From a piece in today's Times about the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra - the target of disruption by pro-Palestinian protesters last September in London - this excerpt (£):
Any player from the Israel Philharmonic is proud to tell you about their orchestra's courage in adversity. This is the band that played on during the Six Day War in 1967, the Yom Kippur War in 1973, and the Lebanon War in 1982. During the Gulf War in 1991, as Scud missiles launched by Saddam Hussein rained down over Israel, the IPO's chief conductor Zubin Mehta (now conductor for life) gave a memorable concert in which the audience members donned gas marks rather than abandon the concert.
The impact of September's Prom at the Royal Albert Hall, however, when anti-Israel protesters disrupted the IPO's concert four times with satirical songs and shouted slogans - and, for the first time in the history of the Proms, the BBC took the concert off the air - may prove harder to erase. If Avi Shoshani, the secretary-general of the orchestra, is to be taken at face value, that Prom might turn out to be the IPO's final appearance in Britain.
"I don't think I really want to return the UK," Shoshani says, as we sit in the IPO's temporary home in the Port area of Tel Aviv and listen to the orchestra rehearsing for the night's 75th anniversary gala concert. "Why should I put my musicians in such an unpleasant situation? We want to make people happy - that's what music is all about - and if people behave in such an uncivilised way why should we be a part of that?
"I have nothing against demonstration," he continues. "But there is a way of doing it. The fact that you live in a democratic society that allows you [to] demonstrate doesn't mean you have the right to abuse people."
I have a certain amount of sympathy for what Shoshani says. Who wants to play music in front of a bunch of louts? Who wants to go where they're not wanted? By declining to play in venues where they're likely to be treated abusively, the Israel Philharmonic could be seen as turning the tables on the cultural boycotters. You don't want us playing there? We've got news for you: we have no desire to play in your presence.
On the other hand, if the orchestra no longer visits Britain, this will be claimed by the boycott movement as a cheap victory. Moreover, media reports of the disrupted performance suggest that the great majority of the audience wanted to hear the Israeli musicians playing and felt no indulgence towards the noisy protesters. It's surely better in these circumstances to continue visiting, while trying to obtain assurances that the organizers will be better prepared in future against those planning disruption. Avi Shoshani is also quoted as saying, 'Well, you only need ten to twenty people who are shouting at you and you get the feeling everybody is against you'. It's an understandable sentiment, but it's perhaps better to overcome it if in fact it's misplaced.
Update at 5.25 pm: But see, now, the clarification here:
The secretary general of the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Avi Shoshani, has categorically denied that the IPO will not return to play in Britain, in the wake of the row over September's disrupted Proms concerts.
A report in today's Times suggested that the IPO was unlikely to play again in Britain. But Mr Shoshani insisted: "I did not say I did not want to come back to the UK. I did say that I did not want to put my musicians in such a situation again, where they were being abused and threatened..."
Shoshani goes on to explain, for the benefit of those who need an explanation, what the difference is between protesting against the visit of an Israeli orchestra and behaving like a bunch of thugs.