Acclaimed Israeli Jazz Player Avishai Cohen Told Boycott Movement Representatives to ‘Go F*** Yourself’
Error: Contact form not found.
by Algemeiner Staff

Israeli jazz musician Avishai Cohen playing with Jazz Collective at Jazz Standard in 2015. Photo: Steven Pisano via Wikicommons.
Acclaimed Israeli jazz player Avishai Cohen had a short and sweet response when asked to boycott Israel: “Go f*** yourself.”
Cohen told Israeli news website Walla on Sunday that he was approached by representatives of the BDS movement due to a song on his 2017 album Cross My Palm With Silver about Israel’s presence in the West Bank. They asked him not to play a concert in Israel.
“I never paid attention to them,” Cohen said. “And when they came to me, I told them ‘Go f*** yourself.’”
“It’s not your business to tell me where to play and where not to play,” he said he told them.
Cohen, who was born in Tel Aviv, has recorded 10 albums as a bandleader and collaborated with some of the biggest names in jazz. He has been voted Rising Star-Trumpet by the famed jazz magazine Down Beat for four years in a row.
US Strikes Iran Following Attack on Cargo Ship in Strait of Hormuz
British Man Admits Threatening to ‘Kill Jewish Schoolchildren’ Amid Rising Antisemitism in London
Turkey Expands Online Censorship, Silences Dissent as Erdogan Tightens Grip on Power
Plurality of Americans Believe US ‘Too Supportive’ of Israel, Poll Finds
Israel, Lebanon Sign Initial Agreement After US-Mediated Talks
Trump Chides Iran for Ship Attack After Tehran Insists on Control of Strait of Hormuz
US House Committee Passes Bills to Combat Campus Antisemitism
Belgian Police Say They Have Identified Suspects Behind March Attack on Synagogue
Hamas Crushes Planned Gaza Protests With Kidnappings, Death Threats
Following New York’s Democratic Primaries, It’s Clear Pro-Israel Americans Must Adopt a New Political Strategy





In Competition With Hamas, Palestinian Authority Boasts That Most Terrorists Belong to Fatah
Hamas Crushes Planned Gaza Protests With Kidnappings, Death Threats
The Fight for the Future of the Jewish Community Is Happening Right Now in Europe
Following New York’s Democratic Primaries, It’s Clear Pro-Israel Americans Must Adopt a New Political Strategy
The Business of Fighting Antisemitism — Why the Organized Jewish Community Must Change



