Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Shahana Yasmin

From Benedict Cumberbatch and Florence Pugh to Yara Eid and Mehdi Hasan: key speeches from star-studded Together for Palestine concert

Benedict Cumberbatch, Florence Pugh, and Richard Gere were among the 69 artists, speakers and activists who helped raise £1.5m for humanitarian relief efforts in Gaza, in one of the UK’s largest cultural fundraising events for Palestinians to date.

On Wednesday, the 12,500-capacity sold-out Together for Palestine concert at London’s OVO Arena Wembley saw musicians, actors, and activists appear at the event, which was livestreamed globally and coordinated by musician and activist Brian Eno. Palestinian artist Malak Mattar served as artistic director.

Funds from ticket sales, online donations, and merchandise are being distributed via the UK charity Choose Love to aid groups including the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund, the Palestinian Medical Relief Society, and Taawon, which runs orphan care and medical programmes in Gaza.

The concert came as Israeli military operations intensified around Gaza City, even as the United Nations and humanitarian agencies continued to warn of mass displacement, famine, and a collapse of medical services in the territory.

Performers included Damon Albarn, Bastille, Hot Chip, PinkPantheress, and James Blake, alongside Palestinian musicians such as Nai Barghouti, oud player Adnan Joubran, pianist Faraj Suleiman, and rapper El Far3i.

Speakers and presenters ranged from high-profile actors including Benedict Cumberbatch, Riz Ahmed and Florence Pugh to documentary filmmaker Louis Theroux.

Richard Gere, Benedict Cumberbatch, and Florence Pugh were among the 69 celebrities who raised £1.5m for humanitarian relief efforts in Gaza at the Together for Palestine concert in London (Aaron Parsons Photography)

UN special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories, Francesca Albanese, received a standing ovation as she addressed the crowd, urging attendees not to lose sight of the suffering in Gaza and the West Bank. “As we gather here tonight celebrating life and hope, many Palestinians are holding their loved ones in makeshift tents, waiting for the next bomb,” she said.

“Silence in the face of such suffering is not neutrality. It is complicity. And empathy should not be this hard, and it should’ve never been this hard,” said Pugh.

Cumberbatch took to the stage to read the poem On this land there are reasons to live by the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish, sharing the reading with playwright Amer Hlehel.

Former French footballer and actor Eric Cantona urged FIFA and UEFA to suspend Israel and condemned the double standards that allow it to compete.

“Four days after Russia started a war in Ukraine, FIFA and UEFA banned Russia. We’re now 716 days into what Amnesty International have called a genocide, and yet Israel continue to be allowed to still participate,” he said.

PinkPantheress and Bridgerton star Charithra Chandran spoke together on stage, with the musician saying: “Neutrality or silence shouldn’t be an option. Give Palestine your voice. And when your voice goes hoarse, hang your flags. Wear your keffiyeh. Show them we are here.”

“Yes, yes, at the back of my mind, yes. And then you think about children are dying, who cares about my career?” Chandran told Novara Media, when asked if she worried about backlash.

Palestinian journalist Yara Eid addressed the crowd directly, condemning the deaths of over 270 journalists in Gaza since October 2023, drawing massive applause.

“We have been lied to, manipulated, misled, gaslit,” said Zeteo founder Mehdi Hasan. “Shame on those Western journalists who have said not a word about the mass killing of their Palestinian counterparts. Shame on them.”

“As a Western journalist myself, I can tell you all this, the Palestinian journalists, they are the best of us. They are the best of us because they are not just documenting a war, or a genocide, they are documenting their own annihilation, their own starvation. In real time. They have shown the world that you can’t bomb the truth away.”

Performances ranged from intimate acoustic sets to larger ensemble pieces. Portishead contributed a pre-recorded version of their song “Roads”, accompanied by a string quartet, while pianist Faraj Suleiman performed an emotionally charged set, backed by a jazz-prog trio. Neneh Cherry joined Greentea Peng on stage to perform the hit “Seven Seconds,” drawing one of the night’s loudest ovations. Damon Albarn, Paloma Faith, Bastille, and Gorillaz were also among the evening’s headline performers.

Brian Eno performs at the Together for Palestine concert in London’s OVO Arena Wembley (Luke Dyson)

A pre-recorded video shown before the concert featured actors Cillian Murphy, Joaquin Phoenix, and Brian Cox, alongside musicians Billie Eilish and Finneas, calling for an immediate ceasefire and urging audiences to pressure their governments.

“We have to tell the truth on behalf of the people of Palestine,” Cox said in the video.

Actor and comedian Steve Coogan said: “It’s important to speak out now, not when this is over. Right now, while it’s happening. Pressurise your government, lend your support to those who are peacefully campaigning. Call for a ceasefire. Stop the killing.”

“It’s been the artist’s role in society to speak out, to risk speaking truth to power,” added American photographer and activist Nan Goldin.

Inside Wembley Arena, Palestinian art and symbolism were integrated into the production. Mattar’s stage designs and curated visual art reflected daily life under siege in Gaza.

“We want to empower people to take action. We owe the people of Palestine our solidarity,” she told AFP.

The event combined traditional sales from tickets, which were priced at £70 each, with online donations and a merchandise campaign designed by artists including Bella Freud, Katherine Hamnett, and Ayham Hassan.

Merchandise included T-shirts, tote bags, and keffiyehs, all available online, and profits are being funnelled directly to Gaza relief efforts.

Ticket sales alone raised an estimated £500,000, with presenter Jameela Jamil announcing at 10pm that the concert had raised a total of £1.5m at that point.

Since Israel launched its offensive in Gaza following the deadly attack by Hamas on 7 October 2023, over 60,000 people – mostly civilians including women, children and infants – have been killed, according to Gaza health officials.

Meanwhile, much of the infrastructure has been destroyed, as evidenced in shocking new images that emerged this week, showing Gaza’s flattened landscape coated in dust and ash.

A UN official said on 25 July that Palestinians are beginning to resemble “walking corpses”, as Israel continued to pose heavy restrictions on the amount of food and aid permitted to enter the territory following an 11-week total blockade earlier this year.

This week, a two-year UN probe found that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. The Israeli foreign ministry dismissed the publication as an “antisemitic ... distorted and false report”, adding that Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack, which sparked this conflict, was itself “attempted genocide”.

Keir Starmer is expected to discuss the findings with Donald Trump, as part of the US president’s state visit to the UK this week, with No 10 saying it would likely be a “subject of discussion”.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.