Good Monday morning!
In today’s edition of Your Daily Phil, we report on a mass gathering of Haredi men in Philadelphia in celebration of yeshiva study, and feature op-eds from Rabbi Rebecca W. Sirbu and Jon Adam Ross. We’ll start with an update from yesterday’s Celebrate Israel Parade in New York.
New York’s Celebrate Israel Parade went off without a serious hitch on Sunday, with tens of thousands of people – unofficial estimates put it at 50,000 – marching down New York’s Fifth Avenue, as dozens of people on the sidelines protested the inclusion of members of Israel’s governing coalition in the annual event, eJewishPhilanthropy’s Judah Ari Gross reports.
Ahead of the parade, its chief organizer, Gideon Taylor, the CEO of the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York, told eJP that he predicted the event would be “noisy and chaotic,” and that indeed appeared to be the case.
Within the parade, approximately 1,000 people – many of them Israeli expats who are members of the UnXeptable protest group – marched with the Labor Zionist Ameinu organization, wearing T-shirts and holding signs with slogans like “Zionism = Democracy” and “NYC [loves] Israeli Democracy” in an approved form of demonstration against the Israeli government’s proposed judicial overhaul.
Among the marchers were local and statewide politicians, like New York City Mayor Eric Adams and New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, as well as national figures like Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY). More than a dozen Israeli parliamentarians and ministers marched in the parade, though at least three ministers who had initially been slated to attend – Economy Minister Nir Barkat, Science Minister Ofir Akunis and Jerusalem Affairs and Heritage Minister Meir Porush – ultimately did not attend.
Dozens of protesters who appeared on the sidelines of the march heckled the ministers and Knesset members in attendance. In most years, New York’s annual Celebrate Israel Parade sees only minor protests by pro-Palestinian and anti-Zionist groups, who also appeared at this year’s event, but were largely ignored by the participants.
While the parade itself did not see any serious conflicts or major external demonstrations, hundreds of protesters appeared outside the Jerusalem Conference that was hosted by the Israeli media Besheva Group in New York on Sunday afternoon after the event, where several government ministers and Knesset members spoke. Similar protests were scheduled for Monday outside the Jerusalem Post’s conference, where members of the government were also slated to appear.
Read the full story here.
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