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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East
Israeli protestors speak out against Sharons war
By Lena Sokoll
10 April 2002
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Around 15,000 Israelis joined an anti-war protest in Tel Aviv
on Saturday April 6. The march, made up of various pacifist and
anti-Zionist organizations, started at 7.30pm, at Yitzak Rabin
Square in central Tel Aviv and marched to the Ministry of Defense
where a rally was held.
Moria Shlomot, director of Peace Now, stated that the peace
coalition was insisting, Israel must retreat from the occupied
territories, evacuate the settlements and put up a border between
Israel and the Palestinians while returning to the negotiating
table towards a firm peace agreement.
People of all ages attended the protest but the majority were
young, aged 20-35. Banners were carried, reading, End the
occupationget out of the territories, Stop Sharons
war, Stop the massacres, Free Palestine,
Sharon is a war criminal, Bush/USAan accomplice
in the war, The IDF is a terrorist organization.
This reporter did not see any Israeli flags on the demonstration,
which is unusual. The Peace Coalition, set up by Peace Now, the
liberal Meretz party, various Labour Party doves,
the Kibbutz Haartzi movement and others, defines itself
explicitly as patriotic and Zionist. In former events Peace Now
argued that it is essential to raise the Israeli flag, because
otherwise it would become the property of the extreme right
and the settlers. Peace Now and Meretz also insisted on
the national anthem Hatikva being sung at the end
of protests in order to show loyalty to the Zionist state and
prove their patriotism. The speakers platform itself was
decorated with flags.
A measure of the pressure placed on opponents of the war was
the response of one man on the demonstration, who was one of the
first signatories to the letter written by officers refusing to
serve in the Occupied Territories. He was an anti-Zionist and
was eager to discuss the situation in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
He agreed to do an interview on condition that his real name was
not used, since many leaders of the peace movement regard giving
interviewsparticularly to the foreign pressas virtual
treason and the refuseniks amongst the reservists are forbidden
to talk to the press at all. Unfortunately when he was met again,
he had decided or been persuaded to obey the unwritten laws of
the refusenik movement.
A number of demonstrators were more than willing to make their
views known:
Maya, 27, is a nurse. She told the World Socialist Web Site:
I am here to protest against the war and the occupation.
Negotiations are the only way to achieve peace, I think. I dont
know how peace can be achieved, but I know for sure that this
war has to end and that this road will never lead to peace. The
Israeli army has to get out of the territories and Israel has
to give up the settlements. I have brothers and friends in the
army. I dont want them to kill and I dont want them
to be killed. I dont want them to die for nothing. I see
it as my duty to come here and protest against this horrible war.
Maram, 25, is a student:
I am here to demand the end of the occupation and the
killings. There are many more things I want to say, but first
of all and in this place Im protesting against the occupation
and the killings. Also we have to fight to change the government.
Maybe well be able to do it. Sharon has been too long at
the head of the state. Its high time to end his government.
We will never achieve peace while Sharon is in power thats
for sure. But we have to stop the killings right now. Only then
we will live in peace with the Palestinians.
I believe there are many more people who think like us,
but until now they dont go to the streets and voice their
protest. We cannot wait for the elections. Our protest is necessary
in order to wake up those who dont agree with Sharons
politics, to change the government and to show the world that
the majority of the people in this country dont think that
war is the way to solve problems.
To see the Labour Party and [Foreign Secretary Shimon]
Peres backing Sharons politics is very depressing. Its
sad but they are not a Labour Party anymore. They just call themselves
the Labour Party, but they are not. I know there are many members
of the Labour Party who dont agree with these politics and
who want their party to leave the government, but the mainstream
of the party still wants to stay in the Sharon government.
We have to end the occupation to achieve peace. Thats
the only solution. The end of the occupation will be the end of
suicide bombings. I also think that we have to separate the country
and create a Palestinian state, because in a Jewish state Palestinians
will never have the same rights and freedom as the Jewish population.
Lydia, 38, is a university professor:
Even if there is no peace, the IDF [Israeli Defence Force]
have to get out of the territories and end the occupation, for
the occupation is just horrible. Im quite pessimistic about
the chance of making a peace agreement right now, but the occupation
is wrong anyway so my first demand is to get the army out.
I wish I knew exactly what Sharon is up to, but I think
he wants to build up a puppet-leadership for the Palestinians
that will be under Israeli control.
Its not only this particular leadership, its
the political structure within Israel. I dont see a leader
or political party that is able to break down the status quo within
Israel and really settle a peace agreement. The only slim hope
is this movement here.
Regeb, 29, is a student:
Im demonstrating here against state-terrorism,
Israels state-terrorism. Israel is now going to war and
I dont see that the Sharon-government is able to achieve
peace or sign a peace-agreement.
I heard today that a massacre in a refugee camp in Jenin
is taking place, with a hundred people dead. The international
pressure that is put on the Sharon government right now actually
makes things worse, because the chief of command now wants to
finish his plans in the short time that is left for him to do
so. No medical treatment is available to the people in the camps.
It is already a disaster and it will become worse.
I hope the people in Israel are waking up now. They know
what war is like and they now see these pictures of war again
that they have seen so many times in the history of Israel. I
only hope that there will be pressure by the citizens on the government
to end this war.
My personal wish would be to create a state where all
the people of the region can live together, but it will take a
long timemaybe 50 yearsto establish such a state.
Right now, I think, there is no other way than to establish a
Palestinian state. The Palestinians need freedom. No one ever
in human history could defeat people who fight for their freedom.
Sharon and the chief of the IDF dont understand this. Israel
has a stupid leadership.
No, actually they are not stupid, but rather terrorists.
The leadership of this country is made up of terrorists. They
are shooting at civilians, killing them. In the last few days
the police has been acting against the law. They are using violence
against peace demonstrations. I think you can already see fascist
elements in Israeli society and they are starting to grow and
this is very frightening. But no one will stop us. No one will
silence us. We will protest and protest and protest until peace
is established here.
Daniel, 58, is a computer programmer:
Every important party, such as the government of Israel,
should say what they can do immediately to alleviate the most
severe problems. If the most severe problem of the Palestinians
is that they have soldiers roaming around their cities and marching
into houses, this should stop immediately. Get the army out of
the cities and back to Israel. This is an obvious thing.
A peaceful future, a peaceful existence in the Middle
East, is a bit like something we saw here many years ago. Some
of us are too young to remember. But there were years when Arabs
used to go to Jewish streets and Jews likewise used to buy in
Arab stores. People lived side by side, knocking on each others
doors, making friends, going to the movies together. This can
all happen again and is has to be like that again.
A secular state would be a very nice thing to have and
I would be very happy to be a citizen in such a country. I dont
know if this is very easy to establish. At least in the first
stage it seems easier if every community would organize itself
independently, with its own institutions, and establish a free
and friendly and peaceful relationship and cooperation and later
decide how we want to live together.
I was born in Haifa, which is the third largest city
in Israel, when it was a joint Arab-Jewish state. I was born when
everybody was living peacefully in that city. In 1948 the crisis
began and the city became no longer so unified and the Arabs fled.
There was an invasion into Israel, which was repelled, and when
it was repelled the Arab population mostly fled and from that
moment on it was no longer easy.
Im 58 now and in my spare time I try to reestablish
the peaceful things that used to be here and that should come
back again.
See Also:
Israeli massacre in the city of Jenin
[10 April 2002]
Thousands march in Australia against
Israels aggression
[8 April 2002]
Thousands of Israeli workers and youth
demonstrate against Sharons war
[5 April 2002]
International protests against assault
on Palestinian Authority
[5 April 2002]
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