Shocking Shaker
Posted: Thu Aug 29, 2013 11:11 pm
I am aware that some of you do not share my taste in music and probably live happy lives without any new CDs from the talented singer Fadel Shaker. I have tried, but simply cannot resist listening to his music every day, and I am not the only one. It is pleasant pop, beautiful tarab and wonderful interpretations of classic Arab and Egyptian songs – all very danceable.
- Bennu
What Happened to Fadel Shaker?
Posted on: July 4 2013
Translated by: Pascale Menassa
By: An Al-Monitor Correspondent in Beirut for Al-Monitor Lebanon Pulse Posted on July 4.
إقرأ باللغة العربية
It is going to be a long time before the Fadel Shaker enigma is solved or forgotten. The Lebanese singer acquired fame and fortune in a matter of years and then turned into a jihadist supporter of the Salafist sheikh Ahmad al-Assir. Suddenly, he was a wanted man, pursued by the authorities, after vanishing with his “mentor” following their defeat at the hands of the Lebanese Army on June 24, in Sidon, in south Lebanon.
The path Shaker decided to walk shocked the Lebanese people. Lebanon had never before witnessed one of its singers rediscover his religion and return to the faith. Before Shaker, the stories of TV stars or movie actors who suddenly appeared veiled, declaring that they were forsaking the world of entertainment, had been unique to Egypt, published on the pages of magazines found on the counters at beauty salons and read by the Lebanese for fun.
The Lebanese had only experienced one similar precedent, though a bit different from that of Fadel Shaker. Antoine al-Khawli was a Lebanese singer famous in Lebanon and most other Arab countries in the mid-1980s and into the late 1990s. He went by the stage name Rabih al-Khawli. At the peak of his fame and fortune, two painful incidents befell Khawli: He lost one of his brothers to illness, and a car accident claimed the life of another person in his life. These tragedies changed the man. Antoine, aka Rabih, took an extended sabbatical from the world of singing and went looking for answers to the meaning of life and the mysteries of pain and death.
Khawli's retreat soon turned into a way of life. He quietly left the worlds of art and performance, without a declaration, speech or interview. In the late 1990s, he joined a Maronite monastery that trains apprentices on Mount Lebanon. At that point, Rabih became known as Father Antoine. Ten-plus years have passed since he took his religious vows and made a decision to spend his time in prayer, worship, poverty, asceticism and isolation.
Fadel Shaker, however, has shown the Lebanese another side of the equation that they had never heard of or known. In 2005, Shaker, who hails from Sidon, was one of the most popular emerging Lebanese singers in the Arab world. He was known for his exquisite voice and singing style and focused on romance, love and passion. In short order, Shaker experienced the transition from the slums of the southern capital to fortune and fame. Around that time, Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, a Sunni, was assassinated. Shaker is also a Sunni. After Hariri's death and the subsequent turmoil of events, including rising tensions between Sunnis and Shiites in different countries in the region, rumors began circulating in the media that Shaker had a fundamentalist brother who led a group of Palestinian jihadists in the Ein al-Hilweh refugee camp, near Sidon.
In 2008, news of a violent conflict between Shaker and Ragheb Alama, a famous Lebanese Shiite singer, spread like wildfire. As the story goes, the dispute, stoked by a political disagreement, began on a plane that both singers happened to be on. Their conflict intensified after Alama allegedly received death threats from Shaker in summer 2009, and a group of armed men tried to break into Alama’s house. It was then that the Lebanese people saw another face of the famously romantic singer.
Shaker did not leave his fans impatiently waiting. As soon as Assir launched his jihadist movement in Sidon, Shaker became his shadow. He grew a thick beard, just like the other Salafists, and became Assir’s right hand man in the jihadist group. Funding the movement with the fortune he had earned from his singing career, Shaker became the movement's media star and its most provocative voice. He soon announced that he was quitting singing altogether; his speeches then focused solely on his enemies, the infidels, whom he often described as pigs and threatened to kill. It is no coincidence that Shaker's last appearance, available on YouTube, was from a hideout for Assir in Sidon, before the army burst in. He bragged about his men having killed two soldiers and promised that the best is yet to come. Shaker soon vanished, however, and took second place on the Lebanese authorities’ most wanted list of dangerous and notorious criminals. First on the list is his mentor, Assir.
Most Lebanese are still wondering what could possibly have turned a rich, famous and successful singer into a wanted, extremist Salafist? Khawli left the world of singing to worship God, pray in a hermitage and seek peace of mind, but what could have pushed Shaker to find God in violence, hatred and murder? How could a person who had discovered the pleasures of this world leave everything behind for a small alley in a neighborhood near Sidon no more than a few meters long?
There have been similar cases in the world of Islamic jihadism, but they tend to involve two things that have typically driven suicidal jihadism: the Palestinian cause, which is a sacred call for people treading that path, and enmity toward the United States — considered the “devil incarnate” — and the war against it imbued with religious fervor. This is how suicidal Islamists linked their affiliations to “major causes,” seemingly so irrational that they render the behavior of jihadists inconceivable. Shaker, however, did not choose Palestine or America. Instead, he chose to fight a small war in a narrow alley in which he spent all the savings of his previous life and, apparently, his next one.
This is the enigma of Fadel Shaker, and it will be a long time before it is forgotten or understood.
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/origina ... z2dOUDU3lx
Fadel Shaker: Crooner Turned Fugitive Militant
by Naharnet Newsdesk 25 June 2013, 15:59
Once adored by women for his warm voice and good looks, crooner Fadel Shaker followed an unlikely path to become an Islamist militant now on the run with fellow fugitive Sheikh Ahmed al-Asir.
The pair are now being sought in a nationwide manhunt after clashes between Asir and his Salafist supporters and the military in the southern city of Sidon that left 17 soldiers dead.
Though he grew to become one of the Arab world's most famous singers, Shaker suffered through a miserable childhood of poverty, which a onetime musician friend says helped lead him down a dark path later in life.
Now in his mid-forties, Shaker was born to a Palestinian mother and Lebanese father in the country's biggest Palestinian refugee camp, Ain al-Helweh.
Born Fadel Shmandur, he began his career as a popular wedding singer who performed from the rooftops of the camp, an over-crowded and hopeless place.
"He has a beautiful voice. Hearing him live was even more beautiful than a recording," a former friend of Shaker's told Agence France Presse on condition of anonymity.
"But he has always been naive and gullible. The more of a star he became, the further he strayed from the people who really loved him. He constantly ended up in bad company," said the friend, who lost touch with him some years ago.
In his prime, Shaker sang love songs that were instant region-wide hits. He released his first album in the late nineties, and continued to perform until 2011.
"He is a very sensitive, extremely reserved person," said Shaker's friend.
"When his Palestinian wife left him, he would cry on stage as he sang, thinking of her. He is very emotional."
Shaker's immense popularity was boosted by the fact he was also a defender of Palestinian rights, and was granted honorary Palestinian citizenship by President Mahmoud Abbas.
Shaker also opened a restaurant in Sidon and pondered swapping his music career for a less hectic life, closer to his three children.
"I knew he would leave music one day, but I would never have thought he would join Asir. It's such a shame, he has such talent. I feel sorry for him," his friend told AFP.
Shaker's brother had long been a strict Muslim, and he tried for years to convince him to leave music.
But it wasn't until after the outbreak of an uprising in Syria against President Bashar Assad that Shaker became convinced that singing is haram, or forbidden in Islam.
Shaker soon became the best-known face of Asir's small movement of openly sectarian, Sunni radicals and praised the cleric as "the lion of the Sunnis".
He grew a beard and became a highlight of Asir's rallies, helping attract attention to the phenomenon of Sunni radicalism in the small Mediterranean country.
Performing during a television interview earlier this year, Shaker swapped his love songs for a chant about jihad and death.
Sitting by Asir, Shaker smiled and sang as sweetly as ever: "God gave me the gift and invited me to join the jihad... Mother, don't cry for me... Death does not frighten me, and my wish is to become a martyr."
His latest media appearance came in an amateur video in which he boasts: "We got rid of two of your swine, of your dogs... God is great."
The video went viral, with many alleging Shaker referred to killing army troops. Others said the footage referred to earlier clashes between Asir supporters and pro-Hizbullah fighters.
Judicial authorities issued a detention order for Asir and 123 of his supporters, including Shaker, whose brother was killed in weekend clashes with the army in Sidon.
"Fadel's story makes me sad, but in a way I am not surprised. He has always been easy to manipulate," his friend told AFP.
"These people have used him. Without him, no one would have heard of them."
http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/88179
- Bennu
What Happened to Fadel Shaker?
Posted on: July 4 2013
Translated by: Pascale Menassa
By: An Al-Monitor Correspondent in Beirut for Al-Monitor Lebanon Pulse Posted on July 4.
إقرأ باللغة العربية
It is going to be a long time before the Fadel Shaker enigma is solved or forgotten. The Lebanese singer acquired fame and fortune in a matter of years and then turned into a jihadist supporter of the Salafist sheikh Ahmad al-Assir. Suddenly, he was a wanted man, pursued by the authorities, after vanishing with his “mentor” following their defeat at the hands of the Lebanese Army on June 24, in Sidon, in south Lebanon.
The path Shaker decided to walk shocked the Lebanese people. Lebanon had never before witnessed one of its singers rediscover his religion and return to the faith. Before Shaker, the stories of TV stars or movie actors who suddenly appeared veiled, declaring that they were forsaking the world of entertainment, had been unique to Egypt, published on the pages of magazines found on the counters at beauty salons and read by the Lebanese for fun.
The Lebanese had only experienced one similar precedent, though a bit different from that of Fadel Shaker. Antoine al-Khawli was a Lebanese singer famous in Lebanon and most other Arab countries in the mid-1980s and into the late 1990s. He went by the stage name Rabih al-Khawli. At the peak of his fame and fortune, two painful incidents befell Khawli: He lost one of his brothers to illness, and a car accident claimed the life of another person in his life. These tragedies changed the man. Antoine, aka Rabih, took an extended sabbatical from the world of singing and went looking for answers to the meaning of life and the mysteries of pain and death.
Khawli's retreat soon turned into a way of life. He quietly left the worlds of art and performance, without a declaration, speech or interview. In the late 1990s, he joined a Maronite monastery that trains apprentices on Mount Lebanon. At that point, Rabih became known as Father Antoine. Ten-plus years have passed since he took his religious vows and made a decision to spend his time in prayer, worship, poverty, asceticism and isolation.
Fadel Shaker, however, has shown the Lebanese another side of the equation that they had never heard of or known. In 2005, Shaker, who hails from Sidon, was one of the most popular emerging Lebanese singers in the Arab world. He was known for his exquisite voice and singing style and focused on romance, love and passion. In short order, Shaker experienced the transition from the slums of the southern capital to fortune and fame. Around that time, Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, a Sunni, was assassinated. Shaker is also a Sunni. After Hariri's death and the subsequent turmoil of events, including rising tensions between Sunnis and Shiites in different countries in the region, rumors began circulating in the media that Shaker had a fundamentalist brother who led a group of Palestinian jihadists in the Ein al-Hilweh refugee camp, near Sidon.
In 2008, news of a violent conflict between Shaker and Ragheb Alama, a famous Lebanese Shiite singer, spread like wildfire. As the story goes, the dispute, stoked by a political disagreement, began on a plane that both singers happened to be on. Their conflict intensified after Alama allegedly received death threats from Shaker in summer 2009, and a group of armed men tried to break into Alama’s house. It was then that the Lebanese people saw another face of the famously romantic singer.
Shaker did not leave his fans impatiently waiting. As soon as Assir launched his jihadist movement in Sidon, Shaker became his shadow. He grew a thick beard, just like the other Salafists, and became Assir’s right hand man in the jihadist group. Funding the movement with the fortune he had earned from his singing career, Shaker became the movement's media star and its most provocative voice. He soon announced that he was quitting singing altogether; his speeches then focused solely on his enemies, the infidels, whom he often described as pigs and threatened to kill. It is no coincidence that Shaker's last appearance, available on YouTube, was from a hideout for Assir in Sidon, before the army burst in. He bragged about his men having killed two soldiers and promised that the best is yet to come. Shaker soon vanished, however, and took second place on the Lebanese authorities’ most wanted list of dangerous and notorious criminals. First on the list is his mentor, Assir.
Most Lebanese are still wondering what could possibly have turned a rich, famous and successful singer into a wanted, extremist Salafist? Khawli left the world of singing to worship God, pray in a hermitage and seek peace of mind, but what could have pushed Shaker to find God in violence, hatred and murder? How could a person who had discovered the pleasures of this world leave everything behind for a small alley in a neighborhood near Sidon no more than a few meters long?
There have been similar cases in the world of Islamic jihadism, but they tend to involve two things that have typically driven suicidal jihadism: the Palestinian cause, which is a sacred call for people treading that path, and enmity toward the United States — considered the “devil incarnate” — and the war against it imbued with religious fervor. This is how suicidal Islamists linked their affiliations to “major causes,” seemingly so irrational that they render the behavior of jihadists inconceivable. Shaker, however, did not choose Palestine or America. Instead, he chose to fight a small war in a narrow alley in which he spent all the savings of his previous life and, apparently, his next one.
This is the enigma of Fadel Shaker, and it will be a long time before it is forgotten or understood.
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/origina ... z2dOUDU3lx
Fadel Shaker: Crooner Turned Fugitive Militant
by Naharnet Newsdesk 25 June 2013, 15:59
Once adored by women for his warm voice and good looks, crooner Fadel Shaker followed an unlikely path to become an Islamist militant now on the run with fellow fugitive Sheikh Ahmed al-Asir.
The pair are now being sought in a nationwide manhunt after clashes between Asir and his Salafist supporters and the military in the southern city of Sidon that left 17 soldiers dead.
Though he grew to become one of the Arab world's most famous singers, Shaker suffered through a miserable childhood of poverty, which a onetime musician friend says helped lead him down a dark path later in life.
Now in his mid-forties, Shaker was born to a Palestinian mother and Lebanese father in the country's biggest Palestinian refugee camp, Ain al-Helweh.
Born Fadel Shmandur, he began his career as a popular wedding singer who performed from the rooftops of the camp, an over-crowded and hopeless place.
"He has a beautiful voice. Hearing him live was even more beautiful than a recording," a former friend of Shaker's told Agence France Presse on condition of anonymity.
"But he has always been naive and gullible. The more of a star he became, the further he strayed from the people who really loved him. He constantly ended up in bad company," said the friend, who lost touch with him some years ago.
In his prime, Shaker sang love songs that were instant region-wide hits. He released his first album in the late nineties, and continued to perform until 2011.
"He is a very sensitive, extremely reserved person," said Shaker's friend.
"When his Palestinian wife left him, he would cry on stage as he sang, thinking of her. He is very emotional."
Shaker's immense popularity was boosted by the fact he was also a defender of Palestinian rights, and was granted honorary Palestinian citizenship by President Mahmoud Abbas.
Shaker also opened a restaurant in Sidon and pondered swapping his music career for a less hectic life, closer to his three children.
"I knew he would leave music one day, but I would never have thought he would join Asir. It's such a shame, he has such talent. I feel sorry for him," his friend told AFP.
Shaker's brother had long been a strict Muslim, and he tried for years to convince him to leave music.
But it wasn't until after the outbreak of an uprising in Syria against President Bashar Assad that Shaker became convinced that singing is haram, or forbidden in Islam.
Shaker soon became the best-known face of Asir's small movement of openly sectarian, Sunni radicals and praised the cleric as "the lion of the Sunnis".
He grew a beard and became a highlight of Asir's rallies, helping attract attention to the phenomenon of Sunni radicalism in the small Mediterranean country.
Performing during a television interview earlier this year, Shaker swapped his love songs for a chant about jihad and death.
Sitting by Asir, Shaker smiled and sang as sweetly as ever: "God gave me the gift and invited me to join the jihad... Mother, don't cry for me... Death does not frighten me, and my wish is to become a martyr."
His latest media appearance came in an amateur video in which he boasts: "We got rid of two of your swine, of your dogs... God is great."
The video went viral, with many alleging Shaker referred to killing army troops. Others said the footage referred to earlier clashes between Asir supporters and pro-Hizbullah fighters.
Judicial authorities issued a detention order for Asir and 123 of his supporters, including Shaker, whose brother was killed in weekend clashes with the army in Sidon.
"Fadel's story makes me sad, but in a way I am not surprised. He has always been easy to manipulate," his friend told AFP.
"These people have used him. Without him, no one would have heard of them."
http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/88179