Protesters Disrupt Israeli Memorial Day Events
Over War Raging in Gaza
A day of national mourning was interrupted by hecklers
who blamed government officials for failing to secure the release of hostages
still being held by Hamas.
By Patrick
Kingsley, Myra Noveck, Matthew Mpoke Bigg and Thomas Fuller
Patrick
Kingsley and Myra Noveck reported from Jerusalem, Matthew Mpoke Bigg from
London and Thomas Fuller from San Francisco.
May 13,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/13/world/middleeast/protests-israel-memorial-day.html
Israelis
gathered across the country on Monday for the first national day of mourning
since the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attacks, with protesters disrupting several
ceremonies as they demanded that government ministers do more to secure the
release of hostages.
Israel’s
Memorial Day is normally one of the most somber on the country’s calendar, a
date when Israelis put aside their differences to grieve fellow citizens killed
in war or terrorist attacks. But the protests on Monday underscored how
feelings of wartime unity have given way to deep disputes over the war in the
Gaza Strip, the fate of hostages taken on Oct. 7 and domestic politics.
Critics
heckled Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as he attended a memorial at Mount
Herzl in Jerusalem, the site of Israel’s national cemetery. One person was
heard shouting, “Garbage.” Another said, “You took my children.”
At a
ceremony in Ashdod, on the Mediterranean coast, bystanders shouted at the
national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, calling him a “criminal,” before
his supporters tried to drown them out.
While the
government has managed to secure the release of more than 100 hostages abducted
by Hamas in the attacks, at least half of the roughly 240 people who were taken
are either dead or still in captivity. Many of their loved ones want the
government to agree to an immediate cease-fire with Hamas that would allow for
the remaining captives to be released, even it means leaving Hamas in control
of parts of Gaza.
The
disruptions have precedent. Protesters taunted Mr. Ben-Gvir and other ministers
last year, before the war began, when anger over the government’s efforts to
overhaul the judicial system were the most prominent source of social division.
.
This year’s
protests reflected growing anguish among parts of the population about the way
Mr. Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition government has handled the war, causing
enormous casualties and destruction.
Mr.
Netanyahu has repeatedly pledged total victory over Hamas. But fighting across
the Gaza Strip in recent days has underlined the notion that Hamas militants
are still a force in the territory and might remain one for a long time to
come. The pattern that has emerged in the war is that, after pitched battles,
Israel’s military declares that it has taken control of an area and then moves
on, only for Hamas fighters to return and reconstitute their forces.
On Monday,
Israeli airstrikes shook the northern and southern ends of the territory, with
the Israeli military saying it had struck more than 120 targets over the past
24 hours. Ground troops also engaged Hamas fighters in several locations, the
Israeli military said. Amid the fighting, tens of thousands of fleeing
civilians continued a desperate search for safety.
The
fighting appeared to be heaviest in Gaza City, Beit Lahia and Jabaliya in
northern Gaza, and in Rafah, the southern city where more than one million
Palestinians had fled to try to escape Israel’s military offensive farther
north. In recent days, hundreds of thousands have left Rafah, according to the
United Nations.
Hamas said
on Monday that it had launched mortars at Israeli soldiers near the Rafah
crossing, which links Gaza and Egypt and has been closed since Israel seized it
last week.
A spokesman
for the United Nations said Monday that a U.N. staff member was killed Monday
morning when a U.N. vehicle was struck on the way to a hospital in Rafah.
Around 200 United Nations staff have been killed in the conflict.
Israeli
society closed ranks behind the government and military immediately after the
Hamas-led Oct. 7. But critics increasingly blame Mr. Netanyahu for failing to
prevent the attacks, which the Israeli authorities say killed roughly 1,200
people, and for prolonging the war without winning the return of the hostages.
A poll
conducted this month by the Israel Democracy Institute, a Jerusalem-based
research group, suggests that a majority of Israelis see a hostage deal as a
priority over a military operation in Rafah. Israeli officials call the city
Hamas’s last major stronghold in Gaza, with battalions of fighters concealed
there, but U.S. officials say that the group’s leaders in the territory are
hiding in the city of Khan Younis, not Rafah.
Israel and
Hamas have not agreed to a cease-fire and hostage release, despite months of
mediation. And Mr. Netanyahu has insisted that Israeli forces will invade
Rafah, with or without such a deal, amid threats by his far-right coalition
partners to bring down the government if the war ends without the total defeat
of Hamas.
On Monday
at a Memorial Day ceremony in Holon, in central Israel, hecklers shouted at
Miri Regev, the transportation minister, and called on her to resign. One
asked: “What about the hostages?”
As Yoav
Gallant, the defense minister, attended a ceremony in Tel Aviv, a protester
held up a sign that said: “Their blood is on your hands.”
On Sunday
night, Israeli peace activists broadcast their annual Joint Israeli-Palestinian
Memorial Day Ceremony, with parallel events in London, New York and Los
Angeles.
The
ceremony is organized by Combatants for Peace and the Parents Circle-Families
Forum, two peace-building organizations, and tries to recognize not only
Israeli grief, but also the toll of Palestinian suffering over the decades.
The
ceremony, held annually since 2006, was prerecorded this year to avoid the
possibility of disruption by protesters. It featured speeches, songs, a poem
about peace and a video that showed children in Israel and the Israeli-occupied
West Bank talking about the effect of war.
Palestinians
in the West Bank did not participate in person, given that Israel stopped
allowing many Palestinians to work in Israel after the Oct. 7 attacks. There
were also no direct contributions by speakers in Gaza.
More than
35,000 people have been killed in Gaza during Israeli’s military campaign to
defeat Hamas, mostly children and women, health officials there say. Almost
everyone in Gaza has been displaced from their homes amid a hunger crisis that
aid workers say has been largely caused by Israeli restrictions on aid
deliveries to the enclave.
The peace
groups’ ceremony, which was screened at more than 200 venues in Israel,
reflected the diversity and complexity of opinion within Israeli society about
the war. Several speakers discussed their hope for an end to generations of
bloodshed, and for peace.
Ghadir Hani
read a contribution from a woman in Gaza, whose name was given only as Najla,
describing how she had lost 20 family members in the war, including her
brother, a father of two, who she said had been killed while going to look for
food for his parents.
“They
killed him while walking in the street though posing no threat whatsoever,” Ms.
Hani read. “The death machine is still ready to kill,” she added. “But I know
that on the other side there are many people who believe in peace.”
Liam Stack
and Lauren Leatherby contributed reporting.
Patrick
Kingsley is The Times’s Jerusalem bureau chief, leading coverage of Israel,
Gaza and the West Bank. More about Patrick Kingsley
Myra Noveck
is a reporter and researcher based in Jerusalem. She researches feature stories
and reports breaking news. More about Myra Noveck
Matthew
Mpoke Bigg is a London-based reporter on the Live team at The Times, which
covers breaking and developing news. More about Matthew Mpoke Bigg
Thomas
Fuller, a Page One Correspondent for The Times, writes and rewrites stories for
the front page. More about Thomas Fuller


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