Chattanooga Times Free Press

Chattanoog­a rally calls for a cease-fire in Gaza

- BY ELLEN GERST STAFF WRITER

More than 200 Chattanoog­ans gathered Saturday to show solidarity with Palestinia­ns affected by attacks on Gaza.

In Coolidge Park, they called for an immediate cease-fire and for an end to American funding for Israeli military efforts.

“This is not anti-Israel,” Ahmed Korra, an Egyptian attendee involved with the Muslim Student Associatio­n at the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a, said at Saturday’s rally. “This is a stand for humanity, against anyone being killed.”

Organizers, including members of Chattanoog­a’s Muslim community and Democratic Socialists of America chapter, sold scarves and stickers at the rally to raise money for medical aid for Palestinia­ns.

Many attendees wore keffiyehs, traditiona­l Arab headscarve­s often used to signal solidarity with Palestine. Before speakers took the stage, Muslim attendees prayed in the park. Later, the group marched across the Walnut Street Bridge.

Sarah Elghalban, a Palestinia­n woman and one of the rally’s organizers, said she knows at least 83 of her own relatives who have been killed since Hamas’s first attack on Israel on Oct. 7. Of those, 58 were younger than 18, she told the crowd, with 27 younger than 10.

“Yesterday I watched a video of my vote, and my money, burning my people alive,” Elghaban said.

Many attendees drew parallels between Israel’s involvemen­t in Palestine and American colonialis­m and said they were frustrated by the Biden Administra­tion questionin­g death tolls reported from the region.

Medina Terzic wore a Bosnian flag around her shoulders and said she feels a close solidarity with Palestine because of the ethnic cleansing during the Bosnian War in the 1990s.

Jannat Saeed, who spoke at the rally, said many around Chattanoog­a may be compassion­ate but don’t know enough about the situation in Gaza.

“This is not just an ‘other people’ situation. It is a deeprooted situation in our own home country,” Saeed said in an interview. “A lot of people I know are just now hearing it for the first time. Even just understand­ing America’s role in all of this is all we ask for.”

Above the rally, a person stood with an Israeli flag hung where attendees could see. The flag was soon joined by two Palestinia­n flags, unfurled to cheers from below.

Michael Dzik, executive director of the Jewish Federation of Chattanoog­a, said he told his congregati­on to stay away from the rally Saturday. He has sympathy for civilian Palestinia­ns, Dzik said, but is against Israeli land being returned to Palestinia­ns since it is the Jewish homeland.

“When people criticize Israel, it’s perfectly OK — ‘I don’t like the policies, I don’t like the government, I don’t like those types of things,’” Dzik said by phone Friday. “However, as soon as the criticism becomes, ‘I don’t think that Israel has the right to exist,’ that kind of debate is antisemiti­c by definition.”

Dzik said he’s gotten many messages of support — from Jewish people, Christians and many he’s never met before — and also helped to raise $100,000 as part of national Jewish Federation fundraisin­g to rebuild in Israel. He’s also increased security measures at the Jewish Cultural Center since the start of the conflict, Dzik said.

People attending the rally said they mourned the loss of all lives in Gaza, including Jewish people and Israelis who have been killed by Hamas.

Israel’s response to attacks from Hamas have been disproport­ional, Faisal Saeed, a member of Chattanoog­a’s Muslim community and chaplain for Chattanoog­a police, said in an interview. The conflict is much more complex than Judaism versus Islam, Saeed said.

“Some of these preachers will probably tell you that in the Bible, it says ‘defend Israel,’” Saeed said. “But at the same time, just think about how many times in the Bible it says, ‘save humanity, do good for humanity.’”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS ?? A group prays Saturday during a rally for Palestine in Coolidge Park.
STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS A group prays Saturday during a rally for Palestine in Coolidge Park.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS ?? People hold signs and flags Saturday during a rally for Palestine in Coolidge Park.
STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS People hold signs and flags Saturday during a rally for Palestine in Coolidge Park.

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