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Sama Abdulhadi techno

Sama’ Abdulhadi’s Palestine Boiler Room reaches over 10 million views

Today, Boiler Room and Sama’ Abdulhadi will be collaborating once again to celebrate her historic Palestine broadcast reaching over 10 million views. Originally airing in 2018 alongside Sama’ Abdulhadi’s and Palestine Underground documentaries – the latter on Boiler Room’s 4:3 platform – the broadcast helped put Palestine’s underground music scene on the map. Alongside the 10 million views, the stream has been watched 1.7 million hours and has received 18 thousand shares – including people watching it at house parties, on their TV, cooking in their kitchen, at the park and more.

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Sama Abdulhadi techno

Sama’ Abdulhadi, a Techno Rebel With a Cause

Bearing the title as Palestine’s first female DJ, anyone who speaks with Sama’ Abdulhadi would agree techno rebel might be a more fitting crown. “Palestine or music, that’s my knowledge in life,” says the DJ and producer. Sama’ Abdulhadi is a techno rebel with a cause. Abdulhadi has become a face of the emerging electronic music and experimental techno scene in the Middle East. However, while the rest of the world is just starting to hear about her, she’s been dedicating her life to music for the last 15 plus years. Read more

Sama Abdulhadi Arrested in Palestine

Sign Petition to Free Palestinian Techno DJ Sama Abdulhadi, Arrested For Playing Techno

Leading Palestinian techno artist Sama Abdulhadi was arrested in Jericho for playing techno, and a petition is doing the rounds asking for her immediate release.

The petition on Change.org explains the events in detail:

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Why The Chemical Brothers and Other Artists Are Being Pressured To Cancel Israel Shows

Chem Bros

We’ve often heard and personally believed that music knows no political, cultural, social or personal boundaries — that it is a force that unites us all in a world that is often divided by the pressures of society. In fact, house music and every facet of electronic music since was born out of the very ideal of unifying minorities, the misunderstood, the oppressed under an umbrella of freedom that knows no labels, that knows no holds no judgement, that believes we are all one.

Yet at this very moment, artists are being pressured to cancel shows in Israel in support of an artistsforpalestine.org.uk campaign, with Pink Floyd bassist Roger Waters the latest musician to add his voice to the 700 others that have decided to culturally boycott “Israel until the country’s ‘colonial oppression of Palestinians’ ends.”

British duo The Chemical Brothers are now under pressure to cancel their Tel Aviv date at the Exhibition Grounds in Tel Aviv on November 12 as a result of this two-year-long campaign. Waters personally penned an open letter to Chemical Brothers Ed and Tom together with Caryl Churchill, Maxine Peake and other influential artists, noting that their “presence will be used by the Israeli authorities to reassure their citizens that all’s right with the world and nobody really cares that the Palestinians are suffering.”

The letter also states, “Your recording company, Virgin EMI, may tell you that playing Tel Aviv on November 12 is a cool thing to do. But Tel Aviv’s hipster vibe is a bubble on the surface of a very deep security state that drove out half the indigenous Palestinian population in 1948 and has no intention of letting their descendants back in.”

A petition has been making the rounds urging The Chemical Brothers to cancel the shows, with roughly 7,000 signatures at this point; yet nothing at this point seems to have deterred the duo from performing in the Israeli capital. In an interview with Israeli media they have gone on to specify that they don’t feel any pressure has been brought to bear upon them to cancel the show, “Pressure was not applied to us. We will go to any place where young people want to see us playing. We are not really involved in all the rest.”

Should The Chemical Brothers, and other artists, be pressured to cancel shows in Israel due to the political and religious divide that has plighted the area for countless years? Leave a comment on our Facebook or send us a tweet with your opinion!

H/T: The Guardian