Monday, October 7FROM THE RIVER TO THE SEA, PALESTINE WILL BE FREE

JERUSALEM QUARTET

NOVANEWS
WEDO and JQ overlap
There is now a Guardian website report on the disruption of a Jerusalem Quartet performance at the Wigmore Hall in London. I’m sure you can read more about it at Tony Greenstein’s blog @ (www.azvsas.blogspot.com) because he gets a big mention in the piece:
It’s difficult to imagine a more pacific backwater than the genteel Wigmore Hall, London’s most prestigious chamber-music venue – but that peace was abruptly disturbed when anti-Israel demonstrators disrupted a concert given by the Jerusalem Quartet on Monday lunchtime. Wigmore Hall director John Gilhooly told Classical Music magazine: “The demonstration was evidently extremely well planned.
The protesters must have bought their tickets for the concert a long time ago, because they were all sitting in individual seats in different parts of the hall. One stood up and started singing and shouting, and while we were removing him, another one started up somewhere else, and so on.”
One of the protesters, Tony Greenstein, wrote on his blog: “I stood up . . . and proceeded to tell the Jerusalem Quartet that they were the cultural ambassadors of apartheid Israel and its army whom they perform for.” Supporters of the quartet highlight the fact that its cellist, Kyril Zlotnikov, works with the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, which was founded by Daniel Barenboim and Edward Said to include both Israeli and Arab young musicians, and point out that military service is compulsory in Israel.
The quartet’s live broadcast on Radio 3 was truncated and replaced with a performance by the Salomon Quartet. But the Jerusalem Quartet’s recital eventually continued. “The atmosphere in the hall was very tense,” said Gilhooly.
It was me that added the link to Tony’s blog. The Guardian only linked to the Classical music magazine. But did you see that stuff about Kyril Zlotnikov? He works with the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, which was founded by Daniel Barenboim and Edward Said to include both Israeli and Arab young musicians don’t you know? Was this really such a hard case?
See: Jews sans fronier
March 30, 2010

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