Did the Israeli government just admit to 'pinkwashing?'
LGBTQ organizations in Israel are threatening to cancel Tel Avivs yearly Pride Parade unless the government allocates more money to their groups and causes at home and not just use the parade to promote Israel as a bastion of progressive liberalism overseas. The governments response? Pull the international promotional budget.
By Yael Marom
The LGTBQ community in Israel is threatening to hold a huge demonstration instead of the internationally lauded annual Tel Aviv Pride Parade this year. The bold threat is the result of an announcement that the Tourism Ministry was budgeting NIS 11 million ($2.9 million) to promote the event overseas
10 times the combined yearly budget of all LGTBQ organizations in Israel.
The Israel National LGBT Task Force instead called on the government to allocate a sum equal to the NIS 11 million gay tourism spending including money earmarked to paint a plane in rainbow colors to fly in LGBTQ tourists to LGBTQ organizations in Israel. But instead of answering the communitys demands, the Tourism Ministry suspended the NIS 11 million campaign to promote the Tel Aviv Pride Parade overseas, according to Ynet.
I cant help but welcome the Tourism Ministrys decision to pull the funding. It is about time that the state stop using us as a public relations tool to cover up what is really happening here: racism, hate crimes, violence, occupation, segregation and separation, intolerable economic gaps, the discrimination and marginalization of various groups in our society. Its time the state stops using us as a liberal, pink cloak to sell Israel to the world as something diametrically different than what it is. As much as we might want to think were on our way there, we are not a tolerant, open or liberal society.
The announcement by the Tourism Ministry, which is headed by a close Netanyahu ally, is an unequivocal admission by the Israeli government that it is not interested in what the country can do for the LGBTQ community, but what the community can do for the country.
Israel figured this game out a long time ago. The LGBTQ communitys struggle for equal rights is one of the most high-visibility social and civil rights struggles in the world these days. What was once taboo has now become a card Israel can play against the West.
Instead of talking about the occupation, lets talk about Dana International. Instead of talking about economic inequality or the creation of monopolies over privatized natural resources, lets talk about sequins and drag queens in the Pride Parade. Instead of talking about the murder of Shira Banki, lets paint an airplane in rainbow colors and bring celebrities to fawn over our amazing community so they can tell all the people back home to come visit and spend their money here.
It will take more than a few coats of rainbow paint to cover up the crimes that have been committed against the LGBTQ community in Israel. It will take more than a few layers of paint to hide: the three transgender Israelis who took their own lives last year; the LGTBQ rights bills that never make it into law; the absurdly low budgets for LGTBQ community organizations and campaigns; that conversion therapy is still legal; homophobic statements from members of Knesset and prominent rabbis. It will take more than a few layers of paint to hide the fact that homo and lesbian are still pejorative curse words in our enlightened nation; or the fact that we cannot marry here. It cannot hide the teens who are forced to run away from home to shelters. And it cannot hide the murders. The murders.
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http://972mag.com/did-the-israeli-government-just-admit-to-pinkwashing/118691/