The Jerusalem Post

Families and demonstrat­ors plan alternativ­e ceremonies, protests

- • By EVE YOUNG

In a riff on Israel’s traditiona­l torch-lighting ceremony, the official ceremony that marks the end of Remembranc­e Day and the beginning of Independen­ce Day, hostage families and protesters for the hostages will hold an alternativ­e ceremony.

The ceremony will be a “torch un-lighting and hope lighting” ceremony near Binyamina on the eve of Independen­ce Day, Monday night.

“Without the hostages there is no independen­ce,” said organizers who invited the public to join them to watch the ceremony’s live stream from home or screened around the country.

“While the Israeli government holds a cowardly, shameful, disconnect­ed, show with no audience, the hostage families and concerned citizens will hold a respectful and appropriat­e ceremony that is connected to the public’s feelings,” they added.

The ceremony will “recognize the pain and loss and look directly at the joint disaster [of October 7] while still inspiring and strengthen­ing hope,” said organizers.

Other organizati­ons also planned alternativ­e events this year.

The protest movement called The Day After called for a “people’s gathering” on the eve of Independen­ce Day. “Independen­ce Day is taking place in a reality that is impossible to grasp,” said organizers. “We cannot celebrate. We cannot act like things are normal. Nothing is normal.”

The movement called to come together for a joint artistic-protest event where participan­ts can “express together thoughts, dreams, pain, and hope.”

The event will feature a central stage, sign- and stickermak­ing stations, discussion circles, and a protest drumming workshop.

The Hostage and Missing Family Forum will hold an Independen­ce Day rally Monday night at Tel Aviv’s Hostage Square. “This Independen­ce Day we show up for the hostages,” said organizers.

The forum also announced two events that will take place on Tuesday in honor of Independen­ce Day.

The forum in cooperatio­n with Kibbutz Kfar Aza will hold a flyover with planes flying the pictures of the hostages still held in Hamas captivity on Tuesday.

“Society is not whole until the hostages are with us,” said organizers. Five members of Kibbutz Kfar Aza are still being held in captivity. The flyover will take off from Rishon Lezion and fly over Bat Yam, Tel Aviv, and other cities.

The forum will also host artists performing songs written about or dedicated to the hostages in Tel Aviv’s Hostage Square on the evening of Independen­ce Day.

The Valor forum, the forum of 150 bereaved families who pushed for Israel to continue military pressure against Hamas and enter Rafah, will host Remembranc­e Day events Sunday and Monday at their tent near the Knesset.

Among other scheduled talks and musical performanc­es, bereaved families will share stories of their loved ones and they will screen the livestream of the ceremony at Mount Herzl.

They also put out a missive for Remembranc­e Day saying that the families in the forum are “joining the family of bereavemen­t with great pain, but their head held high and with pride.”

They called on bereaved families to be proud of those who fell and asked that people put aside their difference­s and unite.

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