Jerusalem – Thousands of Israelis Protest High Cost Of Living

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    Israelis march during a protest against the cost of living in Israel, in central Tel Aviv, Saturday, July 30, 2011. Thousands of people marched in downtown Tel Aviv on Saturday to protest rising housing prices, in a major demonstration in a movement calling attention to the soaring cost of living. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)Jerusalem – Tens of thousands of Israelis took to the streets nationwide on Saturday to protest rising housing prices in the largest turnout since the grass-roots demonstrations began two weeks ago.

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    The protests over housing costs have tapped into wider discontent among Israelis over the high cost of living and the growing gaps between rich and poor. Other protests include doctors striking over working conditions and pay, parents demonstrating against expensive child rearing costs and similar outpourings over increasing gas prices.

    Thousands thronged the streets of Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and other major cities and chanted, “The people demand social justice.” Protesters waved Israeli flags and placards that read: “work 3 jobs but don’t make ends meet,” ”killing ourselves to live” and “social gaps are killing us.”

    Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said more than 100,000 people protested in 10 cities across the country from Beersheba in the south to Kiryat Shmoneh at the northern tip of the country Saturday night. Police closed major streets for the protesters to march.

    The demonstrations began two weeks ago in Tel Aviv, where young activists set up a small tent encampment in a central neighborhood to draw attention to the country’s housing crunch. The protests, inspired in part by unrest in neighboring Arab countries, have continued to gain steam and show no signs of slowing.

    “This is a great success; people are marching in the streets and living in the streets for the past two weeks,” Stav Shafir, one of the protest leaders, told Channel 2 TV. “Finally people are choosing to determine how they want to live. We want affordable housing, health, education and welfare.”

    The weeks of popular demonstrations are becoming a headache for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with polls showing a sharp drop in his approval ratings and strong support for the protesters. Netanyahu announced a package of reforms meant to lower housing prices last week but it did little to defuse the anger.
    Israelis march  with a stretcher  with a person wearing a mask of Israel's Prime Minister  Benjamin Netanyahu during a protest against the cost of living in Israel, in central Tel Aviv, Saturday, July 30, 2011. Thousands of people marched in downtown Tel Aviv on Saturday to protest the rising housing prices, in a major demonstration in a movement calling attention to the soaring cost of living. The sign in Hebrew say "Mubarak, Assad, Netanyahu".  (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)
    In Jerusalem, thousands marched through the city center to the prime minister’s house.

    Protesters held up signs reading, “Netanyahu go home.” The protests have brought together people from diverse background and a wide range of political views. Recent demonstrations have included marches against the prices of gasoline, boycotts of expensive cottage cheese that forced manufacturers to lower prices and lengthy strikes by social workers and doctors over pay and working conditions.
    Israelis march during a protest against the cost of living in Israel, in central Tel Aviv, Saturday, July 30, 2011. Thousands of people marched in downtown Tel Aviv on Saturday to protest rising housing prices, in a major demonstration in a movement calling attention to the soaring cost of living. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)
    The average Israeli salary stands at about $2,500 per month, with key professions like teachers, civil servants and social workers typically earning less than $2,000 a month.
    Thousands of Israelis marching in Tel Aviv during a protest over rising housing prices and other social inequalities, on 30 July 2011. Protests against skyrocketing housing prices and cost of living expenses drew an estimated 100,000 people into the streets across Israel, according to police figures. Media reports said there were up to 150,000 protesters, with most of them in Tel Aviv, where police estimated a crowd of up to 70,000 gathered in the square outside the Tel Aviv Museum. The gatherings, among the largest in Israel in decades, punctuated week-long demonstrations for reduced housing rents that included famous musicians and members of women?s organizations and motorcycle clubs.  EPA/ABIR SULTAN
    Home prices jumped some 35 percent between December 2007 and August 2010 and rental rates have also risen steadily. Rent on a modest three-bedroom apartment in central Jerusalem can cost more than $1,000 per month and costs even more in Tel Aviv.

    A standard, 1,000-square-foot (100-square-meter) apartment can easily top $600,000 in metropolitan centers like Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, and $200,000 to $300,000 in second-tier areas.

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    12 Comments
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    chaimbrooklyn
    chaimbrooklyn
    14 years ago

    This is a wake up call for borough park residents we have the same sky rocking rent prices 1 bedroom costs $1200. And 3 bedrooms $2200. Why? I think we should do the same thing.

    shtill
    shtill
    14 years ago

    They should all leave. The physical and spiritual danger as well as the impracticality (cost of living) of living there nulls any reason to live there.

    hmmmm
    hmmmm
    14 years ago

    Nebach. All this on shabbos. I hope there wasn’t massive chilul shabbos. I’m afraid there was.

    DRSLZ
    DRSLZ
    14 years ago

    Does anyone really think this is all a coincidence? Didn’t anyone read the online predictions that the Obama administration was aiming to pull off an “Arab Spring” type of illegal protesting in Israel to topple Netanyahu and bring to power Livni and those who immediately and unconditionally withdraw to the pre-1967 lines (called the “Auschwitz lines” by the late Abba Eban)?

    Already, the “leaders” of this protest movement are calling for regime change.

    This is a very serious development, one that threatens Israeli democracy and the very lives of all of its citizens.

    MosheM
    MosheM
    14 years ago

    Idiotic socialists! What is it the government’s business that things are expensive?

    MosheM
    MosheM
    14 years ago

    It’s the leftist media-sponsored protests. Leftist loons wanting to topple Netanyahu.