PARIS,
March 26 (IslamOnline.net) – In France, rap music no longer conjures
up images of hip-hopping boys and girls or doped teenagers after a
Muslim band has given it a new look.
Singing
primarily against terrorism and racism, Din Records seven members are
priding themselves on being Muslims moved by the sufferings of their
fellow Muslims from Palestine to Chechnya.
“Other
rap bands are united by drugs, but we are united by prayers,” the
band’s vocal Medine said on the band’s Web site.
Established
in 2002, the band denounces the injustice done to Muslims in the
occupied Palestinians territories, Iraq, Afghanistan and Chechnya.
It
also condemns terrorism and expresses heartfelt sympathy with the
oppressed worldwide.
Din
Records songs, which topped France’s music charts and sold briskly,
include “Jihad” “9/11,” “Guantanamo” and “The School of
Life.”
“We
want to give voice to the sufferings endured by Muslims throughout the
past three years in the aftermath of the attacks,” Medine says.
“9/11”
The
9/11 ditty, which has been banned by the French TV, shows a mixture of
the havoc caused by 9/11 attacks in New York and Washington and the
destruction caused by the US troops in Afghanistan and Iraq.
It
also features the deplorable conditions of the Palestinians and the
wide-scale destruction of their lands and homes by the Israeli
occupation army.
“I
keep looking for the root of the world’s disasters/Only to find out
that the storm is blowing everywhere,” read the song’s lyrics.
“But
the eyes are fixed on the twin tower/You don’t understand anything
neither do I/But listen to the story from the very beginning…From
September to September…From Ramallah to Manhattan…From Kabul to
Baghdad,” they say.
The
song says that the 9/11 attacks have had their domino effects on
Muslims in France with the secularism drive picking up steam.
“In
the country of the three-color flag, you have to be secular and
enlightened/You must respect the values of the republic/Muslims are
not allowed to wear beards or take on the hijab in schools.”
And
it hits out at the media blitz against Muslims.
“In
the newspapers, they accuse us of inciting violence, war crimes/They
accuse us of being against the Americans though the Americans are
rallying behind Michael Moore,” the US filmmaker who directed the
anti-Bush “Fahrenheit 9/11.”
The
song also touches on the torture and sexual abuse of Iraqi prisoners
by US soldiers.
“Two
or three million dollars and we will forget about Abu Gharib,” the
scene of the pornographic and shocking practices meted out to Iraqi
prisoners by US soldiers.
Guantanamo
The
songs “Guantanamo” and “The School of Life” have to do with
the humiliation of Muslims in the West.
“The
storm is blowing down Islam and the residents of the suburbs, who are
marginalized in transports because of their hijabs/And those young
people with beards, who are banned in airports/It is a plausible
reason for Islamophobia,” read the lyrics of “Guantanamo”.
“The
School of Life” adds: “They tell me that I belong in the third
generation of immigrants/Though I have been born here and lead a
simple life/Indeed, [the Hijri year] 1425 is a minaret for our
fathers, mothers and brothers.”
The
International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights (IHF) said in a
recent report that Muslim minorities across Europe have been
experiencing growing distrust, hostility and discrimination since
9/11.
“Pre-existing
patterns of prejudice and discrimination have been reinforced and
Muslims have increasingly felt that they are stigmatized because of
their beliefs,” said the report.