IRBIL, Iraq: It is a radio talent contest with a mission: Showcasing the skills of Mosul’s youth after years of militant rule and a months-long battle for the city.
The recorded lyrics of competitor MC Rico, a rapper from Iraq’s second city, filled the studio of Al-Ghad — Arabic for “tomorrow.”
“We saw a lot of horrors when we were young. I wish I hadn’t grown up, because when we grew up, we saw even worse.”
The three judges in the Al-Ghad Star contest concentrated hard on the music, nodded their heads and took notes.
“This kind of song makes me think Mosul can bounce back,” one said.
MC Rico is one of 93 competitors in the contest, all aged between 15 and 25.
He is one of the six who made it through to last Saturday evening’s semifinal.
With a base in Irbil, the capital of Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region, the radio has proved a hit back in Mosul, 80 km to the west, where Iraqi forces have been battling since October to oust the militant group.
The talent show gave young listeners a chance to take to the airwaves themselves, singing classic Arabic songs or commenting on football matches.
One participant even whispered poetry down the phone from western Mosul, keeping his voice down to avoid being heard by the militants who still control his neighborhood.
“They don’t want to become celebrities, they just want to express themselves, share what’s inside them,” said the show’s director, who goes by the pseudonym Raad Al-Moslawi.
Murad Khan, a radio presenter and producer who is on the jury, said the talent on display was “born out of suffering.”
One participant particularly moved the judges and audience with her story and her reflections on Iraqi society.
Nour Al-Ta’i, 15, began losing her sight in August 2015. By the time she told her parents, it was too late for doctors to determine the cause or save her from going blind.
No longer able to devour books or watch television dramas, Nour discovered the radio.
“It takes me somewhere else. It’s a world apart, it touches everyone. I want to be part of it,” she told AFP.
Headphones over her ears, she “follows everything” on the radio, her mother said.
Iraq radio show finds talent amid rubble of Mosul
Updated 26 May 2017