Tel Aviv Rally Against Blockade Of Palestinians
From Sol Salbe
[Two rallies were held on Saturday night to mark the 39th anniversary of the Occupation and to protest the boycott of
the Palestinians. One was held in Ramallah on the West Bank the other in Tel Aviv. We hope to bring additional
information about the Ramallah rally later but it does appear as if it was the first time that Palestinian and Israeli
student rallied in their own towns for a common cause.
The report below is my translation of the Hebrew media release issued by Gush Shalom. None of the Gush Shalom people
have had a chance to verify the accuracy of the translation and it does incorporate a slightly longer quote from
Shulamit Aloni in Ma’ariv which Beate Zilversmidt of Gush Shalom has authenticated. My thanks to SB for going over the
rushed translation and improving the grammar etc no end and to MM for assistance in the English rendition of some names.
Nevertheless all responsibility and blame for the translation is mine and mine alone. - Sol Salbe]
Gush Shalom Media release, 3 June 2006
Shulamit Aloni addressing thousands at the Tel Aviv museum:
“We have to talk to the Hamas government. They were elected democratically and they are our partners for peace. Amir
Peretz is following his predecessor in the path of killing, destruction, oppression and war crimes.”
Shulamit Aloni, former Israeli Education Minister and Israel Prize winner for her work on human rights, called last
night for the immediate opening of negotiations with the elected Palestinian government, headed by Hamas. Aloni made her
comments while speaking to a crowd of thousands at a rally at Museum Square in Tel Aviv. The rally was called by a broad
range of Israeli peace groups and organisations.
She said: “How much more can the Israeli occupying state degenerate? How much lower can the army that’s called the
Israeli Defence Force sink? It is carrying out acts of bombing, killings and murder. We have passed despicable
legislation which enables the army to do whatever it likes in the Occupied Territories without the need to pay
compensation. It is permissible to destroy, kill, torture and injure. There is no justice and there is no judge. The new
[Defence] Minister Amir Peretz is following the war crimes path trodden by his predecessor. Three days ago during the
Shavuot celebration, he spoke of Jewish justice and the concept of love and care for the Other. But in reality we are
becoming a despicable Apartheid state and everything that has been said about Jewish justice has been turned into dust
and ashes.
“And now we have a law which prohibits family reunification. A jurist friend of mine tells me that these people are from
an enemy country. An enemy country? Who has been ruling those parts for nearly forty years? Who has been stealing land
and water and turning towns and villages into detention camps? Everything is permissible because “there is no partner“.
But there has never been a partner. Arafat was not a partner, Abu Mazen was not a partner, and naturally the Hamas is no
partner. So let me tell you; there is somebody to talk to and we ought to talk to them. Over there such a body exists,
because there is a democratically elected government there. I’ll let you into a secret: We have had many democratically
elected governments in Israel which I was not too enthusiastic about and did not want. But nevertheless these were the
democratically elected government. If the State of Israel wants peace, and I have my doubts as to whether it does, then
it ought to know that there is someone there to talk to and there’s a need to talk to them.”
Palestinian educator Terri Boullata, principal of a school in Abu Dis, brought greetings from a simultaneous Palestinian
rally in Manara Square in the heart of Ramallah, where IDF forces killed four Palestinian demonstrators about a week
ago. Boullata, whose own backyard has been divided by the “Separation Wall”, told the rally: “At my school we organised
an end of the school year celebration for children who have lived their entire lives in the shadow of the wall and
fence. I hope that one day all of us, Israelis and Palestinians, will have the pleasure of tearing down that fence
together. I have come here to call for a halt to the siege and boycott of my people.
“In 1977, when the Likud was elected to power in Israel, the world was outraged. But did anybody decide then to punish
the Israeli people for its democratic choice? Of course not. Our President Abu Mazen has initiated a referendum in order
to formulate a Palestinian consensus position for peace. But this is not what the Olmert government wants.
“The Israeli government wants to act unilaterally, to carry out what is called Hitkansut [realignment or convergence] in
order to annex additional areas. It wants to annex the areas where the settlers illegally live on my people’s land. You
Israelis want security. I also want security for my children. Let me tell you that no one will get security out of
unilateral actions. If you don’t implement the two-state solution now, if you imprison the Palestinians in twenty
ghettos, you will get neither peace nor security. You’ll only get security by negotiation and through the setting up of
two states based on the 1967 borders.”
There were calls of support at the rally for three refuseniks currently serving time for their refusal to be conscripted
into the army of occupation. The well-known protest singer/song writer Zeev Tene performed his song “You’ll never know
another IDF“. Greetings were read from the villagers of Bil’in who are struggling against the construction of the fence
on their land and from simultaneous rallies and gatherings in the US, Canada, Britain, France, Germany and Japan. All
called on the governments of the world to remove both the boycott and financial embargo of the Palestinian people.
Novelist Salman Natour from Daliat el Karmel village said: “We thought that for the first time we have a civilian
Defence Minister. We thought that we have someone who instead of just climbing down from a tank, has come from the
[poor] development town’s streets, from a demonstration or a strike meeting. But we received a Defence Minister who is
getting dragged behind the generals and admirals, one who is following their tracks to authorise murder after murder.
For Amir Peretz it is merely a technical issue as to where exactly is a bomb going to land in Gaza. Just like it is
merely technical that a Qassam rocket hits the neighbour’s house and not Amir Peretz’s. The point, however, is that we
have to talk to our neighbours and resolve this bloody conflict.
“Don’t say you didn’t know,” said Professor Yehuda Shenhav from Tel-Aviv University, “Don’t say that you didn’t know
that war crimes are being carried out in our own backyard. Executions are taking place there without trial; the elderly
and the sick are being halted at checkpoints on their way to hospitals and our taxes are going to maintain the
Occupation instead of society’s needs. Our men and women of letters, High Court judges, academics, poets and writers,
have become morally and ideologically bankrupt. It is time to tear down the hypocrisy curtain. A Palestinian state must
be formed inside the 1967 borders – a genuine state and not an Israeli protectorate state. A Swiss-cheese state full of
holes and gaps will not do. It will not bring peace.” Shenhav ended his speech by calling: “Talk to Hamas now! Talk to
Hamas now!” Thousands of voices in the crowd echoed his call.
The demonstrators had arrived at Museum Square having marched from Rabin Square along Ibn Gvirol Street. They regularly
called out “Peace Yes – Occupation No”, “The Occupation is terror – the refusenik is the hero” and “Peretz, Peretz,
Minister for Defence – how many kids did you kill today?” “Amir Peretz has fairly and squarely earned the honour of what
he was called today,” said a rally organiser. “The very person who raised such hopes among the Israeli Left has been
transformed into the Defence Minister – the Minister for the Occupation and Oppression who is continuing the evil deeds
of his predecessors.”
The rally was organised by the Women’s Coalition for Peace, Gush Shalom, Ta’ayush, Hadash [Democratic Front for Peace
and Equality based on the Communist Party], Balad [National Democratic Assembly] , Banki [Israeli Communist Youth
Alliance]. The Alternative Information Centre, Student Coalition – Tel Aviv University; The Israeli Committee Against
House Demolitions, The Campus is not Silent; Artists without Walls ; Our Colours [Proud Youth in the Meretz Party] and
MachsomWatch*
* Translator’s note: other reports suggest Bat Shalom, New Profile and Yesh Gvul also sponsored the rally.
ENDS