Lina Makoul on Protest, Prayer, and Power

From Radiya to Radicals: Lina Makoul in her own words.

Lina Makoul on Protest, Prayer, and Power
Menna Shanab

What does it mean to stay radical without hardening? To surrender without giving in? We spoke with Palestinian artist Lina Makoul (Instagram) about healing, heritage, holding oneโ€™s groundโ€”her forthcoming EP Radicals, the meaning behind Radiya, and what it really means for one to protest with their body, voice, and spirit.ย 

Lina Makoul

You describe โ€œRadiyaโ€ as surrender without defeat, survival without silence. As someone living in Palestine, how do you personally negotiate that balance between softness and strengthโ€”between being โ€œcontentโ€ and being radical?

In a world where weโ€™re constantly dehumanized to the point where racism and white supremacy get injected into our DNA through generations of acceptance and survival, I feel like my responsibility as a human being is to make sure it’s not a self-fulfilling prophecy. To make sure I donโ€™t lose my softness, regardless of my strength. That I donโ€™t lose my belief, despite continuous disappointment. Without losing the ability to love, despite all the heartbreak.

If โ€œRadiyaโ€ were a prayer, what would you be praying forโ€”on behalf of yourself, your people, or even your younger self?

I pray to not give in to darkness. To not fear fear or discomfort. To flow and trust. To evolve in harmony with our environment. To accept that light does not exist without darkness and that darkness cannot be eradicated. We canโ€™t fight a system that, no matter what strategy you have, youโ€™ll always lose.

Lina Makoul

Your EP is called Radicals. Whatโ€™s the most radical decision youโ€™ve made in your creative life so farโ€”and what did it cost you?

The most radical decision I have made in my creative life so far is letting art and message lead and pave my professional path. It didnโ€™t cost me, it actually earned me the respect of artists, creators, and free thinkers. Those who dedicate their being to making sure they give their all to make the future a better place. And that provided me with a community I can rely on to charge me with as much light as possible to just keep going.

Youโ€™ve worked with Grammy-winning engineers and global collaborators, but youโ€™ve said you don’t need permission to create world-class work. Whatโ€™s something the industry still doesnโ€™t understand about Arab independence and excellence?

That we are insanely talented – but because we never have it easy, weโ€™ll work 10 times harder than anybody else. Our parents and grandparents used to โ€œwalk through mountains and rivers to get education,โ€ so of course we wonโ€™t stop when our destination is a bit out of reach.

Lina Makoul

In โ€œFish Masariโ€ you tackled capitalism, in โ€œOn Muteโ€ it was censorship, and in โ€œRadiyaโ€ you blend surrender with sovereignty. What keeps you coming back to protestโ€”sonically, lyrically, and visually?

My life. When I release a song or visual, this is me releasing it from my system- physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. Itโ€™s liberating. Itโ€™s healing. Itโ€™s like giving love to something that causes you pain and discomfort, and alchemizing it into something that fills you up with love and support. It just feels like magic. And I know for sure that if this prototype has helped me heal, it will certainly work for others as well.

The choreography in โ€œRadiyaโ€ merges Caracalla Theatre with contemporary dance. What did your body need to express in this piece that words couldnโ€™t say?

Honestly, the choreographers Jouana Samia and Anthony Nakhle did a mesmerizing job. They understood the mission and delivered at 100%. They understood the essence of Radiya and thatโ€™s what makes them such incredible artists in their field. They understood the layers, the vision, the spiritual meaning, the healing Iโ€™m trying to pass through a screen.

Lina Makoul

You say: โ€œI have what money canโ€™t touch.โ€ What is the currency of your life right now – and whatโ€™s bankrupt in the world around you?

My community is my currency. And individualism is the worldโ€™s bankruptcy.

For more interviews, insights, and stories from the artists shaping our soundscape, explore our music coverage here.