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Israel's Eurovision hope: Mira Awad

First ever Israeli Arab to represent the country at Eurovision talks about her guilt

May 7, 2009 12:03
Mira Awad (left) with her singing partner, Noa.
4 min read

The peace organisation OneVoice is throwing a farewell party in Tel Aviv’s Dizengoff Street for this year’s Israeli entry to the Eurovision Song Contest, and the two singers — newly anointed peace ambassadors for OneVoice — are being rushed from one soundbite-hungry journalist to another in what is the last press opportunity before they leave for Moscow.

For Yemenite Israeli singer Achinoam “Noa” Nini, a veteran singer and peace campaigner, this intense media attention is nothing new — from recording songs for hit films such as Goldeneye to sharing stages with megastars like Sting and Stevie Wonder, she is well used to being in the spotlight.

But in Dizengoff Street it is her less well-known singing partner, the striking Mira Awad, who is grabbing most of the attention; switching casually between English, Hebrew and Arabic as the questions fly in, and clearly relishing every moment.

Israelis are savvy when it comes to using the Eurovision Song Contest to project an image of their country as liberal, tolerant and diverse — just remember the show-stopping transsexual diva Dana International who won in 1998.