battered hometown of Aleppo in a heartbreaking rendition of a mawwal, there
wasn’t a dry eye in the -audience.
“Aleppo, a
flood of suffering, how much blood is shed in my country,” the 25-year-old sang
in the Beirut studio where the hugely popular show, modelled on the British hit
Pop Idol, is recorded.
“With a
broken heart I cry for my land and the children who have become strangers in
their own country,” he sang. The song has already been viewed more than four
million times on YouTube.
The lyrics
to the poem, which he wrote, deeply affected Arab Idol’s judges.
“That’s the
voice we want to hear in the Arab world, not the sound of cannons,” said the
Idol judge and Lebanese songstress Nancy Ajram.
The
Lebanese singer Ragheb Alama, a veteran Idol judge, said that Hamdan’s singing,
dripping with raw emotion, brought something new for both the audience and the
judges.
“We stood
by him and automatically felt like we were part of this issue. He made us feel
that way and the public reaction was very honest, just like the honest way that
Abdel Karim sang about the bloodshed in Aleppo and in Syria,” said Alama.
Hamdan’s
fellow Syrian competitor Farah broke down in tears as he wrapped up his
performance. “I wanted to sing about a cause that affects the whole world,”
said Hamdan, who studied opera singing at the Institute of Music in Homs in
central Syria.
“I wanted
to sing the pain of my country,” Hamdan said during rehearsals.
The
passions unleashed by the conflict followed Hamdan to Arab Idol and he has been
-accused both of being a supporter of the regime and of the uprising against it
that began in March 2011. He has reportedly even received death threats. The
young singer said he has “nothing to do with politics” and wants to “sing for
Syria and that’s all”.
“I’m
singing about Syria: the Syria that exists for me and my grandfathers, the
Syria that will remain after me and my children die.”
His passion
has won over the audience, which welcomes his every performance with loud
chants of “Syria! Syria!” – AFP
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