Lebanon's screaming sirens defy gender norms with all-girl metal group
In Greek mythology, sirens use their enchanting voices to lure sailors
to their death. In Lebanon, a group of modern-day sirens have decided
not to sing sweetly like their namesakes. Instead they scream, growl and
headbang -- but they, too, turn heads.
Slave to Sirens are defying gender norms as the first all-female metal
band in the country, asserting their place not just in conservative
Lebanese society but also in the male-dominated, global heavy metal
scene.
The five-piece group, formed in 2016, fearlessly command stages that are
usually monopolized by men. Their lyrics -- written in English to reach
a wider audience -- express raw feelings and strong opinions on issues
of social inequality, politics and freedom.
It's our right to be on stage and perform as all girls, why would we be less or different from guys?
Alma Doumani, Slave To Sirens
In the title track of the band's self-produced debut EP, "Terminal
Leeches," lead vocalist Maya Khairallah sings: "They fill your head with
lies. Ignorance, your ultimate demise." The lyrics of the closing
track, "Congenital Evil," reinforce the message: "Why do you always have
to obey? Zero degrees of empathy, forever coming your way."
Bassist Alma Doumani, 22, says that for her, the allure of heavy metal
is its aggressive style. "It lets your anger out -- it lets you express
your mind."
"It's our right to be on stage and perform as all girls, why would we be
less or different from guys?" says Doumani. "It's not just guys who
have talent."
Defying the norm
Lina Abirafeh, director of the Institute for Women's Studies in the Arab
World, says that in Lebanon, women are frequently objectified. "Ideas
of what is feminine, acceptable, beautiful, sexy -- all of those
descriptors for women -- are notoriously narrow," she says, adding that
female Lebanese singers are often "overly sexualized, very feminine,
very dolled up." She sees Slave to Sirens as "role models" for breaking
that mold.
Slave to Sirens vocalist Maya Khairallah and lead guitarist Shery Bechara.
Change is not being championed at the political level, because women are
not well represented -- they currently hold only 3.1% of parliamentary
seats. Lebanon also ranks 143rd out of 153 countries in the Women, Peace
and Security Index, an assessment of women's overall well-being within
their communities and societies.
Metal in the Middle East
Heavy metal has a troubled history in the region. In 1997, scores of
heavy metal fans were arrested and detained in Egypt because authorities
believed they were members of a dangerous Satanic cult. In Saudi
Arabia, the heavy metal band Al Namrood are forced to keep their
identities secret for fear that they could be prosecuted -- and even
executed -- for their music.
But in Lebanon, the metal scene is largely accepted and most people
understand it to be a form of art, according to Elia Mssawir, who helps
to organize the annual Beirut Metal Fest.
Alma Doumani, the band's bassist.
He cites an incident when organizers of a metal event in the Lebanese
mountains were investigated after villagers "didn't like what they saw,"
but says there have not been any attempts at censorship in the last
five years.
While it's common for metal acts in the region to use music as a
platform to express opinion on politics or religion, Mssawir notes that
current Lebanese bands largely steer clear from that because they see
metal as an "escape" from those everyday realities. Slave to Sirens are
among the few that inject those topics into their music.
Beyond metal music
Abirafeh believes that Slave to Sirens' impact will transcend music.
"You don't have to like metal to see that what these women are doing is
powerful and courageous," she says. "It's about saying that we are going
to defy all those rules and norms, and go out there and do what we
love."
"Other girls can also feel like maybe they [want] to do something but
they are ashamed or they don't have the guts," says Doumani. "Maybe if
they see us, they will have the guts to do it."
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