Gay Parade Tensions Rise in Tel Aviv

Haredi activists put up posters reading Get out and protest in Jerusalem’s Mea Shearim neighborhood. Photo: Ariel Jerozolimski

Graffiti on synagogue wall in Tel Aviv Thursday morning. "If we can’t march in Jerusalem, you won’t walk in Tel Aviv." Photo: Tel Aviv Police

By Etgar Lefkovits and JPOST.COM Staff

The windows of the Geulot Israel synagogue on Tel Aviv’s Shenkin Street were smashed overnight Wednesday, and the words, "If we can’t march in Jerusalem, you won’t walk in Tel Aviv," were spray-painted on the synagogue walls, police said.

A police investigation was underway, as well as a search for the perpetrators of the vandalism.

The synagogue attack was likely a response to outcries on the part of the religious community, which have escalated into riots in Israel’s capital city against the planned Gay Pride Parade, scheduled to take place in Jerusalem on November 11.

Meanwhile, ZAKA Chairman Yehuda Meshi-Zahav filed a petition with the High Court of Justice on Thursday against the intention to hold the November 10 parade.

Meshi-Zahav is asking the court to order the police not to authorize the parade since, according to the ZAKA head, it would lead to violent protests and would put the public at risk.

For the second day in a row, about one hundred haredim rioted in Jerusalem’s Mea Shearim neighborhood on Wednesday against next week’s planned parade, police said.

The protesters pelted police and motorists with stones, and set garbage bins on fire blocking traffic in the street, Jerusalem police spokesman Shmuel Ben-Ruby said.

Two demonstrators suspected of attacking a cab and bus driver who chanced upon the demonstration were arrested by police.

Three police officers were lightly wounded by stones during the violent protest.

Eight of the demonstrators were detained by police for allegedly taking part in the violence.

Meanwhile, Jerusalem police chief Ilan Franco met late Wednesday night with officials in the State Attorney’s office to discuss the legal justifications of banning the parade.

Earlier Wednesday, Internal Security Minister Avi Dichter said that next week’s planned parade in Jerusalem would be cancelled if the event severely disrupts police operations.

His comments were the clearest indication to date that police were weighing banning the event -- or at least curtailing it -- amidst mounting public opposition and threats of violence.

A final police decision on the parade is expected in the coming days.

The prerogative for issuing permits for public events rests with police, who could ban the move due to concerns over public safety.

Protests against the parade broke out Tuesday night in Jerusalem’s Mea Shearim neighborhood, as hundreds of haredim pelted police with stones and blocks in protest against the planned event.

14 suspects were arrested for allegedly taking part in the violence.

The debate over the event, which is slated to take place next Friday, mirrors a similar controversy over this summer’s planned international gay parade in Jerusalem, which was eventually cancelled due to the war in Lebanon.

The burgeoning opposition to the local city parade has again united an unusual cross-party and inter-faith coalition of Conservative Orthodox Rabbis, Muslims, and Christians who call the event a deliberate affront and provocation to millions of believers around the world.

Supporters of the parade counter that freedom of speech enables them to hold the event in Jerusalem, as a symbol of tolerance and pluralism, even if theirs is the view of the minority of residents in the city.

The two-year-old public debate over the holding the international gay parade in Jerusalem in the last two years has only served to intensify the struggle over the local parade.

JPost.com

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-  Click here for article: Supreme Court might prevent Gay March


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