{"id":218892,"date":"2017-06-12T10:21:22","date_gmt":"2017-06-12T14:21:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/witch-hunts-resurgence-and-defiance-heavy-metal-in-the-middle-east-the-quietus.php"},"modified":"2017-06-12T10:21:22","modified_gmt":"2017-06-12T14:21:22","slug":"witch-hunts-resurgence-and-defiance-heavy-metal-in-the-middle-east-the-quietus","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/modern-satanism\/witch-hunts-resurgence-and-defiance-heavy-metal-in-the-middle-east-the-quietus.php","title":{"rendered":"Witch Hunts, Resurgence and Defiance: Heavy Metal In The Middle East &#8211; The Quietus"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Inquistion in    Egypt, image courtesy of Nader    Sadek  <\/p>\n<p>    \"Satanist\", to them, equals homosexuality; killing cats and    drinking their blood \"  <\/p>\n<p>    \"Suddenly, in front of me, hell broke loose. It was bad. So bad     They are hitting you everywhere and they are pushing you in    every direction and they had dogs  People started to faint and    I thought it to be wise to throw yourself under a pile of    fainting people. Play dead! Play dead!\"  <\/p>\n<p>    'Omar', speaking to the writer Benjamin Harbert about his    internment as a \"Satanist\" in 1998.  <\/p>\n<p>    EGYPT  1996\/1997  <\/p>\n<p>    At 4am on 22 January 1997 armed Egyptian state police forcibly    entered the homes of about 100 young people, including -    according to one source - a 13-year-old girl, and arrested    them. They were imprisoned for up to two weeks. According to    one, who wishes to remain anonymous, they were beaten, sexually    abused, attacked by dogs, and left isolated for extended    periods. Their crime? They were accused of Satanism, of \"dead    cat blood drinking, sex orgies, insane drug use.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    A group of Islamist extremists who were also being held were    informed they would be sharing their quarters with the    \"Satanists\". That caused a riot so severe that the \"Satanists\"    were transferred to another jail. \"We started to hear shouts    from far away. Shouts, screams from a faraway place \" one    victim remembered, speaking under the pseudonym Omar to the    writer Benjamin Harbert for his essay on the events, Noise    And Its Formless Shadows, compiled in the book The Arab    Avant-Garde. \"We realised that the sounds of the screams of    the night were because the Islamists of the same prison were    told that the Satanists were in the same prison as them, and    they decided to revolt  they wanted to kill us.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Omar's real crime, and the crime of nearly 100 of his friends,    was not Satanism. It was a love of heavy metal. Egypt's metal    scene had been in rude health the previous year. Metal in Egypt    had been no more than a cult in its infancy, sustained by    bootleg culture until the advent of satellite TV. By 1996 metal    had become a mainstream force in the nation's musical fabric,    with all manner of satellite, experimental scenes. Young fans    would congregate in bars like Khaled Madani's Doom Club, and at    the Qsar al-Barun (\"The Baron's Place\"), an abandoned villa in    Heliopolis.  <\/p>\n<p>    In November 1996, however, the Egyptian tabloid Ruz    al-Yusuf, received an anonymous fax, detailing supposed    'satanic rituals' on the outskirts of Cairo and Alexandria,    sparking media outrage and prompting a hysterical fear of metal    culture in Egypt. On 9 December, Ruz al-Yusufprinted a    'call to action' against metal, which led to the arrests a    month later. As one fan tells tQ anonymously: \"The stories -    whether real or not - did shock society (and our mothers).    Unlike South-East Asia and South America, Egypt had no rock    history, so no one knew anything about rock & roll    traditions and excesses. Facepaint, blood and Satan was quite    shocking for society. The crackdown happened and that was what    all the media spoke about for two weeks. I still think it was    ridiculous, though I'm not denying how traumatising it must    have been to whoever was arrested.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    One particularly melodramatic newspaper account, cited in    The Arab Avant-Garde read: \"Children had swapped beer    and whisky for the blood of cats and pigeons and been tattooed    with skills and other symbols of the occult  Hard rock was    played as the fans dug through the graves in search of human    bones that could be 'gifted' to the devil.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    There were other, more sinister reasons for the crackdown. As    Harbert explained: \"It was a political strategy that had    nothing to do with metal or even Satanism directly. The    government needed a distraction from two issues: the rapid    privatisation of the public sector (initiated by Mubarak's    sweeping cabinet changes) and the intensifying criticism from    exiled and imprisoned Islamic extremists accusing Egypt of    being anti-Islam. Interior minister Hassan El Alfy became a    national hero through his involvement with this crackdown on    metal, though none of those arrested were ever convicted of a    crime   <\/p>\n<p>    \"The government's brutal crackdown, informed by its high stakes    wrangling with radical Islamic groups, was a calculated    strategy that held up this group of 'practising Satanists' as a    straw man against which to redefine its defence of Islam. It    also provided a welcome distraction from the radical    privatisation of the public sector. The practice of persecuting    the metal communities then spread across the Arab world to    Morocco, Bahrain and Jordan.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    LEBANON  BLAAKYUM  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    The leader of Lebanese thrash metal outliers Blaakyum, Bassem    Deaibess, sees parallels between the events in Egypt and in his    own career. His band have flown the flag for the nation's    fertile metal scene for more than 20 years, during which he has    twice been detained by the authorities, first in 1998 and again    in 2002, caught in the wake of a similar anti-metal witch hunt.    Just as in Egypt, metal fans were demonised by the authorities,    and scapegoated to distract the population.  <\/p>\n<p>    Speaking to tQ before participating in a discussion at Chatham    House in London under the title 'Art As Defiance In The Middle    East', he explains that the health of the metal scene in his    home country has its peaks and troughs. \"It goes up and down.    Before 96 metal was huge; in the 80s during the civil war there    were bands - I'd see the pictures, they had massive audiences,    metal was just a regular thing you played in clubs. But then in    96 the first witch hunt happened, the whole Satanism and    backward messaging stuff.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    As in Egypt, these witch hunts coincided with political    scandals that needed to be buried. \"Every time there's    something going on and you need to distract from what the    institution is facing, you need to say 'oh look at these    people',\" Deaibess says. \"The headlines were 'Hard rock music    and backwards messaging is threatening the safety of our    children', 'heavy metal and Satanism is infecting our society',    such ridiculous stories. You'd turn on the TV and half of the    news would be talking about metal and showing reports about how    bad and horrible the music is. They incite mass hysteria and    mass fear. When you're scared of your child being infected by    this disease, you don't pay attention to what laws are being    passed. Metal is a good scapegoat because it has all the    elements that scare society. Politicians and religious    institutions rule by striking fear. You need something that    would scare people, and what's better than people who look    strange, with long hair and earrings and headbanging and    moshing? It's so alien in a conservative country like Lebanon.    The people are extremely conservative, extremely religious, and    extremely superstitious. The problem is not just the    authorities, it's the mentality of the society, the prejudice    and the discrimination against anyone that doesn't look like a    regular Lebanese person.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    'Alien' is certainly the word. When Deaibess was arrested in    1998, the questions he was asked would have seemed comical were    it not for the gravity of what was at stake. \"This guy with a    big moustache sits down and says: 'So! What do you do when you    see a black cat?' And I said: 'Well, I pet the cat.' They would    say: 'But how do you pet the cat?' and then ask: 'Do you    read The Koran upside down?' You could make a sitcom out    of it.\" Deaibess got off relatively lightly; he says the band    Kaoteon were beaten, stuffed in the boot of a car and faced    nine days' imprisonment after their gig was raided because    police believed their then name, Chaotaeon, translated into    Arabic as \"devils\".  <\/p>\n<p>    But what of the Lebanese metal scene in the years since? The    years 2005 to 2010 saw a golden age of sorts, with 50 active    metal bands selling out 2,000-capacity venues - not bad for a    country with a population of around 4 million. In the years    since, the scene has shrunk, but Deaibess says it remains    stable, although prejudice still remains. \"The worst thing is    when you're walking the street, you see a mother who drags her    child away from you and crosses the road - you're seen as this    disgusting person.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    That said, as a metal musician in Lebanon today, the scene is    relatively fertile. \"I like to think we have the best metal    scene in the Middle East.\" There is still ignorance, of course    - finding a sound person with the requisite knowledge of the    genre to know that the distortion is in fact intentional can be    a struggle when it comes to touring - but Deaibess says the    metal community is as tolerant as can be in Lebanon's    multi-faith, multi-ethnic society.  <\/p>\n<p>    \"It's very rare that anyone would ask your religion at a metal    event. Of course it has its flaws, but the metal scene in    Lebanon is the least sexist, the most tolerant when it comes to    religion, it's one of the very few communities in Lebanon    that's tolerant to atheists, any sexual orientation, no    problem. No one would ever ask you. We did have at a certain    point in time a segregation between communities, because areas    in Lebanon are separated by religion, but not any more. Our    community is very diverse, you have the really religious    Christians and the really religious Muslims, the atheists,    they're all together having fun, and arguing too.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    SAUDI ARABIA  AL NAMROOD  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    It is a different story in Saudi Arabia. Al Namrood, whose    utterly uncompromising and utterly brilliant new album    Enkar was released in May, are the country's only black    metal band, one of the most intense musical forces in the    world, let alone the Middle East, but must remain anonymous for    their own safety. Their music takes a fearless stance against    the country's authoritarian regime, and were they to be    identified they would be stoned to death or beheaded for    apostasy; CDs had to be smuggled into the country as    contraband. When guitarsneed to be repaired, they have to be    smuggled out.  <\/p>\n<p>    A member of the band known only as 'Mephisto' spoke to tQ via    email. \"Metal is a good way of expression in this wretched    world,\" he says, when asked just what keeps him motivated to    continue despite the risks. He began playing guitar in 2006,    having been directed to the genre online by \"anger, hate and    aggression\" and a need for \"intense, meaningful music with a    strong vibe\". Two years later, Al Namrood began.  <\/p>\n<p>    \"We look at the world as a free hub, where every human being is    entitled to choose their way of life,\" Mephisto says, outlining    the group's philosophy. \"This is strongly defied in our    society, [because they] fear that freedom is going to break    religion. Most importantly, we do not tolerate any ideology to    be forcefully shoved into our throat. The prospective is    simple: just don't stay in our way and we won't stay in yours.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Yet the consequences of pursuing that ideology could be fatal.    \"Of course we worry, we can never guarantee that we will be    safe,\" he says. They do not face day to day problems and    prejudices as metal fans, simply because to give any indication    of their allegiances would be a compromise of their life or    death insistence on total anonymity. This extends to playing    live. \"We dont know if we ever will play [live] or just keep Al    Namrood as studio project. We have to balance our wishes with    the reality, if playing live will take us to execution, then we    won't do it.\" It goes without saying that there is no visible    metal 'scene' in the country. If there are any other bands in    addition to Al Namrood, they remain utterly isolated from each    other. \"We keep hearing there are other black metal bands in    the area, but we've seen none. When we started in the beginning    we tried to get close to some various local bands but they    rejected us due to our message and context of music.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Despite all of this, Al Namrood's music remains totally    defiant. The video for 'Nabth' (which translates as    'Ostracised') is a ferocious case in point. The clip makes use    of violent, difficult footage, of protests, riots and police    brutality from across the Middle East, coupled with close-up    shots of their own album artwork where Satanic, bearded figures    wield knives and snakes under a sky painted an apocalyptic red,    while a caged populace despairs.  <\/p>\n<p>    Thanks to support from outside the country, Al Namrood have    managed to reach a relatively wide audience globally, but to    leave the country would be nearly impossible. \"Immigration [is]    very tight nowadays and the nationalists and conservative    parties are becoming more lunatic toward immigrants. The    political tension is this world is miserable and as a result,    people became more xenophobic at some level. But say it loudly:    this earth doesn't belong to anyone. Wherever we reside we will    survive and do what we want, regardless of any obstacles.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    ISRAEL  MELECHESH  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    Melechesh come from Jerusalem, but they are now based in    Germany. They are not Israeli or Palestinian, but from a \"a    small diaspora in Jerusalem of Armenians and Syrians, a very    unique situation,\" as their formidable guitarist and frontman    Ashmedi puts it. However with band members all over the world,    and a high profile in the world of metal - they are signed to    Nuclear Blast and play to crowds of tens of thousands  they    prefer to think of themselves as being from planet earth;    Jerusalem is merely a point of origin.  <\/p>\n<p>    That said, the region still bears its influence in his work.    The mythology of Mesopotamia, in particular, though    appropriated often by other bands, makes its presence felt -    stories of the occult, the beginnings of man, and even    pseudo-scientific conspiracy theories of ancient aliens revered    in the region as gods, reinterpreted within the genre. \"We are    Armenians and Syrians,\" Ashmedi says. \"A lot of the mythology    from the region, the Sumerian, Babylonian, that is our    mythology. A lot of bands around the world always toy with    those kind of ideas or use a band names from a deity. We have    our great, rich culture, and we might as well dive into it and    represent it musically.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    That's not to say that Melechesh want their background to be    used as a mere promotional device. \"We want to be responsible    and make sure it's quality [music]. We don't want to be relying    on it as a gimmick. We also want to have a credible approach to    your music that is accessible to people: they don't know why    they like it, it just sounds good, and not a one-trick pony.    That's what we set about doing, and now we're an    internationally recognised band with good sales, and insane    concerts and festivals and tours, and I've made my living off    it basically for the last 11 years.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    The popularity of metal in Israel, and the fertile ground in    which Melechesh made their name (they were the first non-Jewish    group to get signed there) is also down in part to collapse of    the Soviet Union, which saw a mass migration of around a    million Russian Jews to the country as they were finally    granted permission to leave Russia and the other former Soviet    republics.  <\/p>\n<p>    As for the modern politics of the region, there might be    allusions and parallels drawn between the myths they delve into    and the present day - 'Lost Tribes', for example, on the band's    2015 record Enki, can be read to have \"a lot to do with    Isis.\" However, Ashmedi is keen to point out: \"Until [the West]    find a new great villain away from the Middle East, it's going    to still have negative connotations. Maybe 20-30 years it's    going to be the nicest place for them to go make movies where    they are the allies, not the villains.We don't play the game of    politics, we transcend it. As a self-thinking person I have my    opinions but I do not discuss them. The band Melechesh    transcend that. We talk about the cosmic stuff, we show the    beauty, the magic, the spice of the Middle East. All you see on    TV is women's abuse, religion and war, and oil. Always negative    stories, from the cradle of civilisation. There's so much more    good than bad there, so I want to show that with the art.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    On occasion, however, Ashmedi has been been caught up in the    familiar cycle of sensationalised Satanism. In 1995, when they    were still based in their home city, the demo release that saw    them make waves in Israel's metal scene, As Jerusalem    Burns (also the title of their debut album the following    year), caught the eyes of the tabloid press. \"We were    approached by a big newspaper, and they used the headline 'A    Satanic cult is existing is Jerusalem.' We were shocked. The    authorities were suddenly interested in meeting me, but Ashmedi    is my stage name so they couldn't find us. The newspaper at    least did say 'They didn't kill anyone, we're not giving you    their information.' However, the police then started arresting    a lot of metalheads, so we kind of laid low. I left the country    for a little bit, for two months. When I came back, they had    much bigger problems - they forgot about us.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Once or twice the band have found themselves caught in the edge    of the region's conflicts. Ashmedi remembers a bus exploding    above the band's basement studio. They were playing so loud    that they didn't hear it, only to emerge four hours later to    dark, empty streets and worried families. \"It was the 90s, lots    of buses had been blowing up,\" Ashmedi says. \"It was 50 metres    away from us that the bus blew up, and my mum had seen it on    TV. All our parents were freaking out, because they closed the    road, and there's no phone, nothing, we were busy playing    music. We went out four hours later and it was dark. We just    saw a couple of police cars and they're cleaning the street, as    if nothing happened.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1998 Melechesh relocated to Europe, first to the    Netherlands, and then to Germany, although Israel for the most    part was not an intolerant place to be a metal fan. \"Israel is    quite liberal to the Israelis, and to the Westerners,\" Ashmedi    says. \"Tel Aviv is one of the most liberal places in the world,    and in Jerusalem there's a liberals as well as the religious    people. In West Jerusalem where the Israeli and Jewish    communities are, if they see a headbanger they don't care about    it. They see anyone who's not a Hasidic Jew as not a Hasidic    Jew, they don't see it as headbanger or not headbanger. And the    liberals, they don't give a shit. In East Jerusalem, in the    Arabic side, [metal] was new because there wasn't any    headbangers there, so when I walked there with long hair with    spikes and stuff they looked at me weirdly. But then [also]    they knew I'm the foreign guy, the Armenian-Turkish guy.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Things have improved further still, and an underground metal    band can draw a healthy crowd of 100 or so depending on their    network, which this in part is thanks to Melechesh's status as    trailblazers of the genre. \"People are now actually proud of    us, and in a Palestinian Time Out magazine Melechesh was the    first artist of the month to have been been black metal.\" That    said, as Ashmedi points out, Israel is \"a very controversial,    unique place, and I'm not a spokesperson or an ambassador for    Israel. There's multiple societies in one country, and it    differs [from one society to another]. If you're in East    Jerusalem there's a few rockers but not one CD in the shops or    anyone playing any rock songs, it just doesn't exist. If you're    in West Jerusalem, it's still a niche but there are one or two    rock bars that occasionally play metal. In Tel Aviv there's a    couple of international bands playing there.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    It was the practical benefits of moving to Europe rather than    any drawbacks in Israeli society that prompted their    relocation. \"It's more fun being in Israel, like in Tel Aviv or    something, because people are more social and there's a buzz    there, but also there's less facilities. In Germany it's the    metal centre of the world, it's part of their DNA, you see    metal music on commercials. In Germany it's part of the    culture; in Israel it's just a unique subculture.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    IRAN  AKVAN  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    In Iran, a musician known as Vizaresa wants to alter unfair    perceptions of his country through his singular project Akvan.    His focus is on the pre-Islamic, Zoroastrian Iran, using    traditional instruments as part of a claustrophobic,    uncompromising breed of genuinely terrifying black metal,    drawing on the rich landscapes and deep Persian mythology of    the area. The name Akvan comes from the name of a demon in the    Shahnameh, the national epic poem of Iran, the antagonist of    the god of Zoroastrianism, Ahura Mazda.  <\/p>\n<p>    Before the Islamic revolution of 1979, Vizaresa's parents left    Iran for the United States, where he spent a childhood    enraptured by the power of heavy metal. \"It moves me in a way    nothing else can. For me, listening to metal is a very visceral    and emotional experience. I am inspired by other forms of    music, but metal is something different altogether. In the same    vein as classical Western or [traditional Iranian] Sonati    music, it's just so much more epic and intense. It's difficult    to express in words. The lyrical content often deals with    confrontational topics that require and encourage individual    thought.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    For the last few years he has been based in Iran, \"to gain a    better understanding of my ancestral home\", and he releases his    music via Bandcamp, on a tremendous series of EPs that take on    themes like the ancient Persian hero Cyrus the Great. Speaking    via email, he expresses a deep love for his country. \"I hope to    inspire fans and curious passers-by to conduct their own    research into the ancient and epic history of Iran. Hopefully,    they will come away with a more positive outlook in regard to    this beautiful country. They will probably find that the Iran    they hear about on their television set is nothing like the    real thing,\" he says. \"I would like them to see Iran as it is -    an ancient, captivating and ecologically diverse land filled    with romance, adventure, amazing people, exquisite cuisine,    gorgeous art, a lustrous history, and a culture that has    influenced every corner of the globe. For some odd reason, we    are taught to judge nations based on their leaders and    governments, and we lose sight of the actual people who live    there. It's a shame, really. We have so much to gain from    embracing one another, and so much to lose when we reject the    opportunity to do so. And I hope my music, a mix of East and    West, will serve as a model of what can be achieved when two    different and seemingly unrelated elements are joined as one.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    However hearfelt his love for Iran, however, in his approach to    the ancient past Vizaresa takes a direct stance against the    current Iranian regime, and although the stakes are not quite    as high as in Saudi Arabia, like Al Namrood he has chosen to    remain largely anonymous for the sake of his art. \"As any    scholar of history would know, Islam is not the original    religion of Iran. Just like Christianity in Norway, Islam was    forced on the Zoroastrian population through conquest and war.    And as a result, our original culture faded, sort of. Although    Islam was adopted, the Iranian culture largely survived. Since    the thematic and lyrical elements of Akvan promote a return to    pre-Islamic Iran, many of my songs are intended as opposition    anthems.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    He says he has to \"play it safe\", to avoid repercussions. Being    a musician is not a crime in Iran, but \"underground musicians,    especially practitioners of metal, are automatically associated    with devil-worship, blasphemy, apostasy, and expressing    anti-regime sentiment. The punishment for these charges if    found guilty: death.\" Working in his public life as a    behavioural analyst, helping children and adults with autism,    he says he looks like \"the last person you'd suspect\" of being    a black metal musician. \"I don't really talk about my music or    personal beliefs outside of trusted circles and refrain from    making a public spectacle of myself,\" Vizaresa continues. \"I    don't wear band T-shirts with overt themes of blasphemy and the    occult in public. I think it also has a lot to do with my    personality and my professional career. Regardless of where I    am in the world, I have to maintain a professional appearance.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    In Iran, social media websites are blocked. Circumnavigating    that with a VPN slows internet speeds to the point where    uploading a song onto YouTube becomes an ordeal. Meanwhile any    \"Western\" music has to be acquired from underground bootleg    shops, which mostly sell pop and rarely metal. As such, any    developing Iranian metal scene is somewhat scattered and    stilted. \"No bands tour here, local or international. Merch?    Forget about it. So yeah, not a real happening place for metal    fans,\" says Vizaresa, who has never played or even attended a    live show. The only option for gigs are taken at bands' own    risks in secluded locations - a house party beyond the city    limits, for example. \"I've heard that in the past, certain    venues allowed bands to perform without vocals for a few    limited shows, although audience members were required to    remain seated throughout the performance. This obviously didn't    last long.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    As a US citizen, Vizaresa has the option to return to the    States and avail himself of regular shows, self-expression, and    a chance to capitalise on the waves his work has made in the    West. Given the metal scene in Iran is, as he puts it, so    \"scattered and isolated\", it does raise the question of why    exactly he remains. \"I actually like it here,\" he says. \"I    mean, life here certainly has its issues and there are things I    see everyday that I am completely opposed to, but the same    could be said of the US and most anywhere in the world. The    general population, the people of Iran, not the government, are    very modern, sophisticated, and hospitable. The culture here is    infinitely rich and the streets have a very vibrant feel to    them. It also helps that the local cuisine is absolutely    delicious. Almost everywhere you turn, there is some historical    landmark accompanied by its own myths and legends.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Vizaresa's is a different Iran, a country defined not by the    images of tyranny and repression we're often shown, but by its    ordinary culture and rich history. \"It's actually quite sad and    frustrating, because here you have this amazing place, filled    to the brim with breathtaking landscapes, culture, history, and    a noble people, and on the other hand you have this  stuff     that completely ruins it. I guess that's why I do what I do. I    try to invoke a sense of return to the majesty, to the Iran    that was and still can be.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    EGYPT  TWENTY YEARS ON  <\/p>\n<p>    Inquisition,    live in Cairo, 2016  <\/p>\n<p>    In Egypt today, though many remain wary because of the events    of the past, for the most part the nation's metal scene has    largely re-emerged. As an anonymous fan puts it: \"I really    think the state and authorities also have matured and on the    contrary would rather have kids busy with riffs, Satan and    drugs than politics, no?\"  <\/p>\n<p>    In 2015, however, one member of the scene, Nader Sadek, found    himself facing trouble after booking the legendary American    black metal band Inquisition for a show. \"People watched with    jaws on the floor,\" he tells tQ. \"Four hundred people came to    the show - it was amazing.\" He'd had successful shows in the    past that had gone without a hitch, both as a performer and    promoting bands such as Aborted and Alkaloid, but two days    after the Inquisition show there were claims from the country's    Musicians Syndicate about the gig that echoed the    sensationalised events of 1997. \"[It was claimed we were] all    cloaked in stars of David, with a Qatari DJ performing, and    together we were worshipping the devil. Of course it was all    nonsense.\" The head of the Syndicate, Hany Shaker, said Satanic    music was being brought to Egypt as part of a Western    conspiracy to spread \"chaos and immorality\".  <\/p>\n<p>    The Syndicate later claimed it was merely concerned that the    bands playing did not have the correct permits, but Sadek    scored a victory when he appeared with one of its    representatives on Egyptian national television. \"The hostess    was educated and we basically exposed the Syndicate:    uneducated, uncultured and inconsistent in their lies,\" he    says. \"In an attempt to salvage themselves they said it was a    case of missing permits, which made them look worse, as they    basically admitted to lying.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Yet in a key progression from the reaction that metal fans    received 20 years ago, there was far less public hysteria.    \"Something quite amazing happened,\" he says. \"The intellectual    media came to my defence, and so did [high-profile Egyptian    billionaire businessman] Naguib Sawiris. The Syndicate was    ridiculed.\" His battle for what he sees as freedom of    expression within heavy metal is far from over, however. Last    year, his plans to bring Brazilian metal legends Sepultura to    the country were shut down, and Sadek was arrested. He is    currently involved in a legal battle with Hany Shaker, the head    of the Musician's Union, whom he is suing for defamation and    libel. Worrying, too, is the fact that in 2015 the Egyptian    government granted the Syndicate powers of arrest, though some    Egyptian musicians believe the practical effect of that is    simply to make it easier for the Syndicate to extort bribes in    order to let shows go ahead.  <\/p>\n<p>    Heavy Metal in the Middle East  <\/p>\n<p>    Fans enjoy    Inquisition, live in Cairo, 2016  <\/p>\n<p>    These interviews cover just five countries, and comprise just    snapshots of Middle Eastern heavy metal. It would be impossible    to surmise its place among host of nations, each with its own    cultural, religious and geographical pecularities. There is no    such single definition of a Middle Eastern metalhead  some    have endured torture and imprisonment, others risk their lives    on a daily basis and must isolate themselves in the extreme for    the love of their art, while others lead the way for diverse,    accepting creative communities.  <\/p>\n<p>    The common thread between them all, however, is of utter    devotion to their craft, whatever the consequences. There is    something about metal as a genre, so often the refuge of    music's true outsiders, that has always bred an extra edge to    the dedication of its fans. Nowhere is this more apparent than    in Al-Namrood's insistence to keep risking death for their    cause, in the persistence of a band like Blaakyum, for whom    another witch hunt could begin at any moment, in Akvan and    Melechesh's defiant promotion of the region's beauty, history,    and above all, people.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read the original post: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/thequietus.com\/articles\/22565-heavy-metal-in-the-middle-east-al-namrood-melechesh-akvan-blaakyum-nader-sadek\" title=\"Witch Hunts, Resurgence and Defiance: Heavy Metal In The Middle East - The Quietus\">Witch Hunts, Resurgence and Defiance: Heavy Metal In The Middle East - The Quietus<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Inquistion in Egypt, image courtesy of Nader Sadek \"Satanist\", to them, equals homosexuality; killing cats and drinking their blood \" \"Suddenly, in front of me, hell broke loose. It was bad. So bad They are hitting you everywhere and they are pushing you in every direction and they had dogs People started to faint and I thought it to be wise to throw yourself under a pile of fainting people <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/modern-satanism\/witch-hunts-resurgence-and-defiance-heavy-metal-in-the-middle-east-the-quietus.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[431567],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-218892","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-modern-satanism"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/218892"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=218892"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/218892\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=218892"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=218892"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=218892"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}