Tel Aviv – More than 400,000 Turn Out for Largest Economic Protest

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    Thousands of Israelis gather to protest against the cost of living in Israel, in Jerusalem Saturday, Sept. 3, 2011. Israelis poured into the streets of the country's three largest cities Saturday night for what protest leaders predicted would be the largest of months of demonstrations against the rising cost of living. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)Tel Aviv – More than 400,000 Israelis poured into streets in cities across the country Saturday night, Israeli media estimated, in a show of strength behind a social protest movement that has rocked the country for two months.

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    The demonstrations in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Haifa and elsewhere against Israel’s high cost of living, its housing crisis and distorted distribution of wealth marked the high point — so far — of a summer-long grass-roots protest movement that has ballooned from a few tents in Tel Aviv to a nationwide phenomenon that has delivered Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government its most serious domestic crisis.

    Israeli media said the turnout in Tel Aviv was more than 300,000, and more than 100,000 demonstrated in other cities. Israel’s police did not give an estimate. Taken together, the numbers put the Saturday demonstrations among the largest in Israel’s history, and the other large ones were over political issues like Mideast peacemaking, not social ills.

    The protest movement and its slogan of “the people demand social justice” have thrust Israel’s economic issues to the top of the country’s agenda and brought thousands into the streets each week.

    In Tel Aviv, protest leader Itzik Shmuli called the gathering a historic moment.

    “The new Israelis have a dream and it is very simple: we want to build our home in Israel,” Shmuli shouted. “We will not stop this protest until you, Mr. Prime Minister, give us real solutions.”

    Saturday marked the eighth week in a row protesters have taken to the streets.

    “I’ve had enough of always working and never advancing. You have to work several jobs just to survive. All the burden is on the middle class,” said Sharon Riwkes, a 30-year-old clinical psychology resident in Tel Aviv.

    In response to the summer-long protests, Netanyahu has appointed a committee to address the demands. The demonstrators — a loose coalition of university students, social activists and disenchanted youngsters — have rejected all the reforms offered by the government and have pledged to continue protesting.

    The protests have included representatives of all segments of society, with the exception of ultra-Orthodox Jews. Many Israelis are concerned about the growing influence of an expanding community where most of its men study scripture and live on government handouts.

    A brief flare-up between Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza deflected attention from the protests, but the large turnout Saturday indicated the focus has returned.

    Israel emerged from the global financial crisis relatively unscathed. The economy is enjoying rapid growth, and unemployment is at its lowest in decades at around 5 1/2 percent.

    Even so, statistics show the ranks of the working poor have grown dramatically as wealth has increasingly become concentrated among a small group of tycoons.

    The middle class has specifically been hit hard, with high taxes and salaries that have not kept pace with rising consumer prices.

    In recent months, the country has experienced protests against the high price of gasoline and cottage cheese — a staple of the Israeli diet — and seen lengthy strikes by social workers and doctors over low pay and working conditions.

    “There is a chance here to change the face of Israel,” parliamentary opposition leader Tzipi Livni told Israel’s Channel 2 TV.


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    15 Comments
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    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    12 years ago

    “The protests have included representatives of all segments of society, with the exception of ultra-Orthodox Jews. Many Israelis are concerned about the growing influence of an expanding community where most of its men study scripture and live on government handouts”.

    Is it any surprise that the majority of Israelis have now linked the growing threat posed by the Chareidi minority who refuse to work and simply demand more and more tax handouts from those who do work and pay taxes. Somthing has to change soon or the whole society will collapse. Given all the security threats which demand huge expenditures for national defense and the zahal, the nation can no longer afford to to support those leeches who refuse to work or defend the medinah but still demand government handouts.

    12 years ago

    The enonomic problems need to be faced. But I wonder, where were the hundreds of thousands of protestors when 10,000 innocent Jews were thrown out their homes in Gush Katif?

    12 years ago

    Obama- clinton is behind this protest thinking they can over throw the israeli government as they wanted in the other arab countries. But they havent learned that Israel is different and wont fall for their trap, The Israeli economy is solid strong unlike the USA economy.Just a bunch of same leftists that come out to support the PLO but this time they are using a different tactic under the same flag…,

    MosheM
    MosheM
    12 years ago

    Socialists, that’s all and blown up by the far-leftist media. Israel’s unemployment is 5.5%. Bring it to the US

    The-Macher
    The-Macher
    12 years ago

    There are many in all sectors who should be allowed to do alternative national service.

    After all, where does Erez Chiloni go when his son gets arrested for drugs in Thailand? Right to those despised dosim, usually at Chabad (who do shlav bet or more but that is beside the point as their shluchim serve Am Yisroel every day and not just for three years).

    Where does he go when his wonderful Kupat Cholim won’t pay for his operation? Rav Firer, you know, that despicable dos who won the Israel Prize, like Rav Grossman who also sees many a proud dos-hating chiloni turn up at his doorstep.

    Who saves the lives of hundreds of chilonim a year with their bone marrow registry that is ten times as big as the secular one? Hmm..those parasites over at Ezer meTzion..

    Now there is Yedidim, which I am sure will be used and abused by “magia li” chilonim who want a free repair for their homes and “DrosKolDos-mobiles.”

    The kinds of people who would volunteer for those organizations for 3 years in place of army service are the ones who will continue to do it for a lifetime. A few seculars learning ahavas Yisroel by volunteering there instead of service would not be a bad idea either.