Israel’s winner of last year’s Eurovision song contest has said there is no place for calls to boycott this year’s competition in Tel Aviv.
Netta Barzilai said that to snub such a popular world event celebrating diversity would be akin to “spreading darkness”.
Noting Israel’s upcoming annual Holocaust Remembrance Day, Barzilai reminded a group of foreign journalists that the Eurovision was established in the wake of the Second World War to heal a torn continent.
“Being on the same stage, no matter what your religion or ethnicity or colour, from all these countries, from all these cultures, this is a festival of light,” she said, at the annual meeting of the Foreign Press Association in Jerusalem.
“For people to boycott light is spreading darkness. It’s the exact opposite thing.”
The singer’s win last year with the catchy pop anthem Toy earned Israel the honour of hosting the 2019 Eurovision competition next month.
But supporters of the BDS movement, a Palestinian-led campaign advocating boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel, have been calling on artists to pull out of this year’s contest because of Israeli policies toward the Palestinians.
Iceland’s representative has said it would be “absurd” to participate, and boycott activists recently renewed their call for the country to withdraw completely from the event.
Activists had targeted Barzilai even before last year’s win, launching a campaign calling on voters to award her zero points. She said over the past year she has encountered angry protests across Europe as well.
“I personally think it is bullying to artists. If you have a demonstration, go and make it where it should be. My business isn’t representing. My business is music, and my business is spreading light and love,” she said.
However, the charismatic Barzilai, sporting a black, frizzy skirt and a crop-top exposing her midriff, insisted she has no interest in politics.
“I’m not a political person and I represent Netta. Netta loves Israel. Netta loves her people but when I will say my political opinion, I will bring hearts apart instead of bringing them together,” she said. “Yes, I am Israeli, and I will let politicians do their work.”
Barzilai’s physical appearance has upended traditional notions of what it takes to be a female pop star, and she has become a model for plus-size women. She has been unapologetic about her weight, the loud colours she wears, and the funky chicken moves and sounds that have become her trademark.
She said the sounds evolved from a knack for imitating animals that she developed as a youth, when she was routinely mocked by other children. Over the last year, she said she has been approached by so many children who say her success has helped them feel they are no longer alone.
“When you are in your element you accidentally inspire,” she said. “Until I believed in myself and thought I am good enough, no one believed in me. No one believed in me. Until school was over, I believed in what they were telling me. This is what I have to tell kids.”
She said it was this she discussed with the Duke of Cambridge during his visit to Israel last year, just one of many high-profile events she has embarked upon since being crowned queen of European song.
“We talked about being a positive role model for your people, which was the first time that I actually realised that I am a positive role model for my people,” she said. “When Prince William tells you that you are probably doing a good job.”
Israel boasts one of the Eurovision’s most rabid fan bases. Fans flooded Tel Aviv’s Rabin Square in front of City Hall, with some euphorically jumping into a public fountain, after Barzilai was announced the winner last year in Portugal. The City Hall building was lit up to spell Toy and electronic signs throughout the city congratulated her.
Tel Aviv is now set to host the event for the first time, expecting thousands of tourists to arrive for the spectacle. The semi-finals will be held on May 14 and 16 followed by the grand final on May 18.
The Eurovision has previously provided Israel with some cultural touchstones.
Hallelujah became the country’s unofficial national song after it won the contest for Israel when it hosted the event in the late 1970s, and Dana International became a national hero and global transgender icon when she won with Diva in 1998.
“I believe culture should be celebrated more and shared more, because it actually makes the world a better place. It actually makes people happier,” Barzilai said.