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Opinion

We are all in this together

August 6, 2011 20:09
2 min read

Despite attempts by the extremist elements to hijack events the Israeli public is working together for social change in Israel with no difference between left/right religious/non-religious Jew/Arab.

For the first time, observers and commentators said that the nature of the rally had taken on a more balanced character, with television analysts shooting down attempts by Kadima leaders to co-opt the issue of “social justice,” the call for which has turned into a rallying cry for the demonstrating masses. In addition, representatives of the religious sector were also featuredspeakers at the rally , with Rabbi Benny Lau telling the crowd that “the tent of social struggle is big enough to fit both right and left. Two days before Tisha B'Av we must remember the lessons of the destruction of the Temple, of how baseless hatred propelled us into a bitter exile. We are all in this together,” he said.

Demonstrators began massing on Saturday afternoon, hours before the official 9 PM starting time, and police increased their estimates of the number of participants throughout the evening. Demonstrators began massing on Rothschild Boulevard and at about 8 PM, began marching towards the Kirya government office district in central Tel Aviv, where speakers and artists regaled the crowd with calls for social change and a redistribution of resources to help the middle class. Rallies were being in other cities as well, with about 20,000 demonstrating in Jerusalem, and several thousand in the north.

Several of the speakers at the main rally in Tel Aviv took pains to point out that they were not necessarily seeking political change. Itzik Shmuely, chairman of the Israel Students' Union, said that “we are not seeking a change in the parliament that the nation has chosen. We are seeking a change in the harsh economic system that operates in Israel. We demand an economy that is humane, that does not seek to crush us. We demand an economy that looks at the needs of the people, not just at the numbers. We demand a better balance between a free economy and an economy that cares about people,” he said.