US singer Madonna performs during her concert in Tel Aviv,
Israel, Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2009. Photo by AP.
Madonna brought her mix of provocative music and
spirituality to the Holy Land with a concert on Tuesday in
front of 50,000 fans who had endured a 16-year wait since the
pop icon's last gig in Israel.
Madonna is wrapping up her worldwide Sticky &
Sweet tour with two concerts this week in a country
whose place at the heart of the Mideast conflict has made it
more of a magnet for diplomats than big-name performers.
Madonna took the stage about a half hour late on Tuesday
night, opening with her 2008 single, Candy Shop and
moving through a tightly choreographed performance that
included a series of colorful costumes - beginning with a
skimpy, black body suit with fishnet stockings and knee-high
boots - and range of hits, new and old.
"I shouldn't have stayed so long away," she told the adoring
crowd midway through the show, as she broke away from the
script to express her affection for the country.
"Every time I come here, I get so supercharged with energy,"
she said.
"I truly believe that Israel is the energy center of the
world. And I also believe that if we can all live together in
harmony in this place, then we can live in peace all over the
world."
The 51-year-old entertainer has long claimed a special bond
with the Jewish state.
She's been dabbling in Kabbalah, a form of Jewish mysticism,
for more than a decade and has taken on a Hebrew name,
Esther. She's come on private pilgrimages in recent years.
She has visited the Jewish holy site at the Western Wall in
Jerusalem since arriving in Israel on Sunday.
Madonna was scheduled to perform again on Wednesday at Tel
Aviv's Hayarkon Park, the same outdoor site as Tuesday's
show.
"One of the reasons she attracts such large crowds is that
she has a special connection to Israel," said Chen Shasha, a
24-year-old law student attending the concert.
"Israelis appreciate the fact that someone appreciates them
and approaches them and is willing to look into things such
as Kabbalah."
Israeli radio stations played Madonna songs through the day
Tuesday, and recorded Madonna tunes greeted concertgoers as
they lined up to enter the concert grounds. On Israel's Army
Radio, a DJ interrupted a song briefly to quip that "tonight,
Aunt Esther is playing at Hayarkon Park."
Late Monday, the pop diva dined with Israel's moderate
parliamentary opposition leader, Tzipi Livni, at Madonna's
request, Livni spokesman Gil Messing said. Her main political
rival, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, will receive
Madonna at his Jerusalem residence on Friday.
Madonna last performed in Israel in 1993 but came on private
pilgrimages in 2004 and 2007 along with other Kabbalah
devotees.
Her previous two stops on the current tour, in Romania and
Bulgaria, were marred by controversy.
In Bulgaria, Orthodox Church officials accused the singer of
showing disrespect for Christianity. In Romania, she was
booed during her concert for criticizing widespread
discrimination against eastern Europe's Gypsies, also known
as Roma.
In Israel, some rabbis have criticized her involvement in
Kabbalah. Madonna was raised a Roman Catholic. She wrote in
an article for an Israeli newspaper last month that the study
of Kabbalah helped her understand life better.
Jewish tradition holds that Kabbalah is so complicated and so
easily misunderstood that students may only begin to approach
it with a strong background in Jewish law and only after age
40.
Still, Madonna's fans are happy she's in Israel. Her first
show sold out quickly, and a second was added.
After years of concerns over political tensions and violence,
more world artists are performing to Israel.
Ex-Beatle Paul McCartney performed a year ago, but he drew
criticism from Palestinians who said his concert amounted to
support for Israel's occupation of the West Bank.
David Brinn, a music critic for The Jerusalem Post, said
Madonna's performances are a sign that Israel is becoming
more attractive as a concert venue. The Pet Shop Boys played
Israel in July, pop sensation Lady Gaga was here last month,
the rock band Faith No More is playing Tel Aviv on Tuesday
night, and the iconic songwriter Leonard Cohen is to perform
later this month.
"For a long time, it was security-related, and artists and
managers didn't want to take a chance," he said of the dry
spell in concerts. "They realized it is safe in comparison to
other countries, and it is viable for artists to come here."
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