Showing posts with label Ahava. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ahava. Show all posts

June 12, 2013

Protest the BICOM & Israel Embassy sponsored Israeli Film & Television festival at Hackney Picturehouse

From Facebook
  • The Israeli Film & Television Festival, Seret 2013, promotes itself as "the best in current Israeli film and television". However, its main purpose is to promote Israel, which is clear from the list of sponsors and the nature of the films being shown.

    If you look at the official website for 'Seret 2013' you will find it is co-sponsored by the Israeli embassy, Israel lobby group BICOM and occupation profiteers Golan Heights Winery, see http://www.seret.org.uk/

    Hackney Picturehouse has shamefully decided to...See more


270 Mare StreetE8 1HE London, United Kingdom
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  • Please note we will protest every evening @8:15pm from tomorrow, Wed 12:
    Dates: Wed 12th, Thu 13th & Friday 14 June
    Place: Hackney Picturehouse
    Address: 270 Mare Street, Hackney E8 1HE
    Our protests are against the filmwashing of the Israeli apartheid and against its sponsors.
Check out this Jerusalem Post article from last year and you get some idea of the hasbara exercise that this film fest represents:
London is set to host the UK’s first-ever Israeli film festival which kicks off on Thursday with a celebration of work celebrating the contribution that Israeli film and television has made and the diversity of its projects.

Seret, the London Israeli Film & Television Festival, is the brainchild of Odelia Haroush, a former manager of the Ahava cosmetics store in London targeted last year by anti-Israel activists; Anat Koren, editor of Alondon, a popular magazine in Hebrew for London’s extensive Israeli community; and Patty Hochmann, a member of the Israeli Film Academy.

Haroush said she hoped the festival would provide a window to Israeli culture and life and show how Israel’s film and television industry is flourishing.

She said she was motivated after experiencing weekly protests by anti- Israel activists at Ahava.
So the film fest picks up where Ahava left off or was driven off.

April 01, 2011

Ahava megillah no more

Not in London anyway.  Ahava is leaving its current address in Covent Garden because the neighbours are sick of the protests.  Here's the Jewish Chronicle:
The UK branch of Israeli cosmetics store, Ahava, is moving from its central London shop after years of pro-Palestinian demonstrations. 

Protesters claim that the products sold in the store are manufactured in a factory in Israeli settlement, Mitzpe Shalom in the West Bank but are "misleadingly" labelled as produced in Israel.
The owner of the shop, currently in Monmouth Street, Covent Garden, is looking for other sites after owners of neighbouring stores complained to the landlord following protests.
Supporters claim it has been "chased out" of its location by regular "noisy and intimidating" demonstrations.
A spokeswoman for Shaftesbury PLC, which owns the property as well as several others in the Seven Dials area, said: "When Ahava's lease expires in September, we will not offer them a new one."
Pro-Palestinian protesters have been demonstrating fortnightly outside the shop, which opened in April 2007, for more than two years. A counter group of pro-Israeli supporters also demonstrate outside.
Police were drafted in to control the protests and set up a meeting last October between the protesters and other shop managers.
Last week, four demonstrators stood trial for aggravated trespass after they chained themselves to a concrete block inside the store last year.
Colin George, manager of clothes shop The Loft, next door to Ahava, said: "I'm pleased Ahava is leaving. It's brought the street down. I've complained to the landlords, as has everyone here. Everyone would like them to leave. I wish they had left two years ago.
This is highly significant. Notice the local shopkeepers aren't complaining about the demonstrators? And there's another significant thing.  See this:
Richard Millett, who attends the counter-demonstrations, said: "Maybe the neighbours could have had a more positive role and spoken to the protesters, rather than take it out on Ahava.
Whatever happened to Jonathan Hoffman?