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JSG

Opinion

In Gaza and Sderot children want to live

December 29, 2008 12:59
4 min read

Israeli peace activists have taken to the streets of Tel-Aviv questioning Israel's war on Gaza. Two protests took place over the weekend. This report on the first one comes from longstanding peace activist Adam Keller, who live in Holon, and is a founder of Gush Shalom.

Saturday, December 27 - a few minutes to midnight. War in Gaza. It has come.

This morning, some of us got up with anxiety to listen to the early morning news, and go on hoping against hope for a few more hours. This morning, more than two hundred Gazans, whose names we will probably never know, woke up without guessing that is was their last morning. And also in the Israeli border town of Netivot, the 58-years old Beber Vaknin got up and went strolling through the quiet weekend streets of his hometown, not knowing that long before sunset he would become part of statistics. A very favourable body count indeed for Day 1 of Israel's newest war - one dead Israeli to 225 Palestinians, as of this hour. Cheers!

The mass bombing and killing at 11.30 am came as a shocking surprise - even though there had been, in fact, no reason whatsoever to feel surprised. Out of our anger and outrage, sharp texts of angry protest and denunciation were feverishly written and hurled out to other activists, to the media, to anyone and everyone in Israel and the whole world who might possibly be willing to listen: "The Gaza war is the vicious folly of a bankrupt government", "Barak conducts his elections campaign by bloodshed on both sides of the border."

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