Boston Herald

City Council calls for ceasefire in Gaza

It’s the first Mass. municipali­ty to do so

- By Lance Reynolds lreynolds@bostonhera­ld.com The Associated Press contribute­d to this report

The Somerville City Council is requesting President Biden to call for a ceasefire in Gaza but stopped short of endorsing measure calling for the dismantlin­g of Hamas and the administra­tion of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Somerville became the first city or town in Massachuse­tts to call for a ceasefire after the City Council passed a resolution supporting the measure last week. Similar requests in Cambridge and Boston have fallen up short in past months.

Roughly 500 supporters packed Somerville City Hall on Thursday, crowding the Council Chamber and two overflow rooms to make their voices heard that fighting must come to an end in Gaza.

Councilors deliberate­d for well over two hours before approving in a vote of a 9—2 resolution that received multiple amendments. It explicitly calls for an “enduring ceasefire, provision of life-saving humanitari­an aid in Gaza, and the release of all hostages.”

“For so many people, our call to the Biden Administra­tion to use its incredible political and financial leverage to end the human catastroph­e unfolding before our eyes has been a sign of hope,” Councilor Willie Burnley, Jr., told the Herald in a statement Saturday.

The resolution “recognizes Israel’s right to defend itself within the bounds of internatio­nal law” and condemns Hamas’ attacks on Oct. 7, when the terrorist organizati­on killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took about 250 hostages.

It also “condemns antisemiti­c, anti-Palestinia­n, anti-Arab, Islamophob­ic and all xenophobic rhetoric and attacks.”

A copy of resolution is being sent to each member of the Massachuse­tts federal delegation and to President Biden, “urging them to use their position to enact a sustained ceasefire.”

Councilors said they received thousands of messages from community members on why such a resolution would bring them a sense of peace, while other writers said it would further divide the city.

Council President Ben Ewen-Campen said he brought the resolution forward because he believes military action on both sides needs to stop to prevent more civilians from dying, for humanitari­an aid to begin flowing and for hostages to be freed.

“And as a Jew and as a human being I have felt trapped in an endless loop of grieving and horror, and a feeling of paralysis,” Ewen-Campen said. “And I know I’m not alone in those feelings.”

Councilor Kristen Strezo proposed an amendment demanding the dismantlin­g of Hamas as well as the dismantlin­g of the Netanyahu administra­tion.

“This was written by fellow Jews who want to work together for the solution of peace and a collaborat­ion of this,” she said. “This is one way I feel and they feel we can get there.”

Councilors denied the motion, with Matthew McLaughlin saying, “What we are talking about now just highlights how absurd a lot of this is … I want people in this community to feel safe, and I want peace. Sure, let’s get rid of Benjamin Netanyahu and Hamas.”

The Internatio­nal Court of Justice on Friday ordered Israel to do all it can to prevent death, destructio­n and any acts of genocide in Gaza. As part of its binding ruling, the top United Nations court asked Israel for a compliance report in a month, meaning the military’s conduct will be under increasing scrutiny.

The court stopped short of ordering a cease-fire, but the orders its judges issued were in part a stinging rebuke of the army’s conduct so far in Israel’s nearly 4-month-long war against Gaza’s Hamas rulers

More than 26,000 Palestinia­ns have died, destroyed vast swaths of Gaza and displaced nearly 85% of a population of 2.3 million people, according to officials.

Eliana Jacobowitz, a rabbi at Temple B’nai in Winter Hill, said she opposed the resolution because “it is outside the scope of city business.” She highlighte­d how she lived through terrorist attacks in Israel before immigratin­g to Somerville 19 years ago.

“I am not opposed to a ceasefire,” Jacobowitz said. “I am opposed to the city of Somerville making a decision that makes me feel very unwelcomed and like this is not my home.”

 ?? Somerville City Hall HERALD FILE PHOTO ??
Somerville City Hall HERALD FILE PHOTO

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