April Peavey

April Peavey

April Peavey produces the Global Hit. She is based in the Boston newsroom of The World.

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Music in Northern Mali is Silenced by Islamist Extremists

Khaira Arby (Photo: myspace.com/khairaarby)

Khaira Arby (Photo: myspace.com/khairaarby)

Musicially, Mali is one of the richest places in the world.

The country has brought us the late guitarist Ali Farka Toure.

Then there’s musicians Salif Keita and Oumou Sangare.

And don’t forget singer-songwriter Habib Koite and Toureg band Tinariwen

But as of Wednesday, the music stopped in the north of the country.

That’s because Islamic extremists who control much of the vast desert region of Mali have banned all music, except the singing of Koranic verses.

The extremists say they are enforcing the strict Islamic code of law known as Sharia.

The rule went into effect months after a military coup in Mali destabilized the government, leaving militants and hard-line Islamic groups controlling the north.

Freelance journalist Rose Skelton was recently in southern Mali, reporting for the British newspaper, The Independent.

Skelton spoke to musicians in the north who told her their instruments and amplifiers have been burnt and that they have to play and sing in hiding.

Malian singer Khaira Arby had to leave her home in Timbuktu.

Arby told Rose Skelton she has nowhere to go and that she can’t perform because all her instruments are back home.

Rose Skelton says, “there’s a real sense of music being strangled there.”

Discussion

8 comments for “Music in Northern Mali is Silenced by Islamist Extremists”

  • http://www.facebook.com/kbrunette3 Kacie Brunette

    I was brought to tears by how y’all closed the show today, her voice can’t be heard in her hometown so let it be heard on our airwaves. Beautiful! Thank you!

  • Nyakairu

    If it were up to religious institutions, they would not only kill the music, they would silence anyone who didn’t kowtow to their primitive beliefs.

    • http://www.facebook.com/janet.goldner Janet Goldner

      What’s going on in the North has nothing to do with religion and everything to do with oil.

      • Nyakairu

        Which planet do you live on?

      • moderniste

        I read your informative website, and while I appreciate the political complexities that have thrown Mali into its current state, I think it’s very foolish to overlook the disgusting crimes committed by those religious zealots in charge of the theocratic Shariah states. Fundamentalists of all religions, but especially Christianity and Islam, are fanatically obsessed with being the only “right” belief system, with horrific crimes against humanity for anyone who does not submit to their “leadership”. The priests and despots in control of a society with Shariah law are the true definition of psychopaths, so great is their hatred of humanity. Mali’s cultural loss is deplorable, and I wish that the ban of music and art alone was enough to incite and unite the people to a revolution against Shariah and those who wish to continue its reign.

  • http://www.facebook.com/janet.goldner Janet Goldner

    I just returned from a 6 week fact finding trip to Mali where I have deep roots. We, in the West, are fed a diet of stories
    of the horrible situation in the north of Mali. At the
    same time the US and the international community refuses recognize the current transition govt and help it chase those “armed men” out! It isn’t that the democracy in Mali collapsed in a matter of hours. There never was a democracy in Mali, only a corruption machine expert in making donors believe there was a democracy. Why this continuing misinformation? Shame on you. I have been writing about the crisis in Mali: http://www.janetgoldner.com/site/mali-coup/

    • Nyakairu

      Just because you claim to have deep roots in Mali doesn’t make you an expert on Mali. Some of us are just as knowledgeable, if not more, about the causes and effects buffeting the country.

  • http://www.facebook.com/paul.batlan Paul Batlan

    Heartache. The Music of Mali is trully a universal language. Music is the common language that binds all persons on this planet. Fundamentalism of any stripe destroys our potential as a species. It is clear in the 21st century the only way forward for human cultural development is total separation of church and state. Here at home forces are at work trying to extinguish independent voices like NPR that bring us these sounds and today this sad story. Keep the voices and airwaves free to speak to soothe our souls.