Hebrew University
Hebrew University - LA Times reported in 1990 that
Amiram Goldblum's own house was stoned by angry neighbors enraged by
his political activities in support of Palestinian demands
JERUSALEM — A group of enraged Israelis drove Arab
construction workers from a building site in Baka, the Jerusalem
neighborhood where on Sunday a Palestinian had stabbed and killed
three residents. The group then turned to the home of a well-known
peace activist.
…
A few of them picked up stones and hurled them at the man's
second-story apartment until police intervened, arresting local
residents who tried to stop them and sending the rest on their way.
…
"We are being made a scapegoat," said Amiram Goldblum, a Peace Now
activist whose house was stoned. "It's madness, sheer madness."
…
"When there is this kind of violence, we just lose ground," Goldblum
said. "We lose the people in the middle."
…
"The hostility is a product of the right," Peace Now activist
Goldblum said.
http://articles.latimes.com/1990-10-23/news/mn-2971_1_peace-activists
Israeli Peace Activists Forced to Retreat
Under a Barrage From Angry Rightists : Mood: It's been a year of
distress for those who favor conciliation. Recent events have put
the left on ever more slippery ground.
DANIEL WILLIAMS
October 23, 1990
JERUSALEM — A group of enraged Israelis drove Arab construction
workers from a building site in Baka, the Jerusalem neighborhood
where on Sunday a Palestinian had stabbed and killed three
residents. The group then turned to the home of a well-known peace
activist.
"PLO supporter!" one yelled. "Leftist!"
A few of them picked up stones and hurled them at the man's
second-story apartment until police intervened, arresting local
residents who tried to stop them and sending the rest on their way.
Attacks against the left, physical and verbal, provided a strong
undercurrent to the public's bitter reaction to Sunday's
slayings--the left in Israel being defined largely on the basis of
whether one favors a political settlement of the Palestinian
conflict that includes giving up land to the Arabs.
The attacks added to a sense of unease among peace activists, who
have endured a year of distress. Once they were a vital force in the
politics of protest, viewed--from abroad at least--as a kind of
conscience of Israel. But now, more and more, they are living on the
margin of effectiveness and public acceptance.
On the one hand, peace activists are vilified for supporting the
idea of Palestinian statehood. On the other, many feel betrayed by
Palestinian support for Iraq, the invader of Kuwait and avowed enemy
of Israel.
To this situation was added Sunday's knife attack in Baka, where
several prominent peace activists and sympathizers live: first, the
shock that neighbors in this quiet district should be struck down in
cold blood, then the horror that the mob--including residents of the
community--should place the blame on them.
"We are being made a scapegoat," said Amiram Goldblum, a Peace
Now activist whose house was stoned. "It's madness, sheer madness."
"Our vulnerability to Palestinians and angry Jews is greater than
at any time I can remember," said Sidra Ezrahi, who lives in a
neighborhood adjacent to Baka.
Under intense public pressure, peace activists have hardly ever
walked on more slippery ground. Their contention that talks can
produce a solution appears undermined by Palestinian violence. The
unwillingness of public Palestinian leaders, especially the
Palestine Liberation Organization, to fully condemn attacks on
civilians leaves the peace activists open to complaints that they
are dealing with unrepentant terrorists. No Palestinian leader has
stepped forward to condemn Sunday's killings.
Amid the passion for vengeance, calls for evenhandedness, are
viewed with suspicion and disdain.
"When there is this kind of violence, we just lose ground,"
Goldblum said. "We lose the people in the middle."
In any event, the collapse of the U.S.-led effort to get
Israeli-Palestinian peace talks started has deprived the peace
movement of a concrete framework for its activities, which included
informal dialogues with Palestinian leaders and common citizens.
Groups like Peace Now achieved prominence in the protests over
Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon and its costly three-year military
involvement there. Massive protests contributed to the political
pressure for Israel's withdrawal from most of Lebanon in 1985.
But since then, peace groups seem more and more alienated from
the mainstream of Israeli society, which according to most studies
is moving toward the right and an uncompromising anti-Arab position.
The erosion of public support is visible in the Labor Party's
successive failures in national elections and the rightist Likud
Party's long stay in power. The parties to the left of Labor are
fractured and have a narrow appeal.
Sympathetic critics like writer Amos Oz say the left has weakened
its hold on the public by taking patronizing attitudes toward
Israelis who did not share what leftists view as true Zionist
ideals: egalitarianism, secular thought, compromise with the
Palestinians.
"Anyone who didn't think as we did we considered a bit of an
idiot, believing that something was wrong with them," Oz said in a
recent interview with Spectrum, the Labor magazine. "We weren't
willing to recognize the fact that there is an authentic anger
towards the Arabs in this country, that there is an understandable
fear of the Arabs in particular and of the Gentiles in general.
There is a sort of aspiration on the left to remain few and cursed."
Others say they are the victims of right-wing campaigns of
demonization in which leftists are accused of traitorous activity.
"The hostility is a product of the right," Peace Now activist
Goldblum said.
In any event, peace groups have tried to expand their
constituency by conducting workshops in poor development towns in
the south and north.
"We have to get away from Baka," Peace Now activist Janet Aviad
said.
Activists say the attack in Baka, coupled with a string of
violent summer and fall incidents in Jerusalem, buttresses their
campaign for a settlement with the Palestinians.
"All the violence strengthens our argument, that there has to be
separation from the Palestinians," Aviad said.
Goldblum added: "We need a partner for talks, terrorist or
otherwise. I don't have any illusions that the Palestinians love us.
I'm not looking for Peace Now among the Palestinians. I just want
two states and separation."
But before reaching out, some leftists are detouring within. The
attack in Baka has forced the peace activists to pull back from the
fray.
"The vocabulary is of defense and hate," Sidra Ezrahi said.
"People say, 'We have to get guns.' Who has the energy to work for
peace?"
In Baka and nearby places, peace proponents have activated a
system of neighborhood vigilance groups, a network that is usually
called upon when there is a threat of attack on Arabs in order to
witness abuses. Now it is to watch for attacks on the homes of peace
activists by roving Israeli gangs.
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