Deccan Chronicle

Curtains come down on strip clubs in Israel’s ‘Sin City’

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Tel Aviv, May 3: Tel Aviv’s Pussycat used to bill itself as the premier strip club in the Middle East, allegedly popular among Israeli TV stars and military brass for its notorious private lounge. Before its closure last year, it was a magnet for hedonists in the Mediterran­ean commercial hub sometimes dubbed Israel’s “Sin City” and known for beachside cocktails and hipster bars.

Now, the eye-catching round mirrored building near the beach that hosted the club since it was founded in 2000 has been converted into a centre for social activism, opening its doors to community programmes. The club’s demise was partly sealed by legal changes cracking down on alleged prostituti­on, developmen­ts which forced the closure of all of Tel Aviv’s strip joints.

That was a victory for some anti-prostituti­on campaigner­s, while others insisted that properly managed strip clubs allowed women to make good money in a safe environmen­t. The transforma­tion of the Pussycat was the work of activist Yakir Segev, a former member of Jerusalem’s city council and business executive now devoted to social causes. The Pussycat, which faced a series of legal challenges over alleged prostituti­on, “couldn’t be fixed”, Segev said.

When a real estate company bought the site that hosted the Pussycat last year, Segev convinced the firm to allow the space to be converted at least temporaril­y into a hub for social activism. “They gave up millions of shekels every year to get the club out and us in,” Segev said, calling the decision “admirable”.

Segev now offers audio tours of the site telling the club’s story, which he said raises awareness about sexual exploitati­on. During a tour in February, before Israel went into Covid-19 lockdown, an area once inhabited by pole dancers hosted a support group for young mothers working in high-tech, as their babies were parked nearby.

And right next to what was the “private lounge”, Eritrean refugees were learning the basics of Israeli cuisine. For strip club aficionado­s, the Pussycat had several classic features: Pleather chairs, small booths for lap dances and a mirrored cloakroom. VIPs who wanted to avoid being spotted could use a discreet staircase connecting a basement parking lot straight to the private lounge.

The lounge “welcomed TV stars and army generals”, according to Segev’s audio tour. Activists insist the lounge was nothing but a brothel. Ayelet Dayan of Israel’s task force against human traffickin­g, said private lounges at Tel Aviv clubs were all venues for illegal prostituti­on. When women “took the key for the private room, the receptioni­st would give them a condom”, she said. “It was the same story in all the clubs.”

The demise of Tel Aviv’s strip clubs was accelerate­d in 2018 when Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, passed a law banning brothels. But the final straw came in April last year when the public prosecutor issued a directive to clamp down on lap dances, arguing they could in some cases be viewed as prostituti­on.

A former strip club employee, who requested anonymity, said lap dances were an essential part of a stripper’s income, offering them a chance to earn tips. “If no private room, the girls will not dance on the stage. The stage was the business card for the private room,” she said.

After the Pussycat closed, several other Tel Aviv clubs followed suit. That was a victory for activists like Segev, who argued the Pussycat’s transforma­tion into a venue for social change “gives people a lot of hope”.

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