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"Hundred Year Hunger"

UK Activist Billy Bragg Releases New Song In Solidarity With Greta's Gaza Flotilla | LISTEN

 British Protest Singer Releases "Hundred Year Hunger" as Climate Activist's Ship Faces Mediterranean Storms.

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Billy Bragg
Ben Sutherland, CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

In a dramatic convergence of musical activism and maritime defiance, British folk-rock legend Billy Bragg has released his most controversial song in years, perfectly timed with activist Greta Thunberg's daring attempt to break Israel's blockade of Gaza.

The 67-year-old protest icon dropped his explosive new track "Hundred Year Hunger" on Monday, just as the Global Sumud Flotilla - carrying ex- climate superstar Greta Thunberg - set sail from Barcelona's sun-drenched port. The timing wasn't coincidental.

Bragg's latest musical missile takes direct aim at what he claims is a century-long issue of food deprivation imposed on Palestinians. Drawing inspiration from E. Mark Windle's recent book of the same name, the song weaves together accusations spanning from British colonial rule to modern Israeli policy.

Billy Bragg, the British folk-rock protest singer, has always spoken out loud and clear about issues of politics, morality, and justice, but this latest offering may be his most incendiary yet. The veteran activist frames the current Gaza situation through what he describes as "a century of enforced food insecurity" - a narrative that's sure to ignite fierce debate.

Meanwhile, the song's release coincided with real-world drama as vessels departed Barcelona on Sunday before turning back as a result of bad weather, and then departing again on Monday. The flotilla, whose name "Sumud" means "perseverance" in Arabic, faced nature's fury before even encountering potential Israeli naval intervention.

Around 20 boats began the voyage, but by Monday, strong winds reaching about 30 knots forced the convoy back to port, creating a dramatic scene of activists battling Mediterranean storms in their mission to break "Israel's illegal siege of Gaza".

Among the participants on board are Swedish climate and anti-Israel activist Greta Thunberg and former mayor of Barcelona Ada Colau, transforming what could have been a routine protest into a media spectacle.

This isn't Thunberg's first rodeo - the Swedish climate activist was detained and then deported by Israel after the IDF intercepted a separate Gaza-bound boat she joined in June. It's unclear why she thinks that this Flotilla will end any differently to the others. Israel's Defense Minister has had quite enough, and has threatened to seize all of the boats and use them for Israel's sea defense.

Also, the puny amount of humanitarian aid will not make any change to Gazan citizens' lives at all. It's just another way for these aging wannabes to get attention, and quite honestly, it's getting both stupid and painful.

Billy Nomates has been added to the line-up of the previously announced "Days Like These" benefit concert for Gaza at the O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire in London on Saturday 20 September 2025, suggesting a followup to Bragg's musical "activism" campaign.

The flotilla continues its journey toward what promises to be either a humanitarian triumph or another pointless (albeit dramatic) confrontation - with Billy Bragg's "defiant anthem" providing the soundtrack to this unfolding maritime drama.

Also, Billy, existence is not resistance. What does that even mean? Surely AI could have helped you come up with a better slogan. Maybe it's time for you to hang up your guitar after all.


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