Europe | Singing past Gaza

Why Eurovision won’t boot out Israel

Keeping the contest apolitical proves harder than ever

Eden Golan rehearsing her song, “Hurricane”,  for the Eurovision Song Contest, 2024.
A hurricane of protestsPhotograph: Sarah Louise Bennett/EBU

The rules of the Eurovision song contest are clear: no politics. That might not seem hard for a pop-music showcase, but when contestants represent their countries, politics tends to get involved. The victory in 2014 of Conchita Wurst, a drag queen from Austria, seemed to rebuke Russia’s homophobic government, which had invaded Ukraine. Two years later Ukraine won with a song by a Crimean Tatar about Stalin’s deportation of her ancestors.

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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Singing past Gaza”

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