JPost
 
Underground youth  culture unappreciated in Gaza 
By _ASSOCIATED PRESS_ (mailto:[email protected])   
07/29/2010  09:25 

Rappers and  breakers often clash with Hamas. 

 
 
GAZA  CITY, _Gaza Strip_ 
(http://jpost.headup.com/Services/FrontService/Horizon/RenderStatic.aspx?uri=http://schemas.semantinet.com/Country/name/Gaza%20
Strip/displaytype/Country/dbpediaSubject/Gaza_Strip/&name=Gaza Strip)  — In 
back rooms and  refugee camps across this impoverished territory, young men 
are rapping over hip  hop beats, flipping over metal bars and spinning on 
their heads to funky dance  music — not the preferred hobbies of Gaza's 
_Hamas_ 
(http://jpost.headup.com/Services/FrontService/Horizon/RenderStatic.aspx?uri=http://schemas.semantinet.com/Info/name/Hamas/displaytype//dbpediaSubject
/Hamas/&name=Hamas)  rulers.

Many youths,  who make up the majority of Gaza's 1.5 million residents, are 
stuck between  Hamas' strict version of Islam and an Israeli-Egyptian 
blockade that keeps them  locked in with little work.

Inside, however, creativity blooms, sometimes  clashing with traditional 
Gaza social codes or Hamas' standards of acceptable  behavior.

Rap, for one, raises suspicion.

"When we started,  everyone said, 'Why are they wearing baggy clothes? Why 
do they greet each other  like that?'" said Ayman Mghamis, 25, of 
Palestinian Rapperz, one of Gaza's 10 or  so rap groups.

Gazans started accepting them, he said, but the Hamas  government didn't.

Hamas police broke up a show in March that contained a  rap act. Police 
said the event lacked permits, but the rappers took it as a cue  to keep their 
heads down. While underground, the rappers distribute songs on the  Internet 
and perform at events organized by international organizations, which  they 
say keeps authorities at bay.

Other pastimes face different  obstacles. A few times a week, four guys 
sneak into an elementary school to flip  over metal railings, leap down 
staircases and launch their bodies off walls and  tree trunks. They are one of 
at 
least two Gaza groups that practice parkour, the  acrobatic art of using the 
human body to overcome obstacles.

Their  neighbors sometimes report them to the police.

"They see you climbing on  a roof and they think you're a thief," said 
Mohammed Irgayig, 19.

Like  most of the rappers — and like most Gaza youth — all four are  
unemployed.

"I do it to get my head out of the situation I'm in and feel  free," 
Irgayig said.

Underground activities are rare for Gaza women, who  have greater 
housekeeping duties and are expected to be discreet in  public.

In a small apartment, the nine male members of Gaza's premier  break dance 
troupe took turns spinning on their backs, shoulders and heads, then  
flipping up and dancing on their hands.

Mohammed Ghreis, 23, started the  Camps Breakerz in 2004. They learn new 
moves from the Internet.

Gaza has  at least one other break dance posse, and Ghreis expects it to 
spread through  children's workshops his group holds.

Recently, two teens he didn't know  showed up for practice and said they'd 
been teaching themselves from videos on  the group's website.

Ghreis played some music and gave them the  floor.

"They were good," he said, beaming. "I was really  proud."

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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