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Many of those at the protest were teenage girls |
Israel's
president has urged Israelis to rally against ultra-Orthodox Jewish extremism
in what he called a fight for the "soul of the nation".
Shimon
Peres was speaking as activists gathered to protest in the town of Beit Shemesh
against the way some ultra-Orthodox Jews treat women.
There have
been two days of clashes in the town after a girl said she had been harassed on
her way to school.
Some
ultra-Orthodox in Beit Shemesh are seeking to segregate men and women.
Mr Peres
said today was a "test for the nation", not just the police.
"The
entire nation must be recruited in order to save the majority from the hands of
a small minority," Mr Peres said.
He said the
demonstration was a defence of the "character" of the state of Israel
"against a minority which breaks our national solidarity".
'Afraid to
go to school'
Ultra-Orthodox Jews clashed with police in the Israeli town of Beit Shemesh, near Jerusalem |
Anger
spilled over after an eight-year-old American girl, Naama Margolese, said she
was afraid to walk to school in the town because ultra-Orthodox men shouted at
her.
"When
I walk to school in the morning, I used to get a tummy ache because I was so
scared... that they were going to stand and start yelling and spitting,"
she said in a subsequent interview with The Associated Press on Monday.
In his
statement, Mr Peres said: "No person has the right to threaten a girl, a
woman or any person in any way. They are not the lords of this land."
Dozens,
many holding placards, have gathered outside the Orot girls' school, attended
by the eight-year-old.
Women have
reported similar incidents in the town of 100,000, some 18 miles (30km)
south-west of Jerusalem.
Sarit Ramon
described the situation in the town, where religiously observant immigrants
live alongside Israelis embracing a more modern lifestyle, as having been
"catastrophic for years".
"When
I told that I was spat at a year and a half ago, people raised an eyebrow, and
that was about it," she told Reuters.
Microcosm
Though
underlining that this behaviour was carried out by only a tiny proportion of
the community, she said what was happening in Beit Shemesh was "a
microcosm of what's happening in the whole country".
On Monday,
one police officer was slightly hurt and a number of Orthodox Jews were
detained after a group of some 300 ultra-Orthodox residents pelted police with
stones and eggs in an incident reportedly triggered after police tried to
remove a sign ordering segregation.
A
television crew attempting to film in the town were surrounded and harassed -
the second alleged attack on journalists in as many days.
On Sunday,
a crew from Channel 2 news, which originally aired Naama Margolese's story,
were attacked as they were filming, say reports, with rocks allegedly thrown at
their van.
After
Monday's clashes, unnamed ultra-Orthodox activists from Beit Shemesh issued a
statement condemning the violence, but also accusing the media of initiating
"deliberate provocations in order to make the peaceful, quiet and tolerant
residents, who live their lives according to their beliefs, look bad".
Such
clashes have become more frequent in Israel in recent years as the authorities
have challenged efforts by ultra-Orthodox Jews to segregate women in public
places.
The BBC's
Jon Donnison, in Jerusalem, says the events have highlighted what is a growing
religious divide in Israel.
Ultra-Orthodox
Jews make up 10% of the population in Israel. The community has a high birth
rate and is growing rapidly.
Related Articles:
Related Articles:
The ultra-Orthodox make up 10 percent of Israel’s population of 7.5 million,but are increasing rapidly amid a growing backlash to the privileges and subsidies long granted to the ultra-religious.
(Rina Castelnuovo for The New York Times)
(Rina Castelnuovo for The New York Times)
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