Roger Waters Responds to Thom Yorke over Israel Controversy

"I would still like to have the conversation"

BY Sarah MurphyPublished Jun 5, 2017

Roger Waters has responded to Thom Yorke, after the Radiohead frontman called the boycott against his band's upcoming concert in Tel Aviv an "extraordinary waste of energy."
 
Earlier this year, Waters and a group of other artists signed a public letter encouraging Radiohead to "rethink" their scheduled July 19 show in Israel, supporting the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) movement's cultural boycott against Israel and claiming that "a system of apartheid has been imposed on the Palestinian people." Last week, Yorke called the petition signers' attempt to "throw shit at us in public" both "patronizing" and "offensive."
 
Now, in a response to Yorke via Rolling Stone, Waters claims that the Radiohead singer's statement "doesn't tell the whole story." He claims that he had personally reached out to Yorke on multiple occasions before the letter was made public, hoping to engage him in a dialogue, but was met with an angry response.
 
Waters goes on, objecting to Yorke's description of the letter and saying that the letter's intent was not to publicly "throw shit" at Radiohead.
 
"That is not true, Thom," Waters said. "I have made every effort to engage with you personally, and would still like to have the conversation."
 
Read Waters' full statement [via Rolling Stone] below.
 
I read Thom Yorke's interview in Rolling Stone. It needs a reply as it doesn't tell the whole story.
 
On February 12th, hoping to start a dialogue, I sent an email expressing my concern about Radiohead crossing the BDS picket line to perform in Israel. A few hours later, Thom replied. He was angry. He had misinterpreted my attempt to start a conversation as a threat. So I tried again.
 
"Hey Thom,
 
I'm sorry. My letter wasn't meant to be confrontational. I was reaching out to see if we could have the conversation that you talk about in your reply. Can we?
Love, R."
 
I didn't hear back. So silence prevailed for three weeks until March 4th when I sent a long heartfelt entreaty to Thom asking him again to talk.
 
In Thom's interview with Andy Greene of Rolling Stone, in referring to Ken Loach and me, he says, "It's deeply distressing that they choose to, rather than engage with us personally, throw shit at us in public."
 
That is not true, Thom. I have made every effort to engage with you personally, and would still like to have the conversation.
 
"Not to talk is not an option."
 
Today is the 50th anniversary of the occupation of Palestine by Israel. Fifty years living under military occupation. Fifty years for a people with no civil rights. Fifty years of no recourse to the law. Fifty years of apartheid.
 
The BDS picket line exists to shine a light on the predicament of the occupied people of Palestine, both in Palestine and those displaced abroad, and to promote equal civil rights for all the people living between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea no matter what their nationality, race or religion. All human life is sacred, every child is our child, exceptionalism is always our enemy. There is no Us or Them, only Us.
 
Restiamo umani.
 
Love,
 
Roger Waters

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