BETHLEHEM, West
Bank (AP) -- A West Bank visit by Syrian singer Asala Nasri, a
prominent supporter of her country's uprising, marked a rare appearance
by a Syrian citizen in the Palestinian territories
Israel
and Syria are longtime enemies who are still officially in a state of
war with each other. Travel between the two countries is all but
impossible, though some members of Israel's Druze minority are allowed
to cross into Syria to study or visit family.
Nasri,
who holds a Bahraini passport along with her Syrian one, performed in
the West Bank on Saturday as part of a festival promoting tourism in the
biblical city of Bethlehem. It was her first trip to the Palestinian
territories, and Nasri was enthusiastic about the experience at a Sunday
press conference.
"Visiting Palestine has been always a dream that finally has come true," she said.
Nasri's
concert drew thousands of Palestinians and Arab Israelis, who were
rewarded with traditional nationalist Palestinian and Syrian songs. The
singer grew emotional as she sang the wistful lyrics to a Syrian tune:
"God bring back the old days."
The crowd
seemed pleased to have the Syrian star in the West Bank. "We used to go
to Jordan to see Arab singers like Asala, but now we can see them here.
It's great," attendee Bisharah Hayek said.
Nasri is an outspoken supporter of the uprising against Syrian President Bashar Assad.
"From
the beginning, I stood alongside the Syrian revolution, alongside the
educated Syrians, nationalist, civilized and moderate youths and their
goal of having a civil and democratic state," Nasri said on Sunday.
A
group of Assad supporters staged a protest in Bethlehem against Nasri's
visit, but police kept them away from the concert. The concert also
drew criticism on social media websites.
Nasri
received extensive honors from the Palestinian Authority. President
Mahmoud Abbas greeted her in Ramallah on Friday afternoon, and
presidential guards have accompanied her on her tour. Nasri also laid a
wreath at the grave of late Palestinian President Yasser Arafat.
The
singer also toured Hebron and Israel's separation barrier with the West
Bank during her trip. She is expected to visit Jerusalem on Monday
before departing.
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