“The song in itself is a historic document of its time, but its teachings about social equality, the injustice of oppression, and the cultural insights that it gives into a past era are valuable to all of us as modern day listeners. The renewed cycle of oppression of Palestinians since May 2021 made me resort to the folklore and sounds that address our history at the start of the 20th century.” (Zaid Hilal)
The song tells the story of Ghbeishi, a young man from a small Bedouin Jordanian tribe who fought against the British Mandate over Palestine in the late 1930s. He fell in love with Hasna, whose parents opposed their marriage due to a difference in social status. The two lovers decided to elope and Hasna’s family asked the British military general of the Jordanian Arab army, Glubb Basha, to help retrieve their daughter. As a result, Glubb Basha dispatched a heavily armed squad to find and kill Ghbeishi.
The lyrics are a conversation between Hasna and Ghbeishi, where the original voice of Badriyya Younes intertwines with the artist’s own voice. The vocals juxtapose the present with the past, bringing old heritage back to life with the help of technology; “Singing by her side gives me a great feeling of honor as different times and similar events come together in one song.” (Zaid Hilal)
The recording is embedded with sounds that socially reconstruct the period; including sounds of an eagle, the rolling wheels of a horse-driven cart, and clapping. At certain points the instrumentation reflects sounds of the weaponry being described in the song.
Lyricist: Possibly Hussein Alloubani
Original recording period: possibly 1940s/1950s
Contemporary recording: August 2021
Instruments: Synth, lifters, riqq, tabla, percussion, electric piano.
Lyrics: n/a
The Why Behind the Music
Music is a tool that scores history into rhythms and lyrics, while incorporating heritage and folklore into its many layers. To me, heritage as a set of customs, beliefs, and lived experiences is a national treasure that reflects and records important historical behaviours, and thus the two are complementary.
As a Palestinian musician living in Palestine, I witness the Israeli occupation exposing our heritage to invasion on a daily basis. This manifests in cultural appropriation and altering our food, fashion, music, drawings, patriotic symbols, and history. Here I see the importance of music in preserving and documenting our history, identity, and struggle for justice. Music and art become mediums I use to help counter these external attacks on our presence, our present, and our heritage.
As the Mirath:Music project has shown, access to our heritage and its proper documentation and archiving is challenging. Due to successive colonizations and constant efforts to erase our history, we do not have a single unified archive as Palestinians. Whatever has remained after Israeli plundering and savage attacks has been scattered either between a number of institutions and organizations in different countries or among individuals who do not always make this heritage available.
Music helps me express what I am feeling and what I am going through, but it also enables me to tell stories I choose to retrieve from the past and to share lived experiences in a way that is accessible to listeners.
Related Links
-
YouTube
November 2021