Ethnic Palestinians were joined by American left-wing activists brandishing Black Lives Matter paraphernalia and religious Jews from the Neturei Karta group known for their opposition to Zionism and the very existence of Israel.
“We came as a group of Jews to show our support, our solidarity with the suffering of the Palestinian people... What’s happening in [disputed Jerusalem neighborhoods of] Sheikh Jarrah, Silwan, what’s happening in Gaza, in the entire occupation is not only unacceptable as a crime, it’s against God, it’s a rebellion against God, against the Torah,” Neturei Karta leader Rabbi Yisroel Dovid Weiss told Sputnik.
At least 35 Palestinians in Gaza and three Israelis were killed, while many more were wounded in an exchange of hundreds of rocket salvos and airstrikes. The fiercest flare-up since 2014 followed days of clashes in East Jerusalem where local Palestinians rose up against Israeli plans to evict several families from homes in Sheikh Jarrah.
“We are here to say to the State Department which refuses to acknowledge the violence of the Israelis... No more! No more funding, no more political support,” one of the speakers at the rally, a young Palestinian woman, said.
The US administration has called for de-escalation and pledges to work with both sides as well as other major stakeholders. It has condemned the rocket attacks on Israeli cities and supports Israel’s right to defend itself, but also urges its chief regional ally to refrain from destabilizing unilateral actions, including evictions, house demolitions and settlement activities.
Speaking at the rally convened by 15 different political groups, Rashida Tlaib, the first American-Palestinian to be elected to US Congress, described the great lengths she goes to explain the Palestinian plight to her colleagues.
The procession eagerly embraced some slightly modified BLM slogans and chants. “Hey hey! Ho ho! The occupation has got to go,” they shouted on the way to the White House. Spearheaded by rabbis and their kids, activists carried a giant Palestinian banner and pushed a dummy tank with flowers atop a plywood turret.
They were accompanied by several police cars who briefly blocked intersections to let the procession pass. A Sputnik reporter saw no disturbances, unlike in New York where a similar event resulted in minor altercations with pro-Israeli activists.