BRICUP tells Elton John ‘Don’t Play Israel’

BRICUP has sent an open letter to Elton John asking him to cancel his planned concert in Israel in June. We’ve said to him:

“Okay, you turn up in Ramat Gan, and it gets to that “Candle in the Wind” moment, and thousands of lighters flicker – but there won”t be any Palestinians from the Occupied Territories swaying along with the Israelis – the army won”t let them leave their ghettoes. Please read what Judge Goldstone said about the onslaught on Gaza; what Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have been saying for decades about the crimes committed against the Palestinians.”

Read the BRICUP open letter
Send your own message to Elton John

OPEN LETTER TO ELTON JOHN

Dear Elton John:

Like much of the world, we think you”re a good bloke. You came out when it was difficult; you admitted your addictions were stronger than you were; you”ve poured money into AIDS research. Oh, and then there”s the music – not bad at all.

But we”re struggling to understand why you”re playing in Israel on June 17. You may say you”re not a political person, but does an army dropping white phosphorus on a school building full of children demand a political response?

Does walling a million and a half people up in a ghetto and then pounding that ghetto to rubble require a political response from us, or a human one?

We think it needs a human response, and we think that by choosing to play in Tel Aviv you”re denying this. You”re
behaving as if playing in Israel is morally neutral – but how can it be? How can the cruelties Israel practises against the Palestinians – fundamentally because the Palestinians are there, on Palestinian land, and Israel wants them to go – be morally neutral?

Okay, you turn up in Ramat Gan, and it gets to that “Candle in the Wind” moment, and thousands of lighters flicker – but there won”t be any Palestinians from the Occupied Territories swaying along with the Israelis – the army won”t let them leave their ghettoes. Please read what Judge Goldstone said about the onslaught on Gaza; what Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have been saying for decades about the crimes committed against the Palestinians. Of course the Israeli state denies it has a case to answer, though it”s knee-deep in ethnic cleansing and land-theft and the endless daily suffocating of Palestinian lives and hopes.

Political or not political, when you stand up on that stage in Tel Aviv, you line yourself up with a racist state. Do you want to give them the satisfaction?

Please don”t go.

Yours sincerely,

Professor Haim Bresheeth
Mike Cushman
Professor Steven Rose
Professor Jonathan Rosenhead
London, February 2010

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