From the Vlaamse Opera, Belgium, 2009 Torsten Kerl - tenor, Samson Marianna Tarasova - mezzo-soprano, Dalila Ferdinand Lemaire - libretto Flanders Opera Symphonic Orchestra and Choir Camille Saint-Saens - Samson et Dalila Click here to watch the Part I of "Samson et Dalila": youtu.be/GNa8HOMcDvk Subscribe to EuroArts: goo.gl/jrui3M A surprisingly actual opera about the mechanisms of fanaticism: the biblical story of Samson and Dalila is an exemplary illustration of how reconciliation is found wanting in the face of religious and political motives. Using the example of the impossible love between the Jew Samson and the Philistine Dalila, Camille Saint-Saëns shows the deadly conflict between two hostile cultures and religions. Samson and Dalila sacrifice their personal happiness for their religious ideals, urged on by political advisors (High Priest, Satrap of Gaza, and an old Hebrew man). The opera ends with the collapse of the Temple of Dagon and the death of all those in attendance due to the reaction of the deeply humiliated Samson. The people of Israel are free, but the notion of reconciliation between the enemies remains a dream. The Palestinian-Israeli production team, including the young Amir Nizar Zuabi and the experienced Omri Nitzan, places the complex relationships between the oppressed and the oppressors at the centre of the work’s vision. The basic assumption: the irony of history has reversed the roles but the violent nature of the relationship has remained the same. The production team’s joint scenic reflection on the present – in the mirror of the archetypal story of Samson and Dalila – focuses the attention not only on the bloody relations between Israel and Palestine, but on all current conflicts between peoples at war with one another, conflicts which in the meantime have also reached Europe.