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Gay
Israel News & Reports 2005
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Israel News & Reports 2000-02
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Israel News & Reports 2003-04
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1 Israeli court rules on lesbian couple adoption1/05
3 New Israel Holocaust Memorial Honors Gay Victims 3/05
4 Gay Jerusalem determined to hold parade 3/05
6 Jerusalem Gay Bar Torched 4/05
7 Jerusalem gay pride parade postponed to next year 5/05
8 Gay Israeli artists seek Arabs to fall in love with 5/05
9
Thousands attend Tel Aviv Gay Pride amid heavy security measures 6/05
10 Jerusalem city council bans gay pride parade 6/05
11 Jerusalem court approves gay parade--"not within the city's jurisdiction to prohibit" 6/05
13 March for pride and Jerusalem --a troubled success 7/05
14 Tel
Aviv to build first-ever gay center 12/05
UPI
http://washingtontimes.com/upi-breaking/20050110-101659-9002r.htm
January
10, 2005
1
Israeli court
rules on lesbian couple adoption
Jerusalem - In a precedent-setting ruling, the Israeli Supreme Court Monday ruled 7-2
that a lesbian couple is able to legally adopt each other's children.
Only married couples are allowed to adopt children in Israel, except in rare
circumstances, according to a literal wording of the law, however the court
recently handed down a ruling allowing a common law wife to adopt her partner's
children.
Based on this ruling, the court expanded the principle to include same-sex
couples, reported the Jerusalem Post."
Our organization is also helping a gay couple, who wish to be recognized as
the adoptive parents of a child that was legally adopted in the U.S., and are
now suffering from bureaucratic caprice and prejudice regarding the rights
of a same-sex family," said attorney Irit Rosenblum, director of the "New
Family" organization. "We hope the court's ruling will lift the remaining
obstacles."
Jerusalem Post
www.JPost.com
February 24, 2005
2
Gay parade a no-go?
by Etgar Lefkovits
Jerusalem police are considering canceling a major international gay
pride parade scheduled to take place this summer because they will be overburdened
by the unilateral withdrawal from Gaza and will not be able to provide
adequate security for such a large event at the same time, police said
Wednesday.
The 10-day, "Jerusalem World Pride 2005," is slated to take
place in the city in mid-August, just four weeks after Israel's unilateral
withdrawal
from the Gaza Strip is supposed to get underway. The pullout from 21 Jewish settlements in Gaza and four in the northern
West Bank, which is scheduled to begin on July 20, is expected to take
anywhere
from five to nine weeks.
In all, 9,000 Jewish residents are slated to be evacuated from their homes
as part of the plan, with many likely to leave only by force. Nearly the entire 24,000 strong police field force will be assigned
to the pullout, with the remainder of the police's manpower is slated to be
stationed
to ward off civil disturbances against the withdrawal throughout the country.
About 18,000 officers will be assigned to the withdrawal, including 2,500
unarmed police officers who will evacuate settlers who refuse to leave
voluntarily, and 4,000 officers will be posted at passages into Gaza, police
said. "
We are examining this issue [of canceling the parade] based on the security
needs on the ground," Jerusalem police spokesman Shmuel Ben-Ruby
said Wednesday.
He declined to say when a final decision would be made on the matter. The issuance of permits for marches and other public events in the country
is under the jurisdiction of the police. Local organizers of the event expressed confidence Wednesday that the international
parade would go ahead as scheduled, despite the evident lack of police
manpower to secure the event.
"
As Israelis and Palestinians are moving towards more peaceful times, we
are confident that the world pride events will take place as planned this August
in Jerusalem, and are working closely with the police towards this goal," said
Hagai El-Ad, the executive director of Jerusalem's Gay and Lesbian Center,
whose organization is planning to host the international event. He declined to comment over a possible postponement of the event. Even before the conflict with the Gaza pullout emerged, the idea of holding
an international gay parade in Jerusalem was a source of bitter controversy.
In a largely conservative city, with a strong religious demographic makeup,
the idea of holding such a parade in Jerusalem is seen by many – even
outside of observant circles and Jerusalem's haredi-run city hall – as
out of touch with both the spiritual character of the "holy city" as
well as the sensitivities of its religious residents.
Jerusalem held its first annual local gay parade three years ago. The event,
which draws several thousand participants, has been the source of repeated
debate each year. When the first gay pride parade was held in the capital in
2002, former Jerusalem mayor Ehud Olmert withheld funding for the event, after
failing
to convince
organizers and participants to join Tel Aviv's pride parade, where an
annual procession enjoys a much larger turnout.
The Jerusalem Municipality was later ordered by the Supreme Court to pay
the organizers NIS 40,000 for the annual event, in keeping with the amount
the
municipality contributed toward other city marches.
The last international gay parade, which took place in Rome in 2000, attracted
about half a million participants. Local organizers expect tens of thousands
of revelers to attend the Jerusalem event this summer.
365Gay.com
Newscenter Staff
March 16, 2005
3
New Israel Holocaust
Memorial Honors Gay Victims
Jerusalem - Israel's new museum dedicated to victims of the Holocaust features
a special exhibit dedicated to gay and lesbian victims of the Nazis. The
Yad Vashem Museum was officially opened Tuesday in Jerusalem. The inclusion
of gays was not part of the original plan. Several months ago
while the museum was still under construction Jerusalem City Council member
Sa'ar Netanel toured the facility honoring Jews killed by the Nazis.
He said he was surprised there was no mention of gay Holocaust victims and
mentioned it to the museum's director. "
The Jewish people has a moral obligation to remember all the victims of World
War II," Netanel told the Haaretz newspaper. "The state of Israel should be the first country in the world to mention
all the victims," he said.
Avner Shalev, chairman of the Yad Vashem wrote Netanel in response, "Jews
indeed were not the only victims of the Nazi regime, but they were the only
group that it aspired to completely wipe out. It is clear that in dealing with
the
Holocaust we also touch on its contexts and related areas, among them the subject
of other victims of the regime. Accordingly, the new museum will present the
subject of other victims, including homosexual victims, of the Nazi regime,
in a relevant place."
There are monuments to the gay victims of the Holocaust in San Francisco and
San Sabba, Italy.
Under Paragraph 175 of the German penal code, which banned sexual intimacy between
members of the same gender, an untold number of gays were rounded up by the Nazis
and send to concentration camps where they were subjected to medical experiments
including lobotomies, and forced to work in labor camps.
The number of gays sent to the camps ranges from 5,000 to 15,000, many of them
sent to the gas chambers.
The American Holocaust Museum in Washington also has an exhibit dedicated to
gays and lesbians. A portion of the exhibition toured the country last year.
But still, many Americans do not know that the Nazis also targeted gay, gypsies
and other groups.
In 2003 Minnesota state Rep. Arlon Lindner during debate on two bills he had
brought forward to repeal gay rights laws in the state, said gays were lying
when they cited thousands of homosexuals who were exterminated or sent to concentration
camps by the Nazis.
"
It never happened," Lindner told the House.
"
I was a child during World War II, and I've read a lot about World War II," he
said. "It's just been recently that anyone's come out with this idea that
homosexuals were persecuted to this extent. There's been a lot of rewriting
of history."
The remarks shocked the legislature, but attempts to censure him failed.
March 31, 2005
4
Gay Jerusalem
determined to hold parade
Jerusalem - A gay leader in Jerusalem said Thursday that the fervent opposition of
Jewish, Muslim and Christian religious leaders had made organizers of an
international
gay festival more determined than ever to go ahead with plans to hold the 10-day
event in Jerusalem this summer.
The World Pride festival, last held in Rome in 2000 where it attracted thousands,
is to include street parties, workshops and a gay film festival and is hotly
opposed by Muslim, Orthodox Jewish and Christian groups.
Jerusalem police spokesman Shmuel Ben-Ruby said Thursday that police had received
a number of requests not to issue a permit for the festival but had not yet
made a decision.
A rare alliance of senior Jewish, Christian and Muslim clerics held
a news conference Wednesday demanding the festival not be held in Jerusalem, describing
gays as
lower than animals and calling their lifestyle unnatural and unhealthy.
Jerusalem Open House director Hagai El-Ad, one of the festival organizers,
told The Associated Press that the offensive tone of the remarks made him even
more
determined to press ahead with plans for the Aug. 18-28 event.
"If anyone had any hesitation about how important this event is, after the
unfortunate remarks made at Wednesday's press conference, I think no such questions
remain," he said. "It's important that one of the first signs of interfaith
dialogue we have encountered here in Jerusalem takes place around such a negative
message."
http://edit.yahoo.com/config/send_webmesg?.src=&.target=rlabrie16
14 April 2005
5
Chief Rabbi in Israel of the Raelian Branch ofJudaism
gives his support to Jerusalem World Pride
Following
the opposition of the religious authorities of Jerusalem to the hosting of Gay
World Pride 2005 which will take place in
Jerusalem in August 2005, Leon Mellul, the Chief rabbi of Israel of the raelian
branch of Judaism, (rael.org) spontaneously decided to grant his full and complete
support to this event and its organizers.
Questioned on
the reasons for his decision, Chief Rabbi Mellul, who is recognized as someone
who doesn't mince words declared:
"They are thugs or rather a religious mafia that wants to impose its power
in order to prohibit the gay parade which will take place on next August 28th
in Jerusalem".
And Chief Rabbi Mellul to add: "the attitude of the religious authorities towards
the religious minorities is from my point of view odious and revolting. It
only confirms once again the lack of love of these hypocrites who play 'men
of god' or rather who live at the expense of their religion for their personal
needs, to satisfy their power and impose their mediaeval laws."
As the founder
and spiritual leader of the International Raelian Movement, Rael, (Mashiach
Rael for Israel only) says it so well:
"Only the love of differences and femininity can save our planet".
"For the international raelian movement, homosexuals have a major role
to play in our society in this direction. They have a lot to teach
us about sensitivity, refinement and especially about the love of differences
which is the theme
of their parade and which the religious leaders have been unable to see, blinded
by the gangue of their traditions and their prejudice. "
RAEL, the spiritual
leader of the International Raelian Movement (Mashiach Rael for Israel only),
opens wide his arms to all human beings without distinction
of language, sex, race, religion or sexual orientation. "The love of a human
being is unconditional!" he says.
To reproach a homosexual for being homosexual is as stupid as reproaching a
black for being black or a white for being white or a cat for being a cat.
"Homosexuality is quite simply genetic and the great religions know it and hide it! Sexual minorities have always been mistreated by the traditional religions that are the source of and that continue to spread violence towards homosexuals by saying words and by posing gestures that encourage homophobia everywhere on the planet."
365Gay.com Newscenter
http://www.365gay.com/
April 25, 2005
6
Jerusalem Gay
Bar Torched
Jerusalem - Police are investigating a fire at Jerusalem's
only LGBT bar as extreme Orthodox rabbis and Christian evangelical groups ratchet
up the rhetoric in opposition to World Pride celebrations scheduled for the
city this summer.
Sa'ar Netanel, a member of Jerusalem's city council and the owner of the
bar, Shushan, said that Sunday night a man entered the doorway of the club and threw
a burning rag inside.
Flames spread quickly but patrons escaped without injury.
No one has claimed responsibility but relations have worsened between city's
gays and conservative rabbis, Muslim clerics, and Christian fundamentalists
in recent weeks.
In January conservative clerics from the three religions in a rare show of
solidarity began efforts to thwart World Pride celebrations. (story).
At a news conference last month, Shlomo Amar, Israel's Sephardic chief rabbi
said that Jerusalem's Open House, the LGBT center which is organizing the
celebration is "creating a deep and terrible sorrow that is unbearable."
"
We can't permit anybody to come and make the Holy City dirty. This is very
ugly and very nasty to have these people come to Jerusalem," Abdel Aziz
Bukhari, a Sufi sheik, said.
Other Muslim officials have warned that if the gay pride organizers do not
heed warnings and attempt to march in Jerusalem, “their lives will be
in danger”.
Netanel on Monday said he is not rushing to judgment. "
I certainly don't blame anyone, and certainly no community," he told
the English language Ynet. " The police will investigate and we'll see. This is the first time the
club is attacked, but I already received threats on my life."
Netanel said he hoped to reopen the club later this week
World Pride, to be held between August 18 and 28 is expected to draw more than
100,000 gays and lesbians from around the world to the Holy City. The last
World Pride was held in 2000 in Rome.
From: The Jerusalem
Open House for Pride and Tolerance
pride@joh.gay.org.il
May.
15, 2005
7
Jerusalem WorldPride postponed
to next year
Worldpride has be re-scheduled to Agust 6-12, 2006.
This change of date follows an announcment by Israel's prime-minister that the Gaza pullout will start mid-August. As a result, The JOH board has decided to re-scheduled WorldPride to August 6-12 2006.
As Tolerance, pluralism and equality are WorldPride's guiding principles, we feel that holding WorldPride during the Gaza pullout would do injustice to those values. We have taken this decision out of consideration to the most difficult political climate expected in Israel this August, and because as a community we are deeply engaged in the complex reality surrounding us.
We are continuting our work to ensure that WorldPride is a successful event, that will echo the message of love without borders globally.
If you have any questions, please let us know and we'll be happy to help. See you in Jerusalem next year.
Michal Hamo
Board member
The Jerusalem Open House for Pride and Tolerance
pride@joh.gay.org.il
20 May 2005
8
Gay Israeli artists
seek Arabs to fall in love with
by Claudia Parsons, New York
Two gay Israeli men have installed a huge double
bed in a New York art gallery and are inviting Arab men to become their "lover" as
part of an exhibition called "Sleeping with the Enemy."
But the artists who like to be known simply as Gil and Moti talk about the
project in romantic terms, saying it's about "falling in love" rather
than sex. Gil said visitors should not come to the show expecting to see pornography.
"The bed is there for us to live in. Artistically there are three pillows
to symbolize unity of three people which goes along with the whole concept of
make love not war," he said.
"We try to actually open up a dialogue and debate which is about more important
issues than just sexual matters and if there's sex, OK, but it's not something
we're interested in discussing," Gil said.
The sales pitch for the show in which the two live and work in the gallery
surrounded by their art reads: "Israeli artists Gil and Moti are gay,
married and in love. For 5 weeks, they court an Arab lover."
Since late 2002 they have made contact online with as many as 300 Arab men
from across the Middle East. They typically send a message through a dating
site asking
if they can paint a picture from the man's photo and explaining who they are. They
then scan and e-mail the painting as a means of "seduction" and
hopefully start a dialogue and meet, Gil said.
The gallery called Jack the Pelican, in Brooklyn, is displaying over 100 of the
watercolors, priced at $700-$900, along with some transcripts of e-mail exchanges,
photos and oil paintings and the bed.
"We felt frustrated with the political situation in the Middle
East," said
Gil. "As Israelis, we grew up with Arabs but we were encouraged by the
education system to hate and abuse them so we thought we must do something
about it. So we decided to fall in love with one of them."
STILL SEARCHING FOR THE RIGHT MAN
Moti is coy when asked whether the bed might actually be put to use if they meet
an Arab man they like.
"We want people to think about sex when they enter the show because we have
a bed in the front and it's clear that we are living here, but we're not interested
in showing that," he said, appearing a little bashful for a man standing
in front of paintings of naked men in graphic sexual positions.
Gil said they had not invited anybody to join them yet but one local Arab man
had invited them to his home.
The exhibit includes video and pictures of a Lebanese man called Oliver
who lived with them for nearly a year in the Netherlands. One photograph shows the three
men standing naked and covered in mud in a wood, holding hands. "We actually fell in love, with the three of us," Gil said. "He
saw us as one person because we're together 24 hours a day, I think it's no
longer clear how individual we are."
"He said he loved not just us but the concept. But at some point it got
complicated," Gil said, explaining that Oliver found the pressure of living
with performance artists who consider their life a constant show too difficult,
so he left.
Aged 37 and 33, Gil and Moti, who met 11 years ago at art school in Israel, dress
alike, on this occasion in yellow tee-shirts embroidered by Gil's mother with
flowers and their names in Arabic, and both wear their hair gelled into spikes.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/587068.html
June 12, 2005
9
Thousands attend Tel Aviv Gay Pride amid heavy security measures
by Yuval Azoulay
"
Any straight folk here?" drag queen Tziona Patriot asked the tens of thousands
of spectators on Friday at the central stage in Ganei Yehoshua park, where
the closing Gay Pride event in Tel Aviv was taking place. A voice from the crowd
shouted, "Yes!" Tziona, who expected the wisecrack,
responded: "So, what is it like to be different? But it's OK. We accept
you, and we have a lot to give..."
This year's parade organizers expected 100,000 marchers on Ibn Gvirol Street,
the number of marchers last year. In fact, only several tens of thousands marched
this year. The colorful parade of the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transsexual
community was held under heavy security arrangements, involving some 1,000
police, security
guards, orderlies and rescue teams.
The parade celebrated 30 years since the founding of the Society for Protection
of Personal Rights for Lesbians, Gay Men and Bisexuals in Israel, and honored
the activity of the pioneers who fought the way for acceptance of people with
same-sex preference.
While thousands were celebrating Gay Pride, Shas Chairman Eli Yishai published
an announcement calling the event "a disgrace." He said that, at
such a violent time, these parades do nothing but "provoke" the public.
"When there is a murder almost every day, a group of people come and steal
hours of municipal police work hours, for an event that is mostly a disgrace
for
humanity." Shas officials said a few hours before the Sabbath that the
party would instruct its representatives in Tel Aviv's city council to see
whether the parade involves desecration of the Sabbath by an official body,
like the municipality.
The organizers were indifferent: "It's only three o'clock in the afternoon.
We'll be gone by six-thirty. What does he want from us?" they said.
At the same time, three young talents, finalists in the "Homolulu is Born" song
contest, waited to go on stage at Ganei Yehoshua. The one requirement was that
contestants were to be out of the closet, which made sense, Tziona explained, "since
the contest receives so much exposure."
The winner, 26-year-old Roni Kiezelgal, sang "Standing on a Cliff," by
Israel's High Five band. His parents were in the crowd watching. "It's
a dream. When my parents see their son is not the only one, and there are tens
of thousands of others in Israel, they will accept me not only 80 percent,
but 100 percent," Kiezelgal said.
The Jerusalem
Post - http://www.jpost.com/
June 26, 2005
11
Jerusalem
court approves gay parade--"not
within the city's jurisdiction to prohibit"
by Etgar Lefkovitz
Overturning a city veto, Jerusalem District Court ruled Sunday that the municipality
must allow the city's annual gay parade to take place on Thursday as scheduled.
Judge Mussia Arad ordered Mayor Lupoliansky to personally pay NIS 30,000 to
the city's Gay and Lesbian center to cover its legal costs and to underwrite
the event, and the Jerusalem municipality was ordered to pay and additional
NIS 30,000.
Arad ruled that is was not within the city's jurisdiction to prohibit the parade,
arguing that the mayor could not act with prejudice against group of people
because he disagreed with their worldview. Arad also ordered the city line the parade route with banners representing
the group in advance of the event, as she said the city customarily did for
other parades and cultural events.
Earlier Sunday, Jerusalem police chief Ilan Franco said that he would allow
the parade to take place on Thursday as scheduled.
The city police chief announced his decision to allow the event, along with
four demonstrations against it, during a morning hearing at the Jerusalem district
court. Interior Minister Ophir Paz-Pines had said that he would obligate the city
to allow the event to go ahead as planned, with legal experts opining that
the court would force the municipality to allow the parade to take place.
The legal action came after the municipality unexpectedly informed event organizers
in writing Thursday that the city would not allow the yearly parade to go ahead
on June 30 as planned, saying the march would offend many of the holy city's
residents, and set off unrest. The city's eleventh-hour decision, made public just one week before the scheduled
event, stunned event organizers who said Thursday that they would fight all
the way up to the Supreme Court, if necessary, to overturn a decision which,
they said, violated the homosexual community's right of expression.
"
The actions of the mayor, and those carrying out his policies, are injurious
to the values of freedom of expression... and are a serious and intentional
violation of good faith...and violate the principle of equality," said
Hagai El-Ad, director of Jerusalem's Gay and Lesbian Center. The event, which draws several thousand participants, has been the source of
repeated debate each year, with many religious city councilors and a not insignificant
number of city residents considering such an event inappropriate for a "holy" city.
Over the last three years, however, the municipality never said they would
ban the parade from taking place, even after Mayor Uri Lupolianski, an opponent
of the event, became the city's first haredi mayor two years ago. The prerogative for issuing permits for marches and other public events in
the country rests with the police, although the municipality can ban marchers
from public parks.
Indeed, the city's surprise decision to block the parade, which was widely
expected to be overturned by the Jerusalem court from the start, was seen as
a largely symbolic move by the haredi-run municipality of Mayor Lupolianski,
who has come under increasingly harsh criticism from his constituency for failing
to take a more vocal position against the planned international gay pride parade
which was slated to be held in Jerusalem this summer.
"
We would like to see Mayor Lupolianski as well as religious city and state
officials lead masses of people to protest the event, and if necessary be arrested
in an attempt to block the parade from happening," said New York Rabbi
Yehuda Levin of the Orthodox Rabbinical Alliance of America, who has been actively
campaigning against such events in Israel.
The city's decision came just a month after organizers, facing a looming police
veto, postponed the international gay pride parade slated to take place in
Jerusalem until next year due to the concomitant pullout from Gaza.
The summer withdrawal, and the mass protests planned to go along with it, are
expected to vastly overburden police around the country, leaving police with
no manpower to safeguard such a highly controversial event.
In a conservative city with a strong religious and traditional makeup, both
Jewish and Arab, the idea of holding such an international parade is seen by
many - even outside of religious circles - as out of touch with both the spiritual
character of the city as well as the sensitivities of its observant residents.
A public opinion poll released earlier this year found that three-quarters
of Jerusalem's 700,000 residents were opposed to holding the international
gay event, and only a quarter supported it.
When the first local parade was held in the capital in 2002, former Jerusalem
mayor Ehud Olmert withheld city funding for the event, after failing to convince
organizers and participants to join Tel Aviv's parade, where a gay pride procession
has been held for years with a much larger turnout. The Jerusalem Municipality was later ordered by the Supreme Court to pay the
organizers NIS 40,000 for the annual event, in keeping with the amount the
municipality contributed toward previous city marches.
Gay Middle East.com
http://www.gaymiddleeast.com/
June 30, 2005
12
Pride
parades take place in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Eilat; Jerusalem parade threatened
but successful
by Avi Ozeri
Sure....it's become a regular event here in Israel and throughout the world.
Annually, pride parades take place in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Eilat. Music,
fun, dancing and sunshine. Little politics and certainly not a struggle for
survival. Here in Tel Aviv, few of us had any intention of taking the 50
minute drive to Jerusalem to participate in the Jerusalem Pride Parade. Then...one
day at the end of last week, we opened our morning newspapers to find that
the mayor of Jerusalem, a religious zealot and far from a friend of the GLBT
community, was making yet another last minute attempt to stop the Jerusalem
parade. Claiming that the parade would be an affront and insult to the moral
sensibilities of the citizens of Jerusalem he went to court and applied to
have the parade permit cancelled. . The Jerusalem Open House, organizers
of
the parade, promised to take this threat up to the Israeli Supreme Court.
Without the backing of his own municipality, the mayor went on this crusade
on his
own.
Just the possibility that an attempt was being made to stop the parade sent
shock waves through Israel. It was an aggressive act of changing
the status quo. The Jerusalem parade has become a symbol of tolerance and
dialogue.
How
dare they try to stop it now?!
The organizers of the Jerusalem Pride Parade (the Jerusalem Open House) have
always stressed that as proud Jerusalemites, they respect the holiness of
the city. The Jerusalem parade always reflected the special atmosphere
of the city.
As opposed to Pride Parades around the world, there are never loud music
trucks, no "half naked" go-go boy and girls dancing. It's a parade of people
walking together upholding their right to be free in their city and live in
equality.
It did not take long for the Israeli courts to hand down their decision -
the parade will go on, the parade is not an affront to anyone. Judge Mussia
Arad,
in an unusual move, ordered Jerusalem's Mayor Lupoliansky to personally pay
NIS 30,000 (Euro6000) to the Jerusalem Open House in order to cover its legal
costs and to underwrite the event, and the Jerusalem municipality was ordered
to pay and additional NIS 30,000 (Euro6000). However, the seeds of hatred
had been well planted by the mayor and his associates, and it was only a
matter
of time until the results appeared.
The Aguda, Israel's National GLBT organization and the Jerusalem Open House began
an information campaign, explaining to the general public how important participation
in the parade would be. Spokespeople for the Jerusalem Open House, human rights
activities, along with various members of the Israeli Parliament and government
ministers were interviewed both on television and radio, explaining how close
we came to losing the right of having the pride parade. People from all walks
of life were called upon to come to the parade to show support....and they
did.
From Tel Aviv, we arrived to the Jerusalem city center, where the parade was
to begin. We saw hundreds of ultra orthodox religious fanatics standing
with
anti-parade signs. We were heckled and cursed by them. The police
managed to separate the protesters and the paraders. But then the hatred that
had been stirred
up by Jerusalem mayor and the ultra religious authorities hit a boiling point.
As the parade proceeded along Jerusalem's main street, an attacker jumped
into
the first group of marchers and stabbed a man. Blood from the victim's
chest seeped through his shirt as he sat, dazed, at the side of the road before
an
ambulance came to take him to a hospital, where he was said to be in serious
condition. The stabber managed to attack two more people until he was finally
apprehended. The victims were rushed to the hospital - all in a stable condition.
Israeli press reports that the attacker will be tried on attempted murder charges.
As absurd as it may sound considering this terrible event, the parade was a
huge success. One cannot help but recall the old anecdote that when Mrs. Lincoln
was
taken out of Fords Theatre after her husband was shot (President Abraham Lincoln),
she was asked "so Mrs. Lincoln, besides the interruption did you enjoy the
show???" The very fact that the parade took place, was a moral and
political
victory for all open-minded freedom loving people. The fact that thousands
of people came to Jerusalem to march in solidarity with the GLBT community
was a
victory. But the attempt to stop it, and the terrible stabbing that took place,
reminds us that we must be on our guard at all times. It was obvious that we
must stand firm and constantly defend our rights - constantly be on the look
out for those that would have us disenfranchised from society.
The parade, which some reports say reached 10,000 participants, marched through
the city and concluded with a 2 hour musical happening at Jerusalem's Bell
Park. Participation in this parade was higher than in any of the previous Jerusalem
parades. This was not just another pride parade - not a copy of other city's
parades. The spirit of Stonewall's "founding sisters" returned. As
in 1969 Stonewall, the GLBT community of Jerusalem was steadfast, stood united,
sought justice and won.
Next year in Jerusalem for World Pride!
The Jerusalem Post - http://www.jpost.com/
July 8, 2005
13
March for pride and Jerusalem--a troubled success
By rabbi Levi Weiman-Kelman
As I marched with my family in the gay pride parade last week, I was amazed
at what a uniquely Jerusalem-style event it was. In other cities around the
world, gay pride parades seem like an opportunity for the gay community to
create a safe public space for itself and to act out
some of its more bizarre fantasies. The Jerusalem parade had very little of
that. Our parade had lots of ordinary Jerusalemites (not known for flamboyant
dress in general) imaging a Jerusalem united by mutual respect, tolerance and
openness.
For many it was the first time joining in the parade. Many of the marchers
were straight, brought out by the behavior of Mayor Uri Lupolianski and other
Orthodox politicians. Lupolianski's attempt to prevent the march and his abusive
attack on the gay and lesbian community redefined the purpose of the parade.
The annual gay pride parade has become one of those rare events that transcends
the narrow boundaries of a specific issue (the rights of gays and lesbians
in this case) and symbolizes broader, more universal issues. It has become
a struggle over our understanding of democracy.
Deputy Mayor Yigal Amedi (a secular politician) supported banning the parade
on the grounds that it would offend many residents of the city. Civics 101
teaches that democracy is not only based on majority rules. Democracy is also
about protecting and cherishing minorities. If that were limited to minorities
that we liked or agreed with, it wouldn't be much of a democracy. The glory
of true democracies is that they recognize the importance of supporting unpopular
ideas and groups.
As in years past the parade was marred by the despicable behavior of the protesters
hurling verbal abuse and bags of human excrement and urine. This year,
however, the violence escalated and three people were stabbed by a haredi protester. The
stage was set for this outrageous attack months ago. In one of the lowest expressions
of interfaith cooperation, leading clergy from the three monotheistic
religions, led by right-wing Christians, organized a public press conference
condemning the gay pride events (which have since been postponed due to the
disengagement in August).
Palestinian Christians have no love for Christian Zionist evangelicals and
neither are particularly embraced by most Orthodox rabbis. This region
has been starved for models of interfaith cooperation to free us from the cycle
of violence and revenge. On those issues these religious leaders cannot work
together. Pathetically, they succeeded in finding a common voice in order to
attack gays and lesbians who wanted to come to celebrate in Jerusalem. I consider
that a "hilul hashem" – a desecration of the divine name.
Mayor Lupolianski's demonization of the gay and lesbian community created the
climate that empowered the evil man who wounded the marchers. Opponents of
the march will probably blame the victim, as is so often the case. The mayor
must be held responsible for his dangerous statements and malicious behavior.
Residents of Jerusalem must demand that Jerusalem remain both a holy and a
democratic city. The prophet Zechariah (chapter eight) calls on us to imagine
the squares of Jerusalem filled with old men and women, boys and girls playing
together.
The prophet adds (8:12), "Do not contrive evil against one another; Those
are the things I hate, declares the Lord." If we wish to live to see Zechariah's
prophecy come true we have to resolve to fight evil by speaking lovingly and
respectfully – especially when
we disagree.
The writer is rabbi of Kehillat Kol Haneshama in Jerusalem.
Copyright 1995-2005
14
Tel
Aviv to build first-ever gay center
Municipality approves initial budget of NIS 4 million, fixed annual budget
of NIS 300,000 for Israel's first-ever homosexual-lesbian center
by Eli Senyor
The Tel Aviv Municipality has decided to build a new statutory institution
in the city, which will serve as a community center for members of the
homosexual-lesbian
community. The center will be established as a municipal building, and the
next elected mayors will be committed to its maintenance, regardless of their
political
views.
As a first step, the municipality will transfer NIS 4 million (about USD
900,000) to renovate the building, which will be chosen in the next few
days. The municipality
also committed to a fixed annual budgeting of NIS 300,000 (about USD 67,000),
similar to the budgeting of any other municipal center. The new center will
be Israel's first-ever homosexual-lesbian municipal center, which will provide
the community with health and culture services,
as well as
other civilian services.
The project's founding father is Itai Pinkas, a member of the Tel Aviv
City Council, who has led an uncompromising battle for the rights of the
city's homosexual
and lesbians ever since he was elected. "
This is an important day for the city and the community," Pinkas said
after the municipality's decision was made. "
By building this center, Tel Aviv joins an honorable club of advanced cities
like New York, Los Angeles and Paris. I thank the mayor, who was a full partner
in the initiative and understood the community's needs," he added.
"This is definitely a historical and important event in the community's
life. This municipal building is designated to serve as the place where the community
members will find the core of their lives," Pinkas explained.
Services for youth, elderly, ethnic minorities
Public institutions and local authorities have refrained until now from
officially and fully acknowledging the needs of the homosexual-lesbian
community. Acknowledgement was received mainly through various budgets,
usually using the community's representatives, in favor of special events or
as part
of municipal
relief committees.
Now, following year-long negotiations, the Tel Aviv Municipality has agreed
to acknowledge the gay community's needs and to provide its members with
a budgeted
municipal building. Community members who will arrive at the center will
be able to receive a large variety of services, such as concerts, cultural
events, exhibitions
by young
artists, workshops, body and mental health services, support groups for
HIV carriers, courses, legal aid, youth groups, social workers, a kindergarten,
a library,
etc. The municipal center will focus on providing services
for four focused groups: elderly people, youth, parents and community members
belonging
to any ethnic minority.