Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Controversial Israeli-Palestinian Memorial Day event draws crowd in Tel Aviv

Detractors say the event equates fallen IDF soldiers with the terrorists who attacked them and minimizes the struggle for Israel’s survival.

Palestinians and Israelis attend what has become a controversial ceremony for the families of Israeli and Palestinian victims as part of a joint memorial day event in Tel Aviv in 2015. Photo by Tomer Neuberg/Flash90.
Palestinians and Israelis attend what has become a controversial ceremony for the families of Israeli and Palestinian victims as part of a joint memorial day event in Tel Aviv in 2015. Photo by Tomer Neuberg/Flash90.

Following an Israeli High Court ruling that Israel must grant permits to 100 Palestinian Authority residents to attend a joint Israeli-Palestinian Memorial Day ceremony, some 9,000 Israelis and a few dozen Palestinians took part in a memorial event on Tuesday night at Yarkon Park in Tel Aviv.

Called “Sharing Sorrow, Bringing Hope,” the event was funded by Combatants for Peace and the Parents Circle-Families Forum. Both organizations are funded by the New Israel Fund, as well as German, Swiss and other European Union donors. The controversial event has taken place annually since 2006.

Detractors say the event equates fallen Israeli soldiers with the terrorists who attacked them and minimizes the struggle for Israel’s survival. Proponents say the event is meant to allow Palestinian and Israeli families who have lost loved ones to find common ground through their loss.

“There is no place for a memorial ceremony likening the blood of our people and that of terrorists,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Twitter. “That is why I refused to allow for the entry of the ceremony’s participants, and I think the High Court should not have intervened in my decision.”

On Wednesday, Natan Landau of Combatants for Peace told Hadashot TV news that the families of terrorists who were killed were welcome as long as they expressed their opposition to terrorism.

“If a family says, ‘We are against those acts, and we believe in achieving peace through nonviolent means,’ I believe it has a place,” he said.

Dozens of pro-Israel activists protested at the event. Police were on hand to maintain order.

Washington “must first remove operational obstacles, including the blockade,” as a condition for “resolving issues,” Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian says.
Michael Lotem finished a three-year tour as envoy to Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Malawi and the Seychelles in August 2025.
Israel’s head of state has faced pressure to grant a pardon from U.S. President Trump.
Tzipi Hotovely will be filling a position that has been vacant for two years.
Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf was reportedly forced to resign after seeking to include the nuclear issue in the talks.
The exiled Iranian opposition leader said they failed to address Tehran’s human rights violations.