Middle Eastern band finds rhythm in Germany

When Eden Cami closes her eyes and starts singing ancient tunes in Arabic and Hebrew, Jewish-Israeli bassist Or Rozenfeld plays the contrabass, and Syrian band member Wassim Mukdad creates sparkling sounds on his 12-string oud, they take their audience on a musical journey through the Middle East.

Yet the three musicians all live far from there, in Germany. Back in their native region, they likely would be unable to perform together due to long-standing hostilities between their governments and societies.

"It took us 3,500 kilometers to be able to meet, although it's like a two-hour drive by car," says Mukdad, 37, referring to the theoretical driving distance between their homes in neighboring Syria and Israel because in reality, people cannot legally cross from Syria into Israel or vice versa.

"The borders in the Middle East are places to separate people," Mukdad added.

Mukdad came to Berlin in 2016, a refugee who says he was tortured during Syria's civil war. Cami, 35, who is Arabic and from the Druze minority in northern Israel, came to the German capital seeking freedom and tranquillity.

Rozenfeld, the grandson of Holocaust survivors, came in search of an affordable, cosmopolitan city where he didn't have to take on a second job to make a living as a musician. Borys Slowikowski, the drummer who joined the group more recently, is an immigrant from Poland.

Cami initiated their band, the Kayan Project, in 2017.

Kayan, the Arabic word for existence, is also the theme of their music and togetherness. In creating and playing songs, they continually learn how much they have in common and how close the roots of their cultures and languages are despite all the hatred they grew up with.

"As musicians we are all...

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