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Batsheva cheered at Edinburgh Festival

Israeli dance company braves the protests and is cheered by audiences

September 6, 2012 16:00
An anti-Batsheva protester burning his ticket outside the concert hall ((c)2012 The Edinburgh Reporter)

By

Jennifer Lipman,

Jennifer Lipman

2 min read

This year’s Edinburgh International Festival was based on peacefulness and sharing cultures. And despite the best efforts of anti-Israel activists, when Israel’s Batsheva Dance Company left the stage after its final performance last weekend to a standing ovation, they did so in this spirit.

Audience members had to make their way through a crowd of protesters before entering the venue, and each of the three shows was interrupted a number of times by activists carrying banners saying “Free Palestine” and shouting about tickets being covered in blood.

A year to the day after the Israel Philharmonic Prom broadcast was suspended by the BBC, supporters of a cultural boycott of Israel turned their attention to Scotland.

Like Habima and like the IPO, Batsheva had been targeted since EIF director Jonathan Mills revealed that the Israeli dancers would be at the festival performing their acclaimed “Hora”.

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