Charlotte Church: I was threatened by ‘some pretty scary people’ after pro-Palestine event
Charlotte Church said police had to check on her because she and her family were threatened by “some pretty scary people” after she took part in a pro-Palestine event.
At a Sing For Palestine fundraising event in Wales, Church led a rendition of “from the river to the sea”, which the Campaign Against Antisemitism has called a “genocidal chant”.
The Welsh singer also penned a blog for socialist newspaper the Morning Star in which she claimed “it is difficult to know the full truth of what happened” on Oct 7.
In the same piece, the 38-year-old said she “is not, has never been, and will never be an anti-Semite”, adding: “I hold the Jewish people in my life very dearly, and have always kept great reverence for Judaism and Jewish culture, since travelling around Israel and Palestine as a teenager.”
On Saturday, Church, who is from Cardiff, marched alongside thousands of protesters in central London calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.
The Palestine Solidarity Campaign organised the protest, following Hamas’s attack on southern Israel on Oct 7.
About 1,200 people were killed and more than 240 kidnapped before Israel retaliated with months of attacks on Gaza, killing and wounding thousands.
In a statement on her website, the singer said: “I have been called many things in my time, but not until this week have I received so much imaginative and violent hate. I’ve never before been called ‘traitor’.
“The threats to my safety have resulted in the police coming round to check in on us.”
She added: “My safety and the safety of my family has been threatened by some pretty scary people, emboldened by the rhetoric of front-line politicians, as well as cravenly irresponsible coverage by liberal legacy media outlets.”
Defending her performance of the song at the event to raise money for a new ambulance for Gaza’s Al-Awda hospital, she said: “I do not believe that the phrase ‘from the river to the sea’ is in any way a call for the ethnic cleansing or genocide of Israelis, and certainly, when I have used it or heard it used by other people, it has always been as a call for the liberation of Palestine (i.e. the most face-value interpretation).
“Often it is accompanied by the phrase ‘...we are all Palestinians’.
“A call for one group’s liberation does not imply another’s destruction, and those suggesting that it does, when it is in fact that first group who are currently being murdered in their thousands, are leveraging a grotesque irony. I will not have my rhetoric around resistance and solidarity redefined by those who most violently oppose my democratic engagement.”
She added: “At this point it becomes necessary for me to state that I do not support Hamas and condemn them for the attack on Oct 7.
“Whilst it is difficult to know the full truth of what happened that day – and hopefully with the fullness of time we will have a better perspective on this – there were undoubtedly war crimes committed, appalling acts, including the massacre of innocent civilians and hostage-taking.
“My heart goes out to the victims of that attack, the hostages, and their families.
“None of that justifies the horrors that have been inflicted upon the Palestinian people since that day.”
The Campaign Against Antisemitism has accused Church of encouraging hatred and called for the Charity Commission to investigate the incident.