Israeli Eurovision Contestant Focuses on Music, Not Protests

Protesters wave Palestinian flags as Yuval Raphael, representing Israel, walks the Turquoise Carpet at the opening of the 69th Eurovision Song Contest in Basel, Switzerland, May 11, 2025. (Harold Cunningham/Getty Images via JTA)

By Philissa Cramer

If she found it unnerving to see someone make a throat-slitting gesture as she walked the carpet earlier this week at the first Eurovision Song Contest 2025 event, Yuval Raphael wasn’t letting on.

“It was a stressful situation, scary at times,” Raphael, Israel’s competitor in this year’s song contest, said on Monday, May 12, a day after the competition’s kickoff when Israel filed a police report accusing a pro-Palestinian demonstrator of making the threatening gesture and spitting at her.

“But I keep reminding myself — and I have my team that keeps reminding me — that we’re here for a very amazing and sole purpose, which is music and to give a good performance and bring honor to my country,” she said.

Raphael, 24, was speaking from the Swiss city of Basel, where she will take the stage Thursday, May 15, in the semi-finals of the 37-country competition to perform the song “New Day Will Rise,” an anthem for an Israel seeking to transcend years of division and trauma.

She is performing a year after Israel’s last entrant, Eden Golan, was booed onstage in Malmo, Sweden, where she skipped celebratory events and largely remained in her hotel room amid security concerns and widespread protests against Israel over its war in Gaza.

This year, Israel warned attendees to avoid protests and not display symbols of Jewish or Israeli identity.

The competition also falls just over a year after Raphael testified in front of the United National Human Rights Council about her experience on Oct. 7, 2023, when she survived Hamas’ deadly assault on the Nova music festival. She described piling into a bomb shelter with dozens of other festival-goers as terrorists assaulted them.

“When the bodies of those murdered fell on us, I understood that hiding under them was the only way I could survive this nightmare,” she testified.

Of the 51 people in the shelter, she said, 40 were killed that day. “The physical injuries I sustained that day are healing,” she said, “but the mental scars will stay with me forever.”

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Raphael, who grew up in the central Israeli city of Ra’anana, launched her singing career after the attack and has participated in music workshops for festival survivors. She said before her winning performance in Israel’s qualifying competition that she wanted to bring her story to the world.

“I want to tell them the story of the country, of what I went through, of what others went through,” she said. “I want to tell the story, but not from a place of seeking pity. I want it to be from a place of standing strong in the face of this, and in the face of the boos I’m 100% sure will come from the crowd.”

Now that she and her team have arrived in Basel — famous in Israel’s history as the host city of the First Zionist Congress in 1897 — those boos have grown more audible. While her stock is rising in the betting markets, she is facing fierce calls for her exclusion, including from 70 past competitors who have petitioned for Israel to be kicked out over the war.

“I support the call for Israel’s exclusion from the Eurovision Song Contest,” Nemo Mettler, a Swiss musician who won last year’s competition, told the Huffington Post. “Israel’s actions are fundamentally at odds with the values that Eurovision claims to uphold — peace, unity and respect for human rights.”

The European Broadcasting Union, which oversees the contest, has rebuffed all entreaties to exclude Israel. But this year, it altered the audience rules so that attendees can display any flag of a recognized state, not just those of the countries performing.

That means when Raphael sings in the semifinal on Thursday, it’s likely that she’ll see Palestinian flags waving in the stands, in a visual reminder of the antagonism her participation has induced.

“There are things that I can control and things that I can’t. And I’m really, really focused on the things that I can control, which is the song, the performance, my voice, keeping it as healthy as possible,” she said. “I’m coming with the biggest heart and so much love and hope. So yeah, whatever happens happens.”

Israel has won Eurovision four times over its 68 years, most recently with Netta Barzilai’s “Toy” in 2018. The 2019 contest was held in Tel Aviv as a result. Last year, Golan placed fifth, fueled by a strong result in the audience vote.

Philissa Cramer is the editor-in-chief of the JTA global Jewish news source.

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