World Orange Defiance In a last stand, withdrawal foes camp out on the edge of the Gaza Strip. DINA KRAFT Jewish Telegraphic Agency Kfar Maimon, Israel nder sparse clumps of trees, thousands of anti-withdrawal activists who gathered for a ' mass protest march to the Gaza Strip take refuge from the baking sun and vow to continue their struggle, no mat- ter what. They arrived Monday, July 18, from across Israel — by bus, taxi, car and on foot — despite unprecedented efforts by police to block them, including declar- ing their planned march illegal. Tensions ran high as thousands of police, braced for possible confrontations, were placed on the highest state of alert. Dressed in orange — the color they've adopted for their struggle to prevent the Israeli government from uprooting thousands of settlers from the Gaza Strip and part of the northern West Bank — the protesters are making a last stand. `How could you not come when Jews living in the Land of Israel are being forced to move out of their homes?" asked Ya'akov Magness, 53, a clinical psychologist who traveled with his wife and daughter from their home in the Golan Heights, far to the north. The family, which camped out in a tent on Monday night, said they'll stay as long as necessary to show the govern- ment that the activists can't be ignored. Many of the 7,000 protesters encamped in Kfar Maimon, a village about 12 miles from, the Kissufim cross- ing into Gush Katif, the main Jewish settlement bloc in Gaza. "There is the feeling that you must show your support and do something," said Magness, a Memphis native who immigrated to Israel in 1982. He sat under a black tarpaulin strung between trees on a grassy hill. Some 20,000 sympathizers gathered Monday night for a mass rally in the nearby town of Netivot. Some then con- tinued on to Kfar Maimon, but they were prevented by Israeli police from setting out for Gush Katif. Police cor- doned off the entire village to prevent the activists from marching on Gaza. About 20 protesters were arrested Tuesday after scuffles with officers. Several people suffered light injuries. The government declared the Gaza U air 7/21 2005 16 Israeli police scuffled with opponents of the Gaza withdrawal in Jerusalem on Monday. Police blocked thousands across Israel from heading toward Gaza's main Jewish settlement bloc for a protest march. Strip a closed military zone last week, allowing only residents to travel in and out. Decisionmakers feared that if they left the area open, it would be flooded by anti-withdrawal activists, complicat- ing the evacuation of Jewish settlements and military posts slated to begin in mid-August. The government's unusually strong- armed approach to the protest drew fire in Israel. Police were ordered to stop buses en route to Monday night's demonstration in Netivot, and they threatened to confiscate bus drivers' licenses — a move criticized not just by the right wing but by civil liberties groups and others. Roadblocks were set up across the region to stop activists from reaching Netivot. On Tuesday, thousands of activists spent the day in Kfar Maimon, attend- ing lectures by rabbis at the local syna- gogue and resting on air mattresses and sleeping bags in whatever shade they could find. A large number of the protesters were teenagers — boys in orange knit kippot, some with their ritual fringes hung over orange Gush Katif T-shirts, and girls in long skirts and sandals with orange rib- bons streaming from their wrists. "We are religious, so we have a strong connection to the land. We are against giving any part of it away to someone else," said Smadar Yechazkel, 16, who hitchhiked to Kfar Maimon after police halted the bus she and fellow youth- movement members had planned to travel in. She was impressed by the large num- ber of protesters who braved the journey and adapted to police interference in order to stand and be counted against the withdrawal. "The people are the ones who should be deciding what hap- pens. This gathering is to show the strength of the people," Yechazkel said. A settler leader, Pinchas Wallerstein, was determined to see the march toward the Gaza Strip take place. 'As long as this terrible decision stands, there will be a constant presence to prevent this," he told Israel Army Radio. Moshe Abouchatzeira, 56, a carpenter from Elon Shvut, a West Bank settle- ment, said that despite polls that show significant public support for the with- drawal, he feels most Israelis oppose it. "We feel most of the people are with us, and no one can pull the wool over our eyes. We are determined to prevent any evacuation of any settlement in Israel," he said. ❑