Special report: Palestine-Israel
Relations
GAZA, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- The
18-year-old Gaza young man Mohammed Wafi, who formed a western-style hip-hop
band, said that as years of conflict between Israel and the Palestinians brought
nothing but more pain and suffering, more people are becoming believers of
peaceful resistance.
He formed his western-style hip-hop band, which sings for Palestine and
slams the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories. The band is
financed by his interior decorator mother, Reda, together with two other
friends.
"We are a group of youths who did not scarify for our home," says Wafi. "We
can't carry arms and shoot at the occupiers, but we decided to adopt the idea of
the Rap music and use it against the Jews (Israel) as what the blacks did in
their fight against discrimination in the United States."
Made up of Khaled Harara, a 21-year-old student who studies economy, and
his school colleague Mohanad Matar and the high school student Wafi, the Black
Unit Band saw the light in the spring this year, just one month before Islamic
Hamas movement celebrated its first anniversary of ruling the Gaza Strip.
15 songs of Black Unit hit the market in Gaza since May, with duets with
Turkish, Bulgarian and German artists.
"The songs were in Arabic with some English phrases," Wafi said, adding "we
communicate with the international artists and corporate through our web space."
But Wafi refers to "a sector of the Palestinian community" that is not
satisfied with their work. "They say we imitate the westerns and that music can
never liberate the countries," he said.
Since Hamas won the elections in 2006 and formed its government in Gaza,
dozens of attacks against DVD stores, cafes shops and hair beauty salons were
registered.
The attacks increased in the early months after Hamas routed its secular
rival Fatah and drove out security forces of President Mahmoud Abbas in mid June
last year.
However, the attacks decreased as order and security dominates now,
according to what Hamas authorities say.
And it is so why Wafi and his friends insist to go on. "After two months,
we will release another CD that deals with common interest national and social
issues with some goals of entertainment."
But Wafi remembers he is in Gaza where everything goes the other way you
plan due to the situation of the Israeli blockade and the internal political
split between Gaza and the West bank.
"We go to the studio to record but the electricity goes off suddenly so we
postpone the recording," he said.
The only power station in Gaza Strip was forced to shut down since nearly
three weeks due to the lack of fuel as Israel sealed off the territory's
crossing points due to resumption of violence and the ongoing homemade rockets
attacks fired from Gaza at southern Israel.
"Sometimes the power cuts off while we are in the middle of recording and
we have to start all over again when it comes back," Wafi said, adding "due to
power problems, electricity comes only 6hours each 24 hours."