[au Royaume-Uni aussi:
http://fr.groups.yahoo.com/group/suffrage-universel/message/753
]
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/08BF4170-DCEC-4561-8038-4E62214BC165.htm
Jews renounce right to Israeli
citizenship
Friday 03 October 2003
A group of San Francisco Jews have renounced
their automatic right to immigrate to Israel in protest of the country's
refusal to extend the same right to Palestinians.
Chanting "Palestine will be free," protesters handed
in a petition to the Jewish Community Federation in San Francisco
declaring their rejection of Israeli citizenship rights, known as Aliyah.
The group of more than 100 called the act a ritual atonement in honour of
the approaching Jewish holy day of Yom Kippur on 5 October.
The protesters claim that Israel's offering automatic citizenship to
overseas Jews while denying the same right to Palestinians forced off
land that originally belonged to them in Israel and the occupied
territories amounted to apartheid.
Protest organiser Eric Romain said: "This is hypocritical. It is a
betrayal of our legacy as Jews."
"Jews are not Zionists and Zionists
are not Jews"
Words on one of the
placards
A petition was gathered and others held placards
declaring "Jews are not Zionists and Zionists are not
Jews".
Aliyah only for some
Aliyah, the automatic right for Jews around the world to immigrate to
Israel, was established in 1950 following the establishment of the
Israeli state in 1948.
But hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were forced off their land and
into refugee camps at that time and in subsequent wars, the protestors
said.
Since then nearly all have been denied the right to return, and the issue
has long been a key sticking point in peace negotiations between Israel
and Palestinian officials.
There are currently over 990,000 Palestinians living in refugee camps
waiting to return home to lands seized by Israel in 1948 and again in
1967.
There are also over two million others in neighbouring countries and many
more thousands displaced around the globe.
Representative?
Sam Salkin, head of the Jewish Community Federation, a leading San
Francisco Jewish charity group, called the protestors "a small group
of fringy young people".
"I don't think they are representative of the Jewish
community."
However, the Jewish protestors claimed to represent the sentiments of a
large portion of the San Francisco area's estimated 225,000
Jews.
AFP