Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University – Gadi Algazi (Dept of History) joins
Sakhnin demonstrators Carrying Portrait of Nasrallah
Gadi Algazi, who spoke at Sakhnin rally, says
Israel must 'recognize its neighbors' needs and dreams'
Professor Gadi Algazi, who heads Tel Aviv University's
History Department, recounted the 'Land Day' rally at which he spoke
Tuesday and explained that it was peaceful, but "two masked
provocateurs turned it into something it wasn't supposed to be."
Algazi told Ynet on Wednesday that the two masked men, who
arrived at the rally in Sakhnin holding posters of
Hezbollah chief
Hassan Nasrallah and slain group member
Imad Mugniyah, were a minority among the Arab residents of the
north.
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3870198,00.html
TA professor plays down 'Land Day' violence
Gadi Algazi, who spoke at Sakhnin rally, says Israel must
'recognize its neighbors' needs and dreams'
Shmulik Grossman
31.03.10
Professor Gadi Algazi, who heads Tel Aviv
University's History Department, recounted the 'Land Day' rally at
which he spoke Tuesday and explained that it was peaceful, but "two
masked provocateurs turned it into something it wasn't supposed to
be."
Algazi told Ynet on Wednesday that the two masked men, who
arrived at the rally in Sakhnin holding posters of
Hezbollah chief
Hassan Nasrallah and slain group member
Imad Mugniyah, were a minority among the Arab residents of the
north.
The professor explained that the struggle for
Palestinian equality in
Israel and the territories was important. "This is a national
political minority struggling to receive the same rights that the
citizens of Israel are given," he said.
"Ten
thousand people arrived in Sakhnin to tell the state to behave
differently, and to recognize the needs and dreams of our neighbors."
Algazi also mentioned the Bedouin protests in
the south on Tuesday, stressing that they were the hardest-hit
minority.
"They were
robbed of 94% of the land in their possession, and they wanted to
make the desert bloom through agriculture but now all they have left
is the little ghetto in which they live. Promises have been made
that in the near future their lands would be returned," he lamented.
'At least
Native Americans got alcohol'
The professor also compared the Bedouins to the
Native Americans in the US and philosophized, "At least they got
casinos and alcohol; all the Bedouins have is poverty and crime."
Algazi claims that until Israel reaches a
historic settlement with the Palestinians, the existential threat
referred to by its government will continue.
"As long as
we are built like a tank moving through the Middle East, the peoples
surrounding us will continue to fear occupation," he said.
"We need to
change, accept the other, and thus be accepted by the Palestinians
and Arabs around us. I have taken part in non-violent activities in
the (Palestinian) territories, and in the end when you get to know
them, those you fear, when you know what their children want and
dream of, you understand that their only ambition is to live
respectfully without being trampled."
Algazi was not the only Jew present at the
Sakhnin rally. Kobi Snitz, 38 from Tel Aviv and a conscientious
objector to army service, slammed what he called IDF brutality
towards Palestinian protestors in Budrus village, near Ramallah.
"A
democratic system does not involve a group of people sitting in an
air-conditioned room giving orders to soldiers located dozens of
kilometers away. The soldiers must object to immoral deeds. The fact
thatthey are threatened with jail time if they disobey an order only
shows how bad the situation is," Snitz said.
Despite this he understands Israel cannot exist
without an army. However he says the government is blowing the
threats it faces out of proportion. "We created the millions of
refugees in the camps, large parts of the state were captured from
Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine, and we have become what history and
the not-too-distant past warned us against," Snitz added.
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