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my identity

Musician Noah Shufutinsky is proudly Black, Jewish and Zionist - and he uses rap to examine his identity

June 7, 2021 12:43
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3 min read

Are there any specific topics we’ll cover tomorrow?” Noah Shufutinksy texts the evening before our interview.

“Your music, antisemitism and Zionism. Y’know, light stuff, ” I reply.

For Shufutinsky, the three go hand in hand. Better known by his stage name, Westside Gravy, he’s made a name for himself in the music scene by rapping about his Black, Jewish and Zionist identities. In one of his most feted songs, Diaspora, he actually raps in Hebrew — on the streets of Jerusalem.

Although the song has had tens of thousands of hits on YouTube and won praise from the likes of former New York ambassador Dani Dayan and reggae star Matisyahu it has also, unsurprisingly, had its detractors. But the hip-hop artist, who’s majoring in Judaic Studies at George Washington University, remains undeterred. “I put it down to antisemitism and people’s refusal to acknowledge that Israel is inseparable from Jewish history and culture. Everyone has the right to safety, freedom and power over themselves. That’s what Zionism and Black liberation mean to me and why, in my mind, the two cannot be separated: their aims are the same.”

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Music