Posted on 04/29/2004 9:16:34 PM PDT by yonif
An initiative which has brought thousands of people from across the country to visit Gush Katif for the first time is winning the hearts of the people of Israel, including quite a few Likud voters.
Ask most proponents of a withdrawal from Gaza whether they have ever been to Gush Katif and the answer will usually be, no, Ive never been there ask them what they think it looks like and you usually hear a description of a fortified army base, one volunteer told Arutz-7 after speaking with hundreds of Likud members. An organization called We are on the Map! has sought to confront this phenomenon in recent months by bringing busloads of people from all over Israel on free tours of Gush Katif.
Over the past few months We are on the Map has brought over 300 busloads of people on their first visit to Gush Katif. 140 of those buses came over the Passover holiday. The goal of the initiative is to help people gain a better understanding of who the residents of Gush Katif are, what they are doing there, and provide a realistic image of the established towns there.
In addition to giving the visitors greater insight into life in Gush Katif, the constant stream of buses and visitors has strengthened the morale of Gush Katif residents, a Gush Katif spokesperson told Arutz-7. It really gives them hope and strength to see that in a time where their expulsion from their homes is being advocated by their Prime Minister, the nation of Israel stands with them.
We are on the Map has narrowed its focus over the past few weeks to specifically target Likud voters, many of whom are wary of the Prime Ministers plan and, baffled, intended to stay home the day of the referendum. "Many Likud members have never been here and when they come and meet with fellow Likud activists who live and work here it makes a very deep impression on them," said Debbie Rosen, a press liason for Gush Katif.
Likud members across the country have been contacted and offered guided tours of Gush Katif on armored buses leaving from their home towns. The initiative is not cheap, each armored bus costing $500 to rent and is manned by a guide who has taken off from work to provide information on Gush Katifs history and to answer questions.
The idea was actually the brain-child of none other than PM Ariel Sharon himself, said project initiator Yaakov (Ketzaleh) Katz. During the 1982-83 elections, which Menachem Begin won, Sharon launched an initiative to bring thousands of Jews to visit communities in Yesha (Judea, Samaria and Gaza).
Ketzaleh, who served and was wounded in the Yom Kippur War as a commander of one of Gen. Sharon's commando forces, and who is currently the Executive Director of Beit El Yeshiva Center Institutions and Arutz-7, added that, "Four years ago, when then-PM Ehud Barak planned to cede the Golan to Syria, We are on the Map adopted the concept, bringing 250,000 Jews to tour the Golan region and in past months we have brought tens of thousands, including thousands of Likud members, to visit Gush Katif for the first time.
Arutz-7s Ezra HaLevi asked Ketzaleh if he attributed the latest polls showing a majority against the withdrawal to We are on the Maps activities. Certainly it has contributed greatly along with efforts of the volunteers who have been going door to door meeting with Likud voters and the tireless efforts of the citizens of Gush Katif to the rejection of Sharons plan, which will be a victory for the Jewish people.
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