LONDON – A group of actors have condemned a call to ban Israel’s national
theater from performing in London, calling it an act of “cultural terrorism”
geared more towards the demonization of Israel, the Jewish people and Hebrew
language.
Last week, a group of 27 actors called for the Globe Theater in
London to revoke an invitation to Habimah National Theater to perform at the
Globe to Globe Festival, celebrating Shakespeare’s birthday and
legacy.
Writing in The Guardian last Thursday, they said the festival was
“associating itself with policies of exclusion practiced by the Israeli state”
and called on the Globe to withdraw the invitation so the festival will not be
“complicit with human rights violations.”
Signatories included
Oscar-winning actress Emma Thompson, director Mike Leigh and actor and director
Mark Rylance.
Habimah is putting on a Hebrew version of The Merchant of
Venice during the festival – part of the Cultural Olympiad preceding the 2012
Olympic Games, which will be held in the British capital from July 27 to August
12.
A letter in Wednesday’s Guardian welcomes the Israeli national
theater’s contribution, calling it a symbol of cultural success for Israel but
also “of the resilience of a people who have united to overcome continued
persecution throughout their history.”
The letter is signed by actors
Simon Callow, Maureen Lipman, actor and director Steven Berkoff, playwright Sir
Arnold Wesker, playwright and screenwriter Sir Ronald Harwood along with
Conservative MP Louise Mensch.
They say the call to ban Habimah is
tantamount to “delegitimizing the State of Israel and its success, the Jewish
people, and even the Hebrew language itself.”
The signatories noted that
Habimah’s productions have always explored the challenges faced by the Jewish
people and that its presentation of The Merchant of Venice on the London stage
continues that important mission.
“Those who wish to hijack the artistic
and cultural work of Habimah for their own narrow political aims simply remind
us of the vital importance of such work. No artists should attempt to
silence the expression of other artists simply because they are
Israeli.”
Instead, they said it is a great example of the shared values
between the UK and Israel.
“By trying to suppress the cultural exchange
of ideas they demonstrate the continued persecution of Jews and Israelis even
occurring in 21st-century Britain. We condemn the acts of cultural terrorism
that some may try to carry out during Habimah’s performances,” they
stated.
The Habimah performances will be on May 28 and 29. The festival
begins on April 23, Shakespeare’s birthday, and will include 37 international
companies performing all 37 of the Bard’s plays in 37 languages over a six-week
period. The Palestinian Ashtar Theatre company is set to perform Richard II in
Arabic at the festival.
The Globe said it had no intention of recalling
the invitation and is aware that anti-Israel activists may disrupt the
performance. The theater said it was “taking all sensible precautions” to
prepare for this.
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