Madonna will make a guest appearance on
Saturday during the Eurovision finals in Tel Aviv. The venue has
prompted calls for a boycott by pro-Palestinian activists who
want companies, performers and governments to disengage from
Israel.
The popular Eurovision competition features musicians from more
than 40 nations and was watched last year by some 189 million
viewers in around 50 European countries.
In her first comment on her decision to sing at the event,
Madonna said she was a supporter of all human rights.
"I'll never stop playing music to suit someone's political
agenda nor will I stop speaking out against violations of human
rights wherever in the world they may be," the singer said in a
statement to Reuters.
"My heart breaks every time I hear about the innocent lives that
are lost in this region and the violence that is so often
perpetuated to suit the political goals of people who benefit
from this ancient conflict. I hope and pray that we will soon
break free from this terrible cycle of destruction and create a
new path towards peace," she added.
Israel is hosting the Eurovision contest after local singer
Netta Barzilai won last year. The winning country customarily
hosts the following year.
Madonna, 60, is expected to perform two songs in Tel Aviv, one
from her upcoming "Madame X" album to be released in June. She
had taken her world tours to Israel in 2009 and 2012, and is a
follower of the mystical form of Judaism called Kabbalah.
The singer's Ray of Light foundation, which promotes social
justice and women's empowerment worldwide, supports a number of
Palestinian projects.
They include funding teachers' salaries at schools in the Gaza
Strip through the United Nations Palestinian Refugee Agency
UNRWA and micro loans to female farmers through the Palestine
Fair Trade Association. The foundation also supports Americans
for Peace Now, which campaigns for a diplomatic solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Israel has launched a PR campaign to counter calls for a boycott
of the Eurovision contest by the international Boycott,
Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement. Security has been tight in
Tel Aviv amid fears that activists may seek to disrupt the
competition.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by James Dalgleish and
Leslie Adler)
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