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ISRAEL     E-mail story   Print story
Religious leaders decry Jerusalem gay pride march
 
JERUSALEM - Rare is the event that can rally devout Jews, Muslims and Christians in Israel toward a common goal. Jerusalem WorldPride 2006 is such an event - but not in the way its organizers intended.

While Jews and Arabs in the Knesset disagree passionately over the fate of a kidnapped Israeli soldier and Israel's incursion into Gaza, many of the same Parliament members are firmly united in opposition to next month's gay pride parade in Jerusalem.

The parade is part of a weeklong WorldPride event slated to begin Aug. 6, and which is expected to draw more than 10,000 lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people and their supporters from around the world.

WorldPride organizers say they'll proclaim in Jerusalem that love has no borders. Opponents, however, say that love needs borders and that the holy city must not be defiled.

"It is forbidden for us to give legitimacy to this parade," said Knesset Member Nissim Zeev of the Sephardi Orthodox Shas Party, who compares holding the parade in Jerusalem to bringing a pig inside the holy Temple.

"It's cultural terror that wants to take control of society and our youth and wants to change the accepted way of life and the way that" God intended, he said.

Police officials in Jerusalem are considering canceling the Aug. 10 march based on security concerns. A final decision is expected to be made by Jerusalem District Police Chief Ilan Franco and Israeli Police Commissioner Moshe Karadi in the coming weeks, a police spokeswoman said.

The international controversy has sparked grass-roots efforts around the world in favor of and against the event, and has reached the highest echelons of Israeli politics.

An anonymous flyer offering a reward of some $4,500 for murdering a homosexual was distributed in some Jerusalem mailboxes and is under criminal investigation, Ha'aretz reported July 11.

Despite the potential for violence, WorldPride organizers say they have no intention of relocating or canceling the march.

"Jerusalem is a global symbol and it has an immense depth of meaning for many people from around the globe, and for many" lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgendered "people from around the world," said Noa Sattath, chairwoman of Jerusalem Open House, which is organizing Jerusalem WorldPride 2006. "Holding the event in Jerusalem in my eyes will not decrease its holiness but increase it, in promoting the values of tolerance and pluralism in Jerusalem that are so valued here."

There's no legal basis for canceling the parade, and legal action would likely be taken if it were canceled, Sattath said.

In a failed effort on July 10 to pass a no-confidence vote and bring down the government over the issue, Knesset Member Yitzhak Levi of the National Union-National Religious Party urged the government to intervene to prevent the march from taking place in Jerusalem.

Levi collected signatures from 50 legislators who oppose the event, and said he believes a majority of the 120-member Knesset is opposed, he said.

"They don't want it to happen in Jerusalem, for religious reasons, for emotional reasons or because Jerusalem has a certain kind of character," Levi said July 10 on the Knesset floor.

"It's very rare that here there are Knesset members from all the parties - religious, secular and Jewish and Arab," who agree on an issue, he added.

Religious people of all faiths are united against holding the parade in Jerusalem, said Ibrahim Sarsur, who heads the United Arab List-Ta'al and is president of the Islamic movement in Israel.

"Such marches may endanger the morals of the generations of all religions," Sarsur said. "We want our generations to be protected from such a disease, which may deteriorate their way of behavior, their families."

But others argue that precisely because of the opposition, the event must be held in Jerusalem - the capital of all Israeli citizens, not just the religious ones.

"Democracy is about the rights of minorities, and we have to protect the rights of minorities," said lawmaker Shelly Yacimovich of the Labor Party. "It's very important that the march happens in Jerusalem because Jerusalem is for everybody, for religious people, for secular people, and for gays and lesbians."

According to a survey commissioned by Levi and conducted in June, 69 percent of Jerusalem residents are against hosting the parade, while 12 percent support it. The remainder said they did not have an opinion or didn't answer the question.

Jerusalem did host a local gay pride march last June that organizers said attracted about 10,000 people from around the country. Three participants were stabbed by a fervently Orthodox man, who received a 12-year prison sentence, according to media reports.

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