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Hip Hop Revolution

In the midst of the Arab Spring there is a group of dedicated young hip hop artists who are using their medium to disseminate revolutionary ideas. This piece documents how hip hop has impacted on the way young people interact with the revolution in Tunisia, Morocco, Egypt, Libya and elsewhere.

By Ulysses
Published:

Hip hop is a fundamentally subversive genre. It has become a universal medium of social and political  expression  for young, dissident, and marginalized people everywhere. What Arabic hip hop has given the Arab world is a widely-accessible  and  unfiltered medium for disseminating revolutionary ideas. It's important not to overstate the  influence of Arabic hip hop on the Arab uprisings, though. Arabic hip  hop is an underground phenomenon. Since there's no real Arabic hip hop industry to speak of, Arabic-language rap artists must distribute their music online or  sign with western  labels. Despite  this, the genre's popularity and  influence are growing remarkably fast because Arabic hip hop powerfully speaks to our  desire for dignity,  human rights, and a brighter future.

The internet and the revolution

Social media and expanded internet access weren't the cause of the Arab uprisings, but they were crucial to their  success. In 2008, massive protests erupted in the  southern Tunisian mining town  of Redeyef. For six months, 3,000 police besieged  this city of 25,000  people while its citizens bravely demonstrated  against corruption and chronic unemployment.  Because of the state's  violent repression and its stranglehold on media  outlets, the protests  failed to spread or gain much attention. Without developed social  networks, the thousands of Redeyef's citizens who obtained protest  footage on CDs or computers had no way to let most  Tunisians see it. Fahem Boukaddous, a Tunisian journalist who covered the protests, said, "In 2008, Facebook wasn't at all well-known, especially in poor cities like here." In fact, fewer than 30,000 Tunisians were on Facebook   when Redeyef exploded in early 2008.  By the end of 2010, Tunisia's internet  landscape had been transformed. A January 2011 survey found that Tunisia, a country of 10 million, had 1.97 million Facebook users   - 18.6% of Tunisia's entire population and 54.73% of its online population. By this time, Facebook, along with YouTube and sites such as ReverbNation.com, had become the primary medium for   distributing Arabic hip hop. The internet's great gift was that it  allowed Tunisians and Arabs, for the first time, to effortlessly share their testimony with  each other and with  the world.

The aura of hip hop

You can legally download almost any revolutionary Arabic hip hop song  for free online - that's exactly what the artists want. As Mark Levine argues,  the  uncommodified,   do-it-yourself character of this hip hop gives it “the aura” that pre-modernity artistic expression enjoyed. This aura, which "previously had given art such aesthetic, and thus social  power by highlighting its singularity, irreplaceable and incommensurable value, was for all practical purposes lost" because of the commercialization of the music industry in the twentieth century. That's a really complicated way of saying, "Arabic rap is awesome because its rappers aren't sell-outs."  Commercialization inevitably leads artists to compromise their politics  and their message because every music industry is run by rich, powerful  people with a huge investment  in the status quo. The Arabic music industry is especially reactionary and patriarchal. "A  lot of the music that comes    from here, from the region, is pop," El Général told Lauren Bohn. "It's   all the same and it isn't art. They're making harmful inroads into the arts, actually. There's no engagement. And music without engagement isn't art." Many Arab artists, including El Deeb and Arabian Knightz, have lamented how foreign media supports and promotes Arabic hip hop more than  Arabic media does. The reason  is simple. Arabic hip hop scares Arab  elites because it's profoundly subversive, while western elites like Arabic hip hop because it makes the revolutions seem  non-radical and friendly to the west. To understand Arabic hip hop, though, you need to approach it on its own terms, not on yours.

El Général and the Tunisian Revolution

On November 7, 2010, Hamada Ben-Amor, a young rapper from Sfax known as  "El Général," posted this jeremiad against the regime of Tunisian  dictator Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali on Youtube and Facebook (Full lyrics here):

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"Rais Lebled" became an immediate underground  sensation. The secret police bugged El Général's phone,  blocked his Facebook page, and tailed him wherever he  went. On December 17, Mohamed Bouazizi's self-immolation sparked pro-democracy demonstrations across  Tunisia. The world media hardly noticed. Then, on January 6, state security, allegedly acting on the orders  of the president himself, arrested El Général. The arrest brought Tunisia far  more international  attention than it had witnessed on any single day since the  trouble began. For a few days, the voice of a  21 year-old rapper from Sfax was more powerful than the voice of the dictator of Tunisia. The regime released El Général a few days later. It didn't matter. On January 14, 2011, Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia after the Tunisian military refused to guarantee his safety. In his place, a caretaker government promising a transition to full democracy came to power.

There's a delicious irony in Tunisian rap music's role in the events that led to Ben Ali's overthrow. In 2006, the Tunisian and French governments sponsored a (bad) film that promotes hip hop as a counter to jihadi ideology. Much as it used "state feminism" to co-opt women's movements, the regime  appropriated Tunisian hip hop for its own ends. The government controlled song lyrics, concert licenses, CD  distribution, and all TV and radio access. Tunisia's rappers had a choice: make apolitical, commercial  rap and have the chance to earn a livelihood or go underground, rap  freely, and face poverty, imprisonment, torture, and death. Most Tunisian rappers chose the first option.

Before the revolution, El Général wasn't well-known even  within  Tunisia's small  underground community. Now, he's an  international  celebrity and hip hop enjoys wide respect throughout  Tunisian society. Even  al-Nahda leader Rachid Ghannouchi enjoys it. El Général was interviewed on Al-Jazeera and named one of TIME's 100 most influential people in the world. Demonstrators in Cairo's Tahrir Square and Bahrain's capital of 
Manama  chanted "Rais lebled" in the streets. Today, the only person who's a bigger icon  of the Tunisian Revolution  is Mohamed Bouazizi himself. As El  Général told Lauren Bohn, "Arab rap is finally on the map, and we're blowing up  the world."

[For more on El Général, click here]

Algeria and Morocco: the cradle of Arabic hip hop

Francophone hip-hop's influence helped make Morocco and Algeria the first real Arabic hip hop scenes in the early 1990s. Lotfi Double Kanon, Arabic hop hop's most influential MC, hails from Algeria. Born in 1974 into a modest  family from Annaba, Lotfi started his rap career while earning his Master's in  engineering in the late 1990s during the height of Algeria's horrific civil war. His music attacks  le pouvoir ("the elite") and speaks for the voiceless youth of his dispossessed generation. The Algerian government hates him, of course, but it generally leaves him unhindered. (Full lyrics here)

The Moroccan rap scene's  size, longevity, commercial sophistication, and Arabic dialect set it  apart from other Arab rap scenes to a certain degree. Moroccan hip hop  is deeply commercialized and closely integrated into the Arabic music industry, which reflects both the genuine success of Moroccan hip hop and the compromises with power that it's made.  Moroccan hip hop gets numbers of hits on YouTube - as many as several million per video - that dwarf those of other Arabic hip hop scenes. Yet, as Zahir Rahman pointed out on Twitter, "The problem with Moroccan hip hop is that the big namers get co-opted by the government." Fnaire's "Mat9drsh bladi" was used as a national unity theme song by the Moroccan government. Don Bigg is a reactionary who performed at  the outlandish, government-sponsored Mawazine festival  that outraged February 20 activists. At the same time, Morocco has some  of the bravest revolutionary hip hop anywhere. The pro-February 20 rapper L7a9ed (Haked) has been imprisoned by the government on trumped-up assault charges. Soultana, a young MC from Rabat, is an incredibly brave woman - just check out her video "Sawt Nssa" and you'll see what I mean.

Malikah: revolutionary Arabic hip hop ventures into the mainstream

Lebanese hip hop started taking shape in the mid-1990s. Artists such as Rayess Bek, Fareeq el Atrach, and Malikah 961 make up a vibrant Lebanese scene today. Malikah is an absolutely fearless MC who vies with Palestine's Shadia Mansour  for the title of "The First Lady of Arabic Hip Hop." Like Soultana, Malikah's infuses her music with revolutionary themes and powerful advocacy for Arab women. Here's "Ya imra2a" ("O woman!") [Full lyrics here].

The Saudi rapper Qusai, the first host of MTV's Hip HopNa, makes some conscious hip hop but nonetheless fully represents the Arab music industry and the powerful more generally (he made a video for, of all things, Mastercard). Fredwreck, the other host, is an American who produces for Snoop Dogg and other stalwarts of the American music industry. By working with people like them, Malikah has become successful and famous. The industry, however, will use every tool it has to dilute the politically and socially revolutionary message of her music. In the rap game, materialism is the enemy of the subversive. Malikah needs to be very careful about this. In this video, she shows AFP her new Mercedes and says, "This is my car. I've  dreamed of buying a car for years. You understand? It must have class  because I am Malikah and Malikah must have the car she deserves."  Malikah is a true revolutionary, but she will always  have to fight the  industry ferociously  to maintain her authenticity and her artistic  freedom. She's such a strong woman, though, that I think she's up to the challenge.

Ibn Thabit and the Libyan Revolution

Although he's largely unknown in the western press, Ibn Thabit, Libya's leading rapper, enjoys almost universal recognition among the Libyan diaspora and a huge  fan  base in Libya itself. His pseudonym comes from Hassan Ibn Thabit, the favorite poet of the  Prophet Muhammad. Over the past four years, Ibn  Thabit routinely took astonishing risks by releasing his music while moving between living abroad and in Libya itself. His obsession with toppling Gaddafi and his indifference towards fame, money, or other topics give his music as pure a revolutionary ethos as you'll find anywhere. This song came out just days before the Libyan Revolution began (Full lyrics here):

Ibn Thabit's music ranges  all the way from love song (Tripoli is Calling, Libya: A Love Song) to diss (Shukrun, Shayateen Al Inss) to celebration (Misrata, Mabruk el Horria, Benghazi, Ms. Revolution) to mourning (Martyrs, Shohada2na) to Arabic (Western Mountains) to R&B (Tassa 7amra, La Shek) to gangsta (Temla, Lookin for Freedom) to whimsical (Hallucination Pills, Warrior Song). His songs tear down Gaddafi's regime,  celebrate Libya's society, culture, and people, and explore how to  build a new, free Libya. He promotes reconciliation  by   giving shout-outs to all elements of Libyan society and by arguing that vigilantism and revenge killing have no place in the new Libya. A few weeks ago, Ibn Thabit shocked his fans by announcing his retirement from hip hop (video here). Now, he says,  he wants to help build a new Libya in a new way.

[For more on Ibn Thabit, click here]

Egypt and January 25

In Mubarak's Egypt, unlike Libya, Syria, or Bahrain (check out "Athletes of Bahrain"), artists could manage to attach their real names to revolutionary forms of expression while keeping themselves out of jail. Artists such as El Deeb (video here), Ramy Donjewan (video here),  Zap Tharwat, MC Amin, Revolutionary Records (video here), and Ismailia Soldiers created a vibrant revolutionary underground scene in the years preceding the revolution. Arabian Knightz even managed to get a little play on Egyptian satellite channels (video here). By being a direct forum for revolutionary expression, Egyptian Hip hop played a small but key role in the decade-long buildup of the movements, organizational infrastructure, and political consciousness that led to the January 25 Revolution. Now, as the massive recent anti-SCAF protests demonstrate, hip hop is an established part of Egypt's political discourse. (Full lyrics here)

Ulysses can be found on twitter and at his blog


Ulysses

Ulysses blogs on Revolutionary Arab Rap and examines social and political change in the Middle East and North Africa through the lens of Arabic hip hop.

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Hip hop and the Arab uprisings

By Ulysses
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