The
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
'We Knew We Had to Come,´ Say
Jews Gathered at Pro-Israel Rally
NEW
YORK, April 15 — It was 90 minutes into the community´s
largest public mobilization in 15 years, and Jews from around the
country continued to stream toward the U.S. Capitol, clamoring to
get into the pro-Israel rally.
In
the shade of a nearby acacia tree, just to the left of the Capitol
rotunda, Mikaella Kagan and Marina Fox-Rabinovitz found refuge
from the sweltering heat.
They
looked out onto the sea of faces and took a moment to reminisce
back to Dec. 6, 1987, when they joined more than 200,000 Jews who
had thronged the nation´s capital on behalf of the "refuseniks"
— Jews of the former Soviet Union who demanded the right to
emigrate to freedom.
Mikaella
and Marina, friends for a quarter-century, were themselves
refuseniks from Moscow, who had made their way to America only
months before.
"I
remember it like it was yesterday," said Mikaella, now 66, of
Bethesda, Md.
"Imagine
Israel, when it seems the whole world is against them.
"We
know from our experience that it´s important not to feel alone,
that someone is thinking of me, that someone remembers that I am
here. For refuseniks, it would have been easier for the government
to destroy us if someone outside hadn´t known about us. Now that
we are free, we want to do the same for Israel."
Added
Marina, 57, "If not Jews, who else will support Israel?"
"Jews
feel themselves to be like a family. We want Israelis to feel they
are loved and supported — and will be always."
Within
the Jewish family out on the Capitol lawn — organizers put the
number at more than 100,000 — emotions ran high.
Criticized
by both Israeli officials and the Jewish grass-roots for a
perceived lack of visibility, the Jewish communal leadership
received an overwhelming response to a rally organized only a week
earlier.
It
drew Jews of all ages, seemingly from all political and religious
stripes, with impressive delegations arriving from the East Coast,
Midwest and South.
Some
150 Jews from Toronto even made the sojourn south.
"When
I grow up and have kids and tell them about the intifada,"
said Daniella English, 19, of Toronto, "I can tell them I did
everything I could to support Israel. I went to Washington."
There
had been talk beforehand about what sort of unified message the
rally should send Washington and Jerusalem: support for Israel
itself, or support for the government of Israel.
But
even without the relentless heat — which several demonstrators
succumbed to — temperatures were elevated.
Indeed,
after 19 months of the intifada, a spate of suicide bombings, an
Israeli military incursion into the West Bank and at least 450
Jews killed, the gathering in Washington seemed almost cathartic
for some.
"When
I read about the rally, I told my wife, ‘I gotta go; it´ll be
good for my soul,´" said Alan Geller of Elmwood Park, N.J.
"And
she said, ‘Al, you´re 71. You´re too old.´ But 10 minutes
later — she always does this — she says, ‘Al, you´re right.
Go.´"
The
sentiment was echoed across the Capitol lawn.
"We´ve
felt frustrated and helpless in trying to show our support for
Israel," said Debby Weinstein of Memphis, Tenn.
"We
knew we had to come here to take a stand, and to say we´re so
proud of the support President Bush and his administration are
showing for Israel, and for standing up to the rest of the
world."
The
thousands of placards on display ran the gamut.
They
expressed solidarity with Israel — "Wherever we are, we
stand with Israel;" and "Self-defense is Not
Murder" — to denunciations of Yasser Arafat —
"Terrorist Bastard" and "Arafat: How Much More
Blood Do You Hunger For?" and of suicide bombers —
"Murderers Not Martyrs" and "Palestinians Danced on
9-11."
Some
equated the Israeli and American wars on terrorism and urged
Washington to support Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
"Finish the Job" and "Destroy Arab Terrorism,"
the posters read.
Many
rally participants were in no mood for talk of a
"cease-fire" or a "return to negotiations."
Many
in the crowd roared their approval when Christian radio
commentator Janet Parshall boomed,
"We
will never give up the Golan; we will never divide Jerusalem. And
we will call Yasser Arafat what Yasser Arafat is — a
terrorist!"
Many
in the crowd then booed when Paul Wolfowitz, the U.S. deputy
defense secretary, referred to "innocent Palestinian
victims" and the "future Palestinian state." One
teen-age boy, while passing a reporter, muttered: "They
should kill Arafat."
And
with no Arabs or Muslims to confront, some Jews turned on each
other.
A
lone placard, stating "We Have Faith in Coexistence," up
near the front seemed likely to draw some attention.
"I
haven´t gotten any verbal complaints, but I do think it will be
an unpopular sign," said Micah Bycel, who studied in Israel
last year and was among two busloads of Hillel students making the
16-hour trip from the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
"But
it´s still a necessary sign. Many signs around here are
destructive signs," he said.
"I´m
as pro-Palestinian as I am pro-Israeli. Israel needs to withdraw
from the territories and recognize Palestinian statehood."
Sure
enough, within minutes, an older man from Chicago approached to
berate Bycel.
After
challenging Bycel on which borders Israel should withdraw to, the
Chicagoan — who only gave his first name, Shael — erupted.
Jabbing
his finger in Bycel´s chest, he shouted, "And you want to
live with Palestinians who use baby´s heads as bowling balls?
You´re just going to stand there and be passive?"
"I´d
be happy to discuss it with you, but please don´t touch me,"
replied the Wisconsin senior.
But
the scene turned uglier as a group from the political left and
right converged.
Eventually,
Bycel lost it, too, screaming, "It´s very offensive to me
that you´re saying I don´t stand with Israel."
A
schoolmate of Bycel´s tried to intervene: "Hey guys, chill
out. It´s a peace rally!"
And
then a burly friend of Shael´s accosted a reporter who had
earlier been interviewing Bycel, taunting him with the comment:
"You must work for Al-Jazeera" — referring to the Arab
news network.
Shael
later said that Bycel and his friends were "naive, and
haven´t lived life long enough. The only human rights they´re
concerned about are the Palestinians´, not the Israelis´. Kids
like that have betrayed us because they think that way."
At
which point, another college student intervened.
"I
don´t want you to think that all young people are in support of
Peace Now" — the dovish group of the left, said Daniela, a
Stern College student from Scranton, Penn.
"There
are other college-age students who realize there´s no imminent
peaceful solution, and that giving in to whatever demands of the
Palestinians is not all they want."
Another
Wisconsin student took in stride the strife among Jews.
"This
is one of the only issues in my life that I feel passionately
enough about to make the drive," said Rachel Heilbronner, 22.
"I
just wanted to experience this feeling of standing with all these
Jews, who might not feel the same way about the conflict, but who
can agree that Israel has a right to exist as a Jewish
state."
And
like Mikaella and Marina, an Israeli at the rally said he was sure
that message and others of solidarity would be well-received back
in the Holy Land.
"I´m
pretty sure the citizens of Israel will appreciate this; it´s
coming from the heart," said Jacob, who lives in New York and
asked that his last name not be used. He said he "had
to" attend this rally after missing a smaller one in the city
two weeks ago.
"With
the terrorism that Israel is facing every day, the least Jews can
do over here is to give up one day to show their support, "
he said. |