CHICAGO--"Arafat is filthy swine, there is no Palestine," and "Thank you
for killing my cousins in Israel," were some of the more polite slogans
shouted at Al-Awda activist Benjamin Doherty and me as we protested
silently at the annual "Walk With Israel" on Chicago's lakefront today,
Sunday. The Jewish United Fund (JUF)-sponsored event, a fundraiser for
Israel attended by over a thousand local Zionists, was billed as a "Family
Walk." Despite this, a man with his two young daughters was not the only
one to give us the finger and shout "F**k You" as we stood, just the two
of us, surrounded by a half dozen police officers, on a pleasant late
spring day by Lake Michigan.
We arrived at the lakefront at about 11.30 in the morning and walked along
the public bike path south of Soldier Field. Along the way, the JUF had
placed lawn signs and displays celebrating Israel and Zionism and "walkers
for Israel" were already passing by along the route waving miniature
Israeli flags, and pushing stollers. I carried a sign saying "Freedom Will
Win in Palestine," and Benjamin's said "Walk Against Israeli War Crimes
and Occupation."
Overhead an aerial dogfight had begun between airplanes pulling
banners. One hired by the JUF read "WALK FOR ISRAEL--JUF.ORG," while
another right behind it, hired by the Chicago-based Jewish group Not In My
Name, which works in solidarity with Palestinians, read "JEWS OPPOSE THE
OCCUPATION--NIMN.ORG."
At the lakefront we met Chicago lawyer and activist Joey Mogul of the
People's Law Office, a civil rights organization, who filmed and witnessed
most of the events which are described here. All was going well until a
JUF official in a golf cart, seeing our signs, came and asked us "What are
you doing here?" I answered, "Enjoying the public park, the same as
everyone else."
"Fine" he said with sarcasm, and then sped off. A short time later we were
surrounded by a veritable phalanx of police officers, who ordered us out
of the public park, claiming that because the JUF had a permit for their
walkathon, we could not be there and hold signs. Other members of the
public were allowed to stay in the park as long as they did not have
signs. We explained that to allow the JUF to have signs and Israeli flags,
while banning us from a public park solely because we were carrying signs
which expressed a different opinion was a gross violation of our First
Amendment rights. The fact that the JUF had a permit did not cancel our
rights. I also objected firmly to one of the police officers who had
attached an Israeli flag to his bicycle. He insisted that he had a right
to have it there. I said that as a uniformed police officer it was
completely inappropriate for him display the flag of any country except
the United States, especially when displaying a flag in such a setting had
a clear political meaning. Eventually another officer whispered to his
colleague to remove the flag, and he did so. Yet another officer came up
and asked me "Is this a peaceful protest?" My only answer was "what does
it look like to you?"
Nevertheless the police insisted that the JUF had complained and that if
we did not leave the park we would be arrested and charged with
"assault" and with "criminal trespass." Joey interceded on our behalf, and
clearly it is only because she, a lawyer, was present that the police did
not carry out their threats to arrest us immediately. After about fifteen
minutes of argument, the police allowed us to remain on the edge of the
park, about sixty meters from the main public path were the "walkers for
Israel" were going by.
Later the police moved us back even further, but since the walkers made a
big circuit of the park, we actually ended up even closer to them on their
return. There we stood for more than an hour with our personal police
bodyguard. While we mostly stood in silence, the walkers, many families
with young children, reacted noisily and angrily. Some loudly sang "Ha
Tikva," the Israeli national anthem, as they walked by us. By our count,
people spat at us six times. Profanity was normal. One woman on reading
Benjamin's sign exclaimed "They wouldn't be committing war crimes if there
were no Palestinians!" An elderly man shouted "End ARAB occupation of
ISRAEL" and others called us "killers" and "Nazis." At least one man drew
his finger across his neck in a throat-slashing motion. A teenage boy
approached us smiling and pointing to his T-shirt which carried a picture
of a machine-gun against a Star of David and the slogan "Uzi does it."
Of the hundreds of people who walked by and read our signs over two hours,
only two showed any appreciation or respect. One man, who said he had seen
me on TV, came up and shook my hand though stressing "I don't agree with
you at all." A woman carrying a JUF-issued sign which read "Peace for the
Children" said to us that for her it meant peace for ALL children.
Other than the spitting and shouting from the walkers, we were standing
calmy, but as the flow of marchers began to dwindle, another police
officer suddenly appeared at the scene saying that he had received another
"complaint" against us, and again ordering us away from the path and
threatening to lock us up. One younger police officer who had been
extremely courteous and helpful throughout the morning tried to calm his
colleague's temper.
The friendly police officer told Benjamin that some of his colleagues were
not quite good enough at distinguishing between peaceful protestors--as we
were--and common criminals. Later, he and two other officers approached us
and asked what we were protesting about and listened politely as we
explained. We offered them some literature but they said they couldn't
accept it while they were in uniform.
At one point I was aggressively grabbed and manhandled by two men in plain
clothes, who claimed to be police officers. I challenged this saying "you
are not police officers, you are wearing JUF insignia--get your hands off
us." They also failed to show me their badges when I asked them to. After
this they backed off. We were also photographed by a man riding in the JUF
golf cart, which was never too far away.
Who would have thought that two people armed with nothing but cardboard
signs and kaffiyehs could cause such distress and discomfort to hundreds
of flag-waving Israel enthusiasts? Perhaps it is a sign of panic that
despite all their bunting, their plastic flags and their displays of
self-confidence, they know that whether carried by two people in Chicago
or twenty thousand in Gaza, the message of justice and freedom for all
people overwhelms the death rattle of ethnic tribalism and repression.
As we walked back to the car, an Israel supporter shouted defiantly at us
"See you next year, we'll be here." Yes, and so will we.
Ali Abunimah
www.abunimah
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