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These Israeli women marched from the Lebanese

border to Jerusalem. Heres why.


October 19, 2016 | Ruth Eglash | http://wapo.st/2fNVz7T

Demonstrators, including Israeli and Palestinian activists, protest in support of peace


near the West Bank city of Jericho on Oct. 19. (Mohamad Torokman/Reuters)

JERUSALEM Two weeks ago, a small group of Israeli women set off on a protest march to
Jerusalem from northern Israel to demand that the Israeli government restart a peace process with the
Palestinians.
On Wednesday, after reaching the Palestinian city of Jericho in the West Bank, the core group of 20
women were joined by more than 3,000 others, including about 1,000 Palestinian women.
Although most of the Palestinians could not proceed beyond the barrier that separates the West Bank
from Israel, the Israeli women headed for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus formal residence,
where they held an emotional rally.
The group, which calls itself Women Wage Peace, is made up of women from across the political
spectrum and the religious divide. At the rally, many held banners reading, Right, Center and Left are
all calling for an agreement, Women Wage Peace.

We are not an organization; we are a movement. We have defined goals, and when we reach those
goals we will disband, said Marie-Lyne Smadja, a co-founder of the group. From history we have seen
that when women are involved in resolving conflicts, there was much more success.

Activists with Women Wage Peace take part in a march

People demonstrate in support of peace near Jericho on

at the Qasr al-Yahud baptismal site near Jericho on

Oct. 19. (Mohamad Torokman/Reuters)

Oct. 19. (Abbas Momani/AFP/Getty Images)

Organizers of the group points to U.N. Resolution 1325, which urges all actors to increase the
participation of women and incorporate gender perspectives in all United Nations peace and security
efforts. They say that it worked in Northern Ireland and in Liberia.
The movement was founded two years ago after the Gaza war, when many Israeli mothers had to send
their sons to fight.
Vardit Kaplan, who serves as the movements spokeswoman, said that more than 10,000 women have
registered with the group. And, she said, they have been building connections with Palestinian women,
some of whom joined the march to Jerusalem.
I came because I want to see a peace agreement with the Palestinians, said Tanya Harkavi, who is
from the city of Kfar Saba, near Tel Aviv.
Harkavi, a mother and a grandmother, said that women are better positioned to solve disputes because
of their roles within the family and that it was time they become involved in the dispute with the
Palestinians, too.
Two years ago, my son was in the army; he fought in the Gaza war. I decided then that I did not want
to launder army uniforms anymore. I want peace, said Miki Rom, who also lives near Tel Aviv.
One of the rallys key speakers was Michal Froman, a religious Jew from the Israeli settlement of
Tekoa. She was stabbed this past January at a clothing store by a Palestinian teenager from a nearby
village. Froman, the daughter-in-law of the well-known peace activist Rabbi Menachem Froman, was
three months pregnant at the time.
It was important for me to speak here because I want people to know that the settlements are not
preventing peace. I think the opposite: that peace will come from the settlements, said Froman, who
brought her 4-month-old daughter to the rally.

Olfat Haider, an Arab Israeli from Haifa, was among the group that walked from the north of Israel to
Jerusalem. She said she believes that Jews and Arabs can live together, and must live together.
Its time to hear some womens voices. Women can talk to each other, they dont fight with their egos,
she said.
Each speaker at the rally received rapturous applause. But for many in Israel, such gatherings come
with a degree of hopelessness, not only because the momentum for peace has all but disappeared, but
also because many do not believe that there is a negotiating partner on the other side.
Since peace efforts by U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry failed more than two years ago, there has
been little attempt by either side to return to talks.
Among the speakers was Liberian peace activist Leymah Gbowee, who helped bring an end to the
Second Liberian Civil War in 2003. After two days in Israel, walking with Jewish and Palestinian
women, she said she believed that there were partners for peace on both sides and that finding a
solution was possible.
I say to my sisters in Israel, that this is your time to stand up and say no to war and yes to peace, said
Gbowee, the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize laureate. When you stand firm for what you believe, the men with
guns are afraid of you.

Calls for peace are painted on a border wall that separates Israel and the
northern Gaza Strip in the community of Nativ HaAshara on Oct. 18. (Jim
Hollander/European Pressphoto Agency)

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