The Jerusalem Post

West Bank and Trump: Two birds, one AIPAC protest

- • By MICHAEL WILNER Jerusalem Post correspond­ent

WASHINGTON – A Jewish group opposed to Israel’s administra­tion of the West Bank took to the streets of Washington this week, hoping to push back against a narrative that the American Israel Public Affairs Committee enjoys robust bipartisan support.

Hundreds gathered under the banner of IfNotNow, a group that has recently focused its efforts around a “Jewish resistance” campaign targeting the Trump administra­tion.

Their Monday march conflated both of these causes as one in the same, explained Yonah Lieberman, 25, a founding member of IfNotNow.

“For us, the fact that this year marks the first year of Trump’s presidency and the 50th year of occupation forces the Jewish community to ask itself: which side are we on?” Lieberman told The Jerusalem Post. “We cannot resist Trump while being silent on the occupation because Trump and Bibi [Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu] are two sides of the same coin. They use the same violent rhetoric and promote the same nationalis­t policies.”

The organizati­on claims that over 1,000 people attended the protest, which reached the convention center that was hosting AIPAC’s 18,000 attendees. Several protesters managed entry into the facility, while AIPAC reportedly revoked some credential­s of IfNotNow activists.

“Because of Trump’s rhetoric, we’re watching the sharpest rise of antisemiti­sm in this country in a generation,” Lieberman said. “Yet AIPAC and the majority of the Jewish establishm­ent have chosen a pro-Israel-at-all-cost approach to politics, cozying up to Trump to ensure his administra­tion continues to support Israel unconditio­nally.”

Protests are a common occurrence at AIPAC conference­s, but IfNotNow’s demonstrat­ion was larger than most – and may have been the largest such demonstrat­ion organized by Jewish activists for the Jewish community. The march began in Franklin Square, outside the headquarte­rs of The Washington Post.

“Trump’s first year in office and the 50th year of occupation are coming together to pose a unique crisis for the American Jewish community,” said Mira Revesz, an IfNotNow spokespers­on. “This crisis calls for nothing less than bold, moral action that can transform our community.”

The organizati­on has recently protested White House adviser Stephen Bannon, calling him a racist, and David Friedman – Trump’s newly minted ambassador to Israel – terming him a “pro-occupation extremist.” On social media, the group notes that AIPAC congratula­ted Friedman on his nomination, adding, “We know what side you’re on.”

Their page has 22,125 likes on Facebook, where the organizati­on describes itself as “a national movement to end the American Jewish community’s support for the occupation.” IfNotNow has chapters in New York, Boston, Philadelph­ia, Chicago, the San Francisco Bay Area, Denver, Detroit, Minneapoli­s, Washington and Los Angeles.

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