August 3, 2009 8:36 AM

Israelis Rally After Murders at Gay Center

(AP)  Reeling from the worst attack ever aimed at homosexuals in Israel, members of the country's gay community and their supporters rallied Sunday in the heart of Tel Aviv a day after a masked gunman killed two people at a center for gay youth and escaped.

As protesters with rainbow flags mourned the victims and condemned the homophobic sentiment assumed to be behind the attack, police hunted for the assailant throughout a city that has long prided itself on a live-and-let-live attitude and a thriving gay community.

"I fear that if the man who did this is not found, the consequences to the gay community might be far-reaching - they might live in fear," said Arnon Hirsch, a 47-year-old lawyer who was one of several hundred people who took part in the protest near the center attacked Saturday night.

Hirsch said he is openly gay and does not intend to act differently now. "I have no intention of giving in to terror," he said. "I'm not going to hide anywhere."

Outside the center, a bouquet of flowers rested on the curb near barricades erected by police and a sign reading, "Stop Homophobia."

A masked man entered the center for gay teens in downtown Tel Aviv late Saturday night, pulled out a pistol and opened fire, according to Micky Rosenfeld, a police spokesman. The shooter then fled the scene on foot, Rosenfeld said.

Photographs taken inside after the shooting showed bodies lying near a billiard table and a smear of blood on the white-tile floor.

The dead were identified as a 26-year-old man who was a counselor at the center and a 17-year-old girl. Eleven people were wounded, four of them critically.

"I took cover with someone under a table, and he kept firing," 16-year-old Or Gil, who was shot twice in the legs, recounted in news footage aired on the YNet news Web site. "When I got up it was horrifying, I just saw blood."

Jonathan Bower, 23, said he had been in the club before the attack and was outside when the shots began.

"One of my friends came out shouting and screaming, 'He has a gun, he has a gun,'" Bower said.

(AP Photo/Ariel Schait)
(Left: Israeli police officers and rescue worker at the site of the shooting attack in Tel Aviv, Saturday, Aug. 1, 2009.)

Bower said the city's usually uninhibited gay population would have to be more careful now.

"This is a moment when I have to keep a low profile, I have to tone it down, because now we are afraid," he said.

Police slapped a gag order on the case, saying publication of details could compromise their investigation.

Mike Hamel, a gay rights activist whose organization runs the youth club, said the center was meant to be a safe place where gay teens - many of them still concealing their sexual identity from their families and friends - could meet with counselors and other teenagers. He blamed religious incitement against homosexuals for the attack.

"Beyond the pain, the frustration and the anger, we are facing a situation in which the incitement to hate creates an environment that allows this to happen," Hamel said.

The attack drew condemnations from Tel Aviv's mayor, Cabinet ministers, the country's chief rabbis and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

"We'll bring him to justice and exercise the full extent of the law against him," Netanyahu said of the killer, speaking at the Israeli Cabinet's weekly meeting.

Nitzan Horowitz, Israel's only openly gay lawmaker, called the attack a "hate crime."

"This is the worst attack ever against the gay community in Israel," he said. "This act was a blind attack against innocent youths, and I expect the authorities to exercise all means in apprehending the shooter."

Israel's gays and lesbians typically enjoy freedoms similar to their counterparts in European countries. Gay soldiers serve openly in the military, and gay musicians and actors are among the country's most popular. Tel Aviv holds a festive annual gay parade, rainbow flags are often seen flying from apartment windows and there is a city-funded community center for gays.

Things are different in conservative Jerusalem, however, where there have been clashes between religious and gay activists. In 2005, an ultra-Orthodox protester stabbed three marchers at a Jerusalem gay parade. Last year, a lawmaker from the ultra-Orthodox Shas party suggested in Parliament that earthquakes were divine punishment for homosexual activity.

The party, whose members have been among the most frequent critics of gays, also issued a statement condemning Saturday's attack.

The youth at the club "go there because it is a refuge of sorts for them," songwriter and gay activist Rona Keinan wrote in the daily Yediot Ahronot. "The very thought that a person might enter that protected space and simply open fire at them is shocking. I just want to cry."

Some of the parents of the wounded teenagers were not aware their children were gay until they were summoned to the hospital Saturday night, said Avi Soffer, 60, a volunteer at the center.

"They didn't even know the kids were coming," Soffer said.
By Associated Press Writer Jen Thomas; AP Writer Aron Heller contributed to this report from Jerusalem

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 13 Comments
by johnhouse August 2, 2009 11:38 PM EDT
I have come to accept gays based on their generally good conduct and the blind hatred directed toward them. Although my wife and I are generally not interested in gay lifestyles, we believe strongly that all people deserve protection from hatred and support in cases there there is no protection.
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by tepeterso August 2, 2009 11:14 PM EDT
Homophobic comments even in the name of religion are much like the Nazi propoganda and misrepresentation of Jews. There is no difference. To regard other as inferior in any way particularly claiming it is God's will are guilty of the greatest blasphemy and evil. Why, because the evil that is perpetrated really casts doubt upon the notion that there is a benevolent, omniscient, omnipotent being out there watching over us.
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by stryker54 August 2, 2009 8:21 PM EDT
Even tho I do not condone the gay lifestyle, these people shouldn't be shot for their lifestyle. Let God deal with it if it is wrong. Which I think it is, at least, it's not a lifestyle for me.
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by Yeah-Me August 2, 2009 5:57 PM EDT
This truely is a sad event that this masked man (coward) would do this to children/young adults.

It's time for the hate to end...
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by denn034 August 2, 2009 5:27 PM EDT
Leviticus 18:22 and 20:13 are viewed by Jewish conservatives in Israel as a command of God to kill gays. Muslims don't like gays either despite how extremely prevalent such is among them. That gunman is either a Muslim terrorist or a Jewish conservative that wants to build the temple and reinstate the Mosaic Law. Both Muslims and Jewish conservatives don't like the secularism in Israel for sure.
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by denn034 August 2, 2009 5:30 PM EDT
Let me add a comment. CBS prevented comments on the HIV Cameron story, so let me comment on that here. The story says HIV was transmitted by gorillas to humans, but I've been told that experts have dismissed that as a means of transmission.
by the_majesty August 2, 2009 5:07 PM EDT
I don't think it has much to do with religion.
Men were created to mate with women. Not men.
Women were created to mate with men. Not women.
Men mating with men or women mating with women is sick.
It did not give the guy the right to gun them down.
Reply to this comment
by hungry1968-16 August 2, 2009 5:13 PM EDT
If men and women aren't supposed to mate with each other, than why are they physically able to have sex?

If they weren't "created" (a fallacy to be sure) to have sex with each other, than wouldn't it be physically IMPOSSIBLE to do so?
by slownewsday_5 August 2, 2009 5:15 PM EDT
No, the_majesty, this is about minding your own business when nothing illegal is being done.



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by slownewsday_5 August 2, 2009 4:58 PM EDT
The only real opponents to people being gay are those who do so blindly based on religious belief.

People should be live-and-let-live as long as laws are not being broken.
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by Stevenapoli7 August 2, 2009 4:38 PM EDT
Gay center? They have YMCAs in Israel too I guess.
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