Increased religious freedom in Tunisia is bad news for this unique musical tradition

The World
A stambeli folklore troupe in Tunisia performs during a festival at the cultural center in the city of Tunis on May 2, 2014.

Since the political upheaval that began in 2011, Tunisians have enjoyed greater political, social and religious freedoms.

[[entity_id:"154105" entity_type:"node" entity_title:"Stambeli is an endangered style of Tunisian religious music "]]

That’s good news, of course. But it’s also been bad news for a unique style of religious music in Tunisia called stambeli. 

Some call it Tunisian jazz. But that’s probably misleading. Stambeli is religious healing music played by Muslims and it has roots in the pre-Islamic history of the African slave trade.

Above, listen to an interview with Fadil Aliriza, who wrote a piece on stambeli for Foreign Policy.

Since the political upheaval that began in 2011, Tunisians have enjoyed greater political, social and religious freedoms.

[[entity_id:"154105" entity_type:"node" entity_title:"Stambeli is an endangered style of Tunisian religious music "]]

That’s good news, of course. But it’s also been bad news for a unique style of religious music in Tunisia called stambeli. 

Some call it Tunisian jazz. But that’s probably misleading. Stambeli is religious healing music played by Muslims and it has roots in the pre-Islamic history of the African slave trade.

Above, listen to an interview with Fadil Aliriza, who wrote a piece on stambeli for Foreign Policy.

Sign up for our daily newsletter

Sign up for The Top of the World, delivered to your inbox every weekday morning.