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Report of a Mass International Rally to End the Occupation:
A Protest-Happening in Tel Aviv
December 27, 2002
We were about 1,500 people from all over Israel as well as Europe
and North America, most of us dressed in black and spread out on
the five corners of one of the busiest intersections of Tel-Aviv.
Our twin slogans End the Occupation and No
to Racism called out from every direction: white lettering
on black smocks, black umbrellas, black banners, and the traditional
black hands of Women in Black.
The day was meant to convey a serious message, but the sudden bright,
hot sun after a week of cold winter rains, our own need for respite
from the horror, and the Tel-Aviv escapist state-of-mind all seemed
to get the better of us, turning a protest demonstration into a
protest happening, with action every few meters:
ÿ Two drummers, doing Middle Eastern rhythms;
ÿ Five Angry Old Ladies singing subversive
political lyrics they had written to nursery rhymes and Zionist
foot-stompers;
ÿ A group from Portugal doing much loved peace songs with guitars
and hand-clapping;
ÿ Black Laundry: Lesbians and Homosexuals Against the Occupation
with an art installation that defies simple description;
ÿ Crates of olives and olive oil, packed into empty soda bottles,
sold by peace activists that had helped in the harvest (ah, they
taste best when you have picked them yourselves
)
ÿ To counter the racist Transfer = Security stickers
that have sprouted all over the country, there were Transfer
= War Crime stickers, on the background of the yellow Jewish
star that had been used by the Nazis during the Holocaust.
ÿ The Fifth Mother Movement (carrying on the tradition of the
Four Mothers Movement that got us out of Lebanon) sold shirts saying
War is not my language.
But best of all was the public screening of the film Jenin,
Jenin [director Mohammed Bakri], an account of the actions
of the Israeli army this spring in the West Bank town of Jenin.
The film had been banned by the Israeli censors, but showing in
private homes around Israel. We the Coalition of Women for
Peace decided to rent equipment and defy the censor, showing
it on a big screen we set up in plain view of everyone.
The police knew of the plan and approached Yoni Lerman, one of the
main organizers, to tell her that the Chief of Police gave strict
orders that the film must not be shown. No way, said Yoni, were
showing it, and gave orders to run the projector. The police couldnt
stand it. They went up to the man who rented us the equipment and
was operating it, and told him to turn off the projector or they
would smash it. He turned it off. That was too much for Debby Lerman,
another organizer, who also happens to be Yonis mom. Debby
pulled out her checkbook, put her signature onto one of them, and
handed it to the video equipment owner. Hold onto that check,
said Debby, and if the police smash your equipment, write
in the amount that its worth. Now turn it on. He still
hesitated, but pointed to the button. You turn it on,
he said, which Debby gladly did. The crowd gathered in great numbers
and the film ran for over an hour, no equipment smashed, with the
TV news this evening reporting, The film Jenin, Jenin,
banned in Israel by the censor, was shown on a giant screen in the
heart of Tel-Aviv this afternoon, followed by an interview
with Yoni who simply explained that one should not hide the truth.
Well done, Yoni.
Special guests at the event: beloved Knesset Member Tamar Gozansky,
now retiring; dear Luisa Morgantini, our member of the
European Parliament; local and international peace activists Shulamit
Aloni, Simone Susskind, Uri Avnery, Dan Almagor, and others.
Special thanks to the many in Europe and North America who held
their own vigils in solidarity with ours some in great gobs
of snow, we hear.
Well, in some ways, it was more a protest carnival than a march
of mourning, like last December. Did we get through to the Tel-Aviv
crowd? Maybe. And maybe they got through to us a little bit, too.
The 10 Commandments at the Coalitions protest-happening
on December 27, 2002.
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