Jewish anti-war activists paint ‘river of blood’ on steps of Israeli Consulate in Toronto to protest Gaza strikes
The steps outside Israel’s Toronto consulate were spattered in red paint by a Jewish anti-war group and other peace activists to symbolize “blood on the hands of Israel.” The Israeli mission denounced the stunt as vandalism.
Members of
Independent Jewish Voices (IJV), World Beyond War and other activist groups
gathered at the Israeli Consulate on Friday to protest the “bloodshed from
Israel’s violence in Gaza,” which saw 11 consecutive days of fighting
between Tel Aviv and Palestinian militants.
“We’re here
to be sure that the blood on the hands of Israel is visible, so we have put
this symbol of blood coming out of the door,” Rabbi David Mivasair, a
member of IJV, said in a Facebook video as he stood outside the consulate.
No one can
go into these offices of the Israeli government right here in Canada without
seeing what Israel is about. We’ve made it visible.
The protest
came less than 24 hours after a ceasefire deal was reached between Israel and
armed groups in Gaza, which was mediated by Egypt and took effect early on
Friday morning. The activists nonetheless condemned the eruption in violence,
which saw hundreds of IDF air strikes and thousands of Hamas rockets fired into
Israeli cities.
Rachel
Small, an organizer with World Beyond War, said that while the group is “encouraged” by
the ceasefire, it would not allow the “blood, the death, the destruction
of the Israeli government” to be “invisible.”
In a
statement to CTV News Toronto, the head of the Israeli Consulate, Galit Baram,
condemned the move as vandalism, adding that Tel Aviv’s operations in Gaza were
in self-defense.
“Israel was
forced to defend its citizens,” she said. “Israel did so in a
surgical, controlled manner, in an effort to eliminate Hamas terror
infrastructure, while making substantial efforts to limit civilian casualties.”
At least
232 Palestinians were killed in the fighting, including 65 children, according
to Gaza health officials, while Israeli authorities say 12 citizens died, among
them two youths.
The World
Health Organization reported on Friday that more than 8,500 injuries were
sustained in Gaza, while some 30 hospitals and other health facilities were
damaged or destroyed by Israeli strikes. The latest flare-up began in
earnest on May 10, following a series of heated protests over looming evictions
of Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem, which met harsh police crackdowns
and saw hundreds injured in the resulting clashes. An Israeli incursion into Al
Aqsa mosque served as a major flash-point, with police attempting to disperse a
gathering as worshippers met for Ramadan prayers. The first volley of rocket
fire from Gaza soon followed, triggering a flurry of IDF air and artillery
strikes.
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