Rabat – The second day of the Mawazine Festival featured a vibrant A-list of celebrities, bringing together musicians from different countries and backgrounds for a grand celebration of music and art.
Gracing the stage yesterday was Metro Boomin, an American artist, who dazzled festival-goers with a spectacular display of colors and lights.
Mawazine in Morocco
Morocco World News documented the event through photos that reflect how the stage was lit up with an array of vibrant colors and visuals, creating an electrifying vibe.
Fans in Mawazine
The pictures show people dancing and singing along to their favorite songs. Even those unfamiliar with the lyrics found themselves moving to the beats and capturing the moment with their smartphones.
Metro Boomin
The second day of the festival, which first kicked off on Friday, featured several artists, including Egyptian singer Ahmed Saad, Morocco’s singer Zina Daoudia, as well as many others. Their performances spread across various stages in the Rabat region.
Today, Mawazine will continue with the celebration with world music and Moroccan rhythms across the country’s capital. Metro Boomin
On the Souissi stage, Korean band Ateez is set to energize the crowd, while Yemeni-Emirati singer Balqeese, Moroccan rapper Musli, as well as singer Ihsane Rgeragui among many others, will entertain their fans in different other stages across the region.
Established in 2001, the Mawazine Festival has become an international platform for promoting Rabat as a cosmopolitan city that embraces cultural diversity. The annual event has consistently drawn in an impressive crowd of approximately 2.5 million music enthusiasts.
Metro Boomin
This year’s festival edition, which will continue until June 29, comes amid the Israel Occupation Forces’ constant massacres targeting citizens in Gaza.
Many Moroccans have created a campaign urging citizens to boycott the event, feeling it inappropriate to be festive amid the devastating situation in Gaza. Many social media pages have been sharing photos from the festival, reflecting empty spaces – suggesting that a notable portion of the citizenry engaged in the boycott campaign.