Israel Eurovision Contestanta Performs Without Incident at Semi-Finals
Israel's Eurovision entrant Yuval Raphael, a survivor of the Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attack at Nova Music Festival, had her performance go off relatively without a hitch on the broadcast for the contest's semi-finals in Basel, Switzerland, Thursday night, shirking even her own expectations as she and many were preparing for loud boos as her country's inclusion in Eurovision has drawn controversy amid the war in Gaza.
Raphael was one of 10 contestants from Thursday's semi-final to punch their ticket to the finals, alongside Lithuania's Katarsis, Armenia's PARG, Denmark's Sissal, Austria's JJ, Luxembourg's Laura Thorn, Finland's Erika Vikman, Latvia's Tautumeitas, Malta's Miriana Conte and Greece's Klavdia.
More from The Hollywood Reporter
Smokey Robinson Under Criminal Investigation After Sexual Assault Allegations
Sean "Diddy" Combs Overdosed on Night of Playboy Mansion Party in 2012, His Ex-Partner Reveals at Trial
Lorde Reveals She Discussed Her "Broadening" Gender Identity With Chappell Roan
They will join Iceland's Vaeb, Poland's Justyna Steczkowska, Estonia's Tommy Cash, Ukraine's Ziferblat, Sweden's KAJ, Portugal's Napa, Norway's Kyle Alessandro, San Marino's Gabry Ponte, Albania's Shkodra Elektronike,and Netherland's Claude.
Eurovision's finals will air on Saturday at noon PST on Peacock.
Israel's presence at the contest has been a controversial subject at the past two Eurovision Song Contests amid the war in Gaza, as over 70 former contestants signed an open letter last week calling for Israel to be banned from the event citing 'genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza and the decades-long regime of apartheid and military occupation against the entire Palestinian people.'
The broadcast itself showed little beyond Raphael's performance of the song 'New Day Will Rise' and the cheers that followed. Some photos and videos circulating online show a smattering of attendees in the audience holding up Palestinian flags. Israel's Eurovision presence drew protests ahead of the semi-finals as well.
Critics have argued that Israel should be banned from the contest, as Russia was back in 2022 over its invasion of Ukraine. While the broadcast didn't show protests, some images online from Thursday's rehearsals showed attendees in the audience waving Palestinian flags while Raphael performed.
Raphael has spoken publicly about her experience at Nova, telling the UN Human Rights Council last year that she fled to a bomb shelter the day of the attack, hiding under dead bodies while she herself pretended to be dead for hours until her father and another Nova attendee saved her.
'Every time we [those who were still alive] raised our heads, we couldn't understand why there were less and less people in the bomb shelter,' she told the UN. 'We thought the terrorists were taking the dead bodies. We didn't realize it was because of the grenades, blowing up their bodies.'
Last year's Israel entrant Eden Golan was booed during her Eurovision performance, and Raphael told the BBC earlier this week that she'd practiced with boos and noises in the background preparing for Thursday. 'I think I'm expecting it, but we are here to sing and I'm going to sing my heart out for everyone,' Raphael said.
Outside of Thursday's semi-final, Celine Dion made a surprise video appearance on Tuesday during the first semi-final, 37 years after she won Eurovision in 1988.
'Music unites us, not only this evening, not only at the moment,' Dion said in French. 'Wonderful. It is our strength, our support and our support in the moments where we need it. I love you all, Europe and the rest of the world, of course. Kisses, I love you.'
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
Most Anticipated Concert Tours of 2025: Beyoncé, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar & SZA, Sabrina Carpenter and More
Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025
Hollywood's Highest-Profile Harris Endorsements: Taylor Swift, George Clooney, Bruce Springsteen and More
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
26 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Hamas threats to aid staff reason for halted food distribution, GHF says
The organization claimed "Hamas wants to return to a broken system it once controlled and exploited—diverting aid, manipulating distribution, and putting its own agenda." The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation announced on Saturday that the reason for temporarily pausing operations was due to threats against the organization and its staff by Hamas. "Hamas is the reason hundreds of thousands of hungry Gazans were not fed today. The group issued direct threats against GHF operations. These threats made it impossible to proceed today without putting innocent lives at risk," the statement read. "Hamas wants to return to a broken system it once controlled and exploited—diverting aid, manipulating distribution, and putting its own agenda ahead of the Palestinian people's basic needs. However, GHF will not be deterred. "We remain committed to safe, secure, and independent aid delivery. We are actively adapting our operations to overcome these threats and fully intend to resume distributions without delay." Aid distribution in Gaza was halted on Friday after the US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation said overcrowding had made it unsafe to continue operations, in the latest disruption to its troubled relief effort. In a day of confusing messaging, the GHF first announced its distribution sites in southern Gaza were closed, then it revealed that it had actually handed out food, before saying that it had had to close its gates as a precautionary measure. "The distribution was conducted peacefully and without incident; however, it was paused due to excessive crowding that made it unsafe to proceed," it said in a statement.
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Why Britain must not recognise Palestine
The West Bank was never taken from the Palestinians. When Israel conquered the territory in 1967 it was from the Jordanians, who had occupied it since 1948 before trying their luck at a genocide of the Jews. Regardless, if Jerusalem gave up the land in return for peace, it would make Israel just nine miles wide at its centre. Known as the 'Hadera-Gadera rectangle', that narrow waist holds half the population and much of the country's vital infrastructure, including Tel Aviv. A new Palestinian state would lie just over the border. After October 7, would you do it? The Palestinian leader, Mahmoud Abbas, is famously incompetent, and is currently enjoying the 20th year of the four-year term to which he was elected in 2005. He presides over a system of corruption and brutality; he holds a PhD in Holocaust revisionism from a Moscow university; and he offers cash incentives to those convicted of terror offences, with higher payments awarded for more serious crimes. Fancy the odds? When Israel pulled out of Gaza in 2005, it was in the naive belief that, from then on, even a single rocket from the Strip would meet with international condemnation, since the settlements and 'occupation' were no more. So that worked out well. A two-state solution would see the same policy applied on the West Bank. What could possibly go wrong? Sir Keir Starmer presumably thinks it's a great idea, because in nine days' time, Britain will join France and the Saudis in New York in talks about recognising a state of Palestine. Far easier to gamble with the lives of someone else's children than your own, I suppose. This would form the natural culmination of Britain's escalating hostility towards our ally, as it battles to defeat the jihadi group that carried out that orgy of butchery, mutilation and rape two years ago and has vowed to do the same again. Hostages are still in the catacombs. Yet Sir Keir dreams of a state of Palestine. War is hell. Israel – which neither wanted it nor started it – evacuates civilians before attacks and provides them with aid. Yet in Parliament last week, amid nods from MPs who have never known the inside of a bomb shelter, the Prime Minister branded Israel 'appalling'. As ever, Starmer's petty politicking blinds him to his own moral bankruptcy. Unilaterally recognising a state of Palestine is a contemptuous proposal. Dismissing Israel's existential security concerns is insult enough, but providing a reward for October 7 creates awful incentives for the future. Worse still, perhaps, is the narrative it would create. Britain's official policy would be to blame Israel for the lack of a Palestinian state, when the historical truth is the opposite. The Palestinians were first offered self-determination in 1947, but rejected it in favour of attempted genocide. They were offered it again during the Oslo Accords in the 1990s, but derailed it with a spate of suicide bombs that claimed the lives of many Israelis. In 2000, at Camp David, they were offered 96 per cent of the West Bank but turned it down. In 2008, prime minister Ehud Olmert offered 94 per cent of the territory with land swaps for the remainder, East Jerusalem as a Palestinian capital, and the Old City turned over to international control. Again, Abbas rejected it. Why? Because the true problem is the very existence of a Jewish country, which is seen as a rebuke by some to Arab honour. The Palestinians don't want a state alongside Israel. They want a state instead of it. This is what Britain would be supporting. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Colorado pol who refused to condemn Boulder firebombing shows true colors at council meeting: critics
An anti-Israel official in Boulder, CO, refused to condemn as antisemitic the horrific firebombing of Jews at a peaceful demonstration — then 'doubled down' by wrapping herself in the colors of the Palestinian flag, critics said. Taishya Adams took office shortly after Hamas' Oct 7, 2023 massacre of 1,200 Israelis. Adams, 50, was seen as 'egging on antisemitism,' an insider told The Post, long before Egyptian national Mohamed Sabry Soliman unleashed a flamethrower and Molotov cocktails last week on unsuspecting members of the group Run 4 Our Lives. 3 Taishya Adams was the sole member of the Boulder City Council who would not sign a letter condemning the June 1 attack. Boulder City Council The group holds a weekly walk calling for Hamas to release the remaining Israeli hostages. Soliman, 45, faces 118 criminal counts for the June 1 incident which left 15 people, as well as a dog, seriously hurt. When city officials offered a 'letter of solidarity' this week condemning the hate crime — Adams was the sole councilmember who refused to sign. She then turned up at the live-streamed Thursday council meeting in a bright red blazer with a large green scarf wrapped around her neck. 'She's doubling down,' seethed the insider. 3 Adams has long been seen as 'egging on antisemitism,' an insider told The Post. LinkedIn/Taishya Adams 'It's disgusting,' seethed Run for Our Lives member Aaron Brooks of the pro-Palestinian fashion statment. 'It's grossly insensitive.' Local Rabbi Marc Soloway slammed Adams in a withering speech Wednesday in front of Gov. Jared Polis. 'In this moment when we're reeling, just days after someone tried to burn Jews to death, that the city council could not unanimously denounce this as an act of antisemitism is horrifying,' he told The Post. City council member Mark Wallach ripped Adams — who is liaison to Boulder's Palestinian 'sister city' of Nablus and returned from a self-funded official trip last month – during the meeting. 'You may find that act courageous — but I find it inexplicable and virtually inexcusable,' blasted Wallach, addressing Adams directly. 'Where is your sense of grace and mercy?' The flummoxed Adams stumbled through a word salad response, pointing to her statement about yanking her support for the solidarity letter, and claimed she looked forward to 'continued dialogue,' noting this is 'not time for the head, but for the heart.' 3 Adams wrapped herself in the colors of the Palestinian flag just days after the antisemitic firebombing in Boulder, Colorado. erika8213 – Adams' ongoing 'anti-Israel propaganda' has included posting about anti-Israel demonstrations on the anniversary of the Oct. 7 attack and ripping the City Council last year for having 'blood on our hands' for failing to pass a ceasefire resolution against Israel. Omer Shachar, co-leader of the walk, called the attack 'pure antisemitism' and recalled seeing an octogenarian friend aflame. 'When I think about Sunday, I see her,' he said, noting she was 'on fire — top to bottom, from legs to the hair.' He can't shake the imagery of friends with 'skin just peeled off.' 'It's beyond words.'