Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Tupac and a Push for Palestinian Freedom



Oakland, California and Lod, Israel two cities separated by 7,405 miles that share a surprising connection.  Tupac Shakur a rapper from Oakland, California is considered one of the most influential rappers of all time. During the early 1990’s his music could be heard on radio stations all across America. He rapped about the struggles of living in an inner city, the effects of drugs on poor neighborhoods, and a system of racism that divided that kept African Americans from becoming successful. A young Tamer Nafar in the small city of Lod, Israel, heard this message and was inspired to rap. Lod is similar to Oakland in many ways, about 15 minutes from Tel Aviv, it is a poor town filled mainly with people of Palestinians, outsiders in their own country. Tamer learned English by memorizing Tupac’s songs and translating them to English.
                Tamer decided that his town needed a similar voice and began rapping in 1998 recording an EP “Stop Selling Drugs.” He joined up with his younger brother Suhell Nafer and childhood friend Mahmoud Jreri and the group DAM was born. DAM, meaning “blood” in Hebrew, began preforming in clubs around Tel Aviv. They originally rapped in Hebrew and wrote songs about violence and drugs in the city they grew up in.
                Their music took a sudden shift in 2000 during the Second Intifada. DAM saw the violence around them and decided to lend their voice to the Palestinian resistance. They wrote their first political song over a beat from their hero Tupac Shakur. They released the song “Innocent Criminals” a song about the struggles of Palestinians living in Israel and the hypocrisy of the Israeli government. The song became a huge hit with Palestinians and gained a large amount of attention all over Israel.

                DAM went on to release many hits including “Who is the Terrorist?” “Born Here” and “Dedication.” They are credited with the rise of Palestinian Hip-Hop and lending a powerful, young voice to the struggle of young Palestinians. In a way they became the Tupac of the Arab world. Born into an oppressive system that kept them confined to a poor city, filled with violence and drugs using rap as a method of expression and protest to raise awareness about a struggle that many people would not think about if not for the music that defines it.

They have a fire soundcloud for anyone interested: https://soundcloud.com/damrap

References:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DAM_(band)

-Cameron Cook

9 comments:

  1. I wonder if Biggie had an influence on Palestinian hip-hop as well

    -Steven Rayburn

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    1. Tupac had more political overtones in his music, Biggie to my knowledge didn't as much.

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  2. This is really cool. I wish more modern American rappers would talk about real issues as well.
    Olive McKay

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  3. I love when artists take their music and put an impactful meaning behind it. When they come from hardships and decide to tell their stories, that music is has such a high value to it.

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  4. It's really awesome when artists talk about things that really matter in their music. I also think it makes the songs much more interesting to listen to. I do think it helped make Tupac one of the best and most influential rappers of all time.

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  5. Its hard for me to gauge the extent of the popularity of the music.

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  6. I wonder if their still around. Their last upload to Soundcloud was 3 years ago which is a lot in todays day and age. -Yonatan

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  7. This is a pretty cool connection from the very different worlds of SOCAL and Israel.

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  8. Amazing to see the music industry and politics cross over

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