July 23, 2006

Jews and Arabs against the war

Here's an article from Ha'aretz on yesterday's anti-war demonstration in Tel Aviv:
Anti-war Tel Aviv rally draws Jewish, Israeli Arab crowd

By Lily Galili, Haaretz Correspondent

More than 2,500 people on Saturday attended a demonstration against the war in Lebanon, marching from Tel Aviv's Rabin Square to a rally at the Cinemateque plaza.

The rally was the first of its kind protesting against the IDF's offensive in Lebanon. Unlike previous anti-war protests in israel, major Arab organizations in Israel - among them Hadash and Balad - participated in the event in large numbers.

They were joined by the left flank of the Zionist Left - former Meretz leader Shulamit Aloni and Prof. Galia Golan, alongside the radical left of Gush Shalom, the refusal to serve movement Yesh Gvul, Anarchists Against the Wall, Coalition of Women for Peace, Taayush and others.

These Jewish and Arab groups ordinarily shy away from joint activity. They couldn't come up with a unifying slogan this time either, except for the call to stop the war and start talking. However, protest veterans noted that in the Lebanon War of 1982 it took more than 10 days of warfare to bring out this many protesters, marking the first crack in the consensus.

The protest drew some new faces, like Tehiya Regev of Carmiel, whose two neighbors were killed in a Katyusha attack on the city. "This war is not headed in the right direction," she told Haaretz; "the captured soldiers have long since been forgotten, so I came to call for an immediate stop to this foolish and cruel war."

The rally, which received wide international press coverage, had a theme unfamiliar from previous demonstrations here. Beside the usual calls for the prime minister and defense minister to resign, this was a distinctly anti-American protest. Alongside chants of "We will not kill, we will not die in the name of Zionism" there were chants of "We will not die and ill not kill in the service of the United States," and slogans condemning President George W. Bush.
There's a passing comparison with the 1982 invasion of Lebanon and opposition to it. I've noticed that many of the supporters of this war like to stress their anti-1982 war credentials. I think many who claimed to oppose the war on Lebanon and the Palestinians in 1982 only did so because it was a Likud war and they still hadn't got used to Likud running the State. Now after years of Likud/Labour coalitions, zionism has shown itself to be pretty, if not entirely, monolithic, with many a "left" zionist supporting the Israeli onslaught. And so the zionist "left" is outed as being zionist first and left a distant second if it has any place at all. Still the demonstration is encouraging.

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