NP Rank:
Israel's leaders stress tolerance after gay youth center attack
In the wake of a shooting at a Tel Aviv gay youth center, Israel's leaders stress tolerance after a masked gunman sprayed bullets into the basement meeting room at the center and local police pressed a manhunt for the gunman.
As local police pressed a manhunt for a masked gunman that sprayed bullets in a basement meeting room in central Tel Aviv, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the murder “shocking.”
“Ours is a country built on tolerance and we must respect all people as they are,” he said.
As Israel’s gay community has broken barriers in the media and politics over the past two decades, tensions have often flared over public events like pride marches in Jerusalem, whose Orthodox Jewish population has said they are a provocation.
The shooting is surprising because of its location. Tel Aviv has functioned as a shelter of acceptance both in the public and private realms, with a gay community center, gay elected officials on the city council, and an annual gay pride parade that draws tens of thousands. (Click here to read Tel Aviv’s openness and here to read about its rise in gay tourism.)
Avner Berenheimer, who co-wrote a movie about gays in the Israeli military, says there’s been a revolution in the attitudes of the Israeli public in the past decade.
“If it’s a hate crime then it’s the first major hate crime in Israel since the foundation of the country. If that’s true it’s a really bad feeling,” he said at a march just a few blocks away from the site of the shooting. “Suddenly we’ve joined all the countries with violence and bigotry against gay people.”
No suspects have been named in the shooting. Though the ultra-Orthodox religious party Shas joined in condemning the attack, left-wing politicians accused the party of inciting hatred against the gay community.
Related stories on NowPublic:
Protests In Tel Aviv In The Wake Of Gay Attacks In Israel
Shooting at Cafe Noir, Gay Club in Tel Aviv, Leaves 3 Dead
Crowd Power
-
Rhonda J Mangus
North Tonawanda, New York, United States
Recommendations (54)
-
generaldecay
Yorkshire, United Kingdom -
158
St. Louis, Missouri, United States -
albertacowpoke
Canada -
Blue Crush
Toronto, Canada -
Yuliya Talmazan
Burnaby, Canada
-
Barry Artiste
Vancouver, Canada -
Rory Cripps
New Port Richey, Florida, United States -
Sri Lanka Army news
Colombo, Western, Sri Lanka -
Barbara McPherson
Nanaimo, Canada -
Roy C
Vancouver, Washington, United States




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (6)
at 11:11 on August 3rd, 2009
Maybe the country can learn from it.
at 16:14 on August 3rd, 2009
Pure supposition but possibly this is a turf war over club ownership? The local mafia in Tel Aviv is disproportionately large for the size of the city especially after the influx of newer Russian emigres and when push comes to shove... control over clubs is control over the disco pill trade. Well, the details of the story will probably come out in the wash. Israel has a very robust and proactive media. Unlike say, the UK or the USA.
at 18:13 on August 3rd, 2009
I really wish that folks who write or reprint news articles from half way around the world get it RIGHT. Cage Noir is a restaurant not a youth center. It is next to the building where the attack took place. I live 5 minutes from the tragedy. 2nd, NO one knows at this moment who, what and why this happened. Hopefully the police will find the perpetrators and we will get the whole story. Meanwhile there is a memorial outside the building in honor of these two souls that were gunned down.
at 04:15 on August 4th, 2009
Tikun, thank you for reading and commenting. I apologize for the error and will remove the reference to Cage Noir. Thanks for bringing it to my attention:)!
at 04:19 on August 4th, 2009
Thanks to everyone who read, commented on and/or recommended this story!
at 06:20 on August 8th, 2009
Perhaps not as tolerant as they are making us all believe