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January 24, 1997 - Image 76

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-01-24

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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Workers relax at a coffee shop in Tel
Aviv.

The media have focused on the
"Margies" of Israel — the Jewish
residents of the territories and oth-
er steadfast right-wing ideologues.
But the "Yaels" of the country
are in the majority. They repre-
sent the three-to-one majority of
Israelis that pollsters say support
this latest advance in the Oslo
peace process.
Seemingly out of thin air,
where Israel once seemed split
about 50-50 over the peace
process, about half the former op-
ponents are now effectively with
its supporters.
Had a government led by Shi-
mon Peres tried to withdraw the
army from Hebron and agreed to
future withdrawals from most of
the West Bank, the opposition in
the Knesset and the streets would
have been fearsome. But with a
right-of-center prime minister and
government, the agreement
passed the Knesset 87-17.
Despite the claim by Mr. Ne-
tanyahu's critics that he violat-
ed his election mandate, many
supporters were of the opinion
that he had lived up to his promis-
es to keep the Oslo accord going,
but to play tougher with the Pales-
tinians than did his predecessors
Mr. Peres and Yitzhak Rabin.
There was a sheepishness, a
resignation, even a note of apol-
ogy among some of the right-
wingers who threw their support
behind the Hebron pact.
In past years, Michael Eitan,
leader of the Likud Knesset fac-
tion, has headed the parliament's
"Land of Israel Front." He was at
pains to explain that, 'During the
election campaign we realized
that if we didn't pledge to go ahead
with the peace process, we would
not have been elected." Mr. Eitan,
however, looked a bit guilt-ridden.
Part of the explanation for the
wide majority in favor of the He-
bron agreement was the tenden-
cy of many unopinionated,
uninformed Israelis to go along
with whatever the government
decided.
But such massive public sup-
port for the Hebron accord was
not "inevitable," said Tel Aviv Uni-
versity sociology professor
Ephraim Ya'ar. Rather, it came
partly because of the dramatic
drop in ten-or since the bus bomb-
ings of last spring.



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