Living conditions protesters during the Gay Pride parade in
Haifa,
Israel (2010) parade Israel has an active
LGBTQ community, with well attended annual
pride festivals, held in
Tel Aviv and
Jerusalem since 1998. Pride events are also held regularly in
Haifa,
Petah Tikva,
Hadera,
Ra'anana,
Eilat, and
Rishon LeZion. In 2016, the first-ever pride parade scheduled in
Beersheba was cancelled by the
Israeli Supreme Court due to security concerns, however in 2017 the first Beersheba Pride Parade was held with full council support. Israel is one of only eleven foreign countries to have a chapter of the U.S. group
PFLAG, called
Tehila. The Jerusalem parade gained international coverage when three marchers were stabbed in 2005. The perpetrator was subsequently sentenced to twelve years in prison. An attempt by Jerusalem's mayor, a
Haredi Jew, to thwart Jerusalem Pride in June 2005 had been challenged in the courts. The mayor lost and was ordered to contribute funds to the event. The
WorldPride Festival was planned for Jerusalem in August 2005, despite protests and opposition from members of the three major religions in Jerusalem. However, it was postponed due to
Israel's pullout from the Gaza Strip, which required the presence of most Israeli police forces and would thus leave the parade with little to no security. The parade had been plagued with threats of violence, as well as consistent grandstanding by some Jewish, Muslim and Christian leaders and members of the Knesset. In November 2006, more than two thousand members of the
Haredi community jammed into streets in an Orthodox neighbourhood in a show of force aimed at pressuring authorities into cancelling the
gay pride parade to be held in Jerusalem. About a dozen people were reported injured. Six people were stabbed in 2015. One of the victims, 16-year-old Shira Banki, died of her wounds at the
Hadassah Medical Center three days later, on 2 August 2015. The number of Jerusalem pride participants after the 2015 attack was smaller than in years past. In 2016, some 25,000 took part, many in solidarity with the LGBTQ community following the deadly stabbing attack, while in 2017, at least 22,000 marched in the parade.
Tel Aviv Pride is one of the largest pride parades in the world. There were 200,000 participants reported in 2016. The parade is the biggest pride celebration in continental
Asia, drawing more than 200,000 people in 2017, approximately 30,000 of them tourists. There were more than 250,000 participants reported in 2018, and again more than 250,000 participants in 2019. On 1 August 2009, an unknown assailant opened fire at Tel Aviv's main LGBTQ youth center, the
Barnoar, killing two and injuring fifteen others. The attack sent shockwaves throughout the worldwide gay community and throughout Israel, sparking an immense reaction throughout the country. Before this attack, it had only been mainly left-leaning politicians that supported the LGBTQ community in Israel. The issue for LGBTQ rights and acceptance began to slowly shift towards the center of Israel's political spectrum. This shift had slowly begun when Israel's Foreign Minister
Tzipi Livni appeared at pride events in the months prior to the shooting. However, in the aftermath of this massacre, right-wing politicians began to publicly show their support for the LGBTQ community. On 6 October 2016, Finance Minister
Moshe Kahlon announced that the Israel Government had issued an order to give a divided 10 million
shekels to various governments over a two-year period to examine the nation's LGBTQ community for possible discriminations. A leading LGBTQ nonprofit called the move historic and
Haaretz journalist Ilan Lior noted that it would even result in a major examination of issues such as the MSM blood transfusion restrictions. In February 2019, in a report to
President Reuven Rivlin by the LGBTQ association
The Aguda – Israel's LGBT Task Force, it was revealed that in 2018 there had been a 54% increase in homophobic incidents compared to 2017. The report highlighted that an anti-gay incident takes place about every ten hours on average in Israel. On social networks, a homophobic comment is detected every four minutes. In July 2019,
Shlomo Amar, the
Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem, was criticised for stating that gay people cannot be religious by saying that "They aren't religious. It would be better if they cast off their kippah and Shabbat [observance] and show their true faces.", and advocating for the pseudoscientific practice of
conversion therapy. Ne'emanei Torah Va'Avodah and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) criticised his comments. Jerusalem councilmembers Yossi Chavilov and Laura Warton called for the removal of Amar from his post as rabbi, as did openly gay politician
Avi Buskila and
Blue and White MK
Eitan Ginzburg. Fellow Blue and White MK
Yael German advised Amar to follow the example of
Pope Francis in his moves to accept the LGBTQ community. The
Jerusalem Open House association and three LGBTQ Jewish groups,
Bat-Kol,
Havruta and the Gay Religious Community, condemned his comments as well. He also caused controversy in 2016 by saying that homosexuality is an "abomination cult" for which the Torah prescribes the death penalty. In July 2019, a 16-year-old teenager who lives in the Beit Dror LGBT center in Tel Aviv was stabbed several times and seriously wounded by his brother for refusing to adopt "a religious lifestyle".
Israel Gay Youth (IGY) called the stabbing a hate crime. The condition of the victim stabilized after he underwent surgery at the
Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center. Media reported that the victim and two suspects were all Muslim brothers from the Arab town of
Tamra in northern Israel and that the victim was removed from his home by social services due to harassment from his family. Nearly 1,000 LGBTQ people and allies marched in Tel Aviv under the banner "fighting for our lives" to denounce
violence against LGBTQ people in the wake of the attack. The march was attended by openly gay Blue and White MKs Eitan Ginzburg and
Idan Roll, who said the party was committed to ending violence against the LGBTQ community, and by
Meretz leader
Nitzan Horowitz, Israel's first ever openly gay party leader, and
Etai Pinkas-Arad, who holds the LGBTQ portfolio at the
Tel Aviv-Yafo Municipality. The stabbing was also condemned as a hate crime by a number of politicians, among them
Nitzan Horowitz and by some Arab lawmakers, namely
Meretz MK
Issawi Frej,
Hadash party leader
Ayman Odeh, Hadash MK
Aida Touma-Sliman and
Balad MK Mtanes Shihadeh.
Green Movement MK
Stav Shaffir blamed members of the religious right for intolerance towards LGBTQ Israelis, to which
Transport Minister Bezalel Smotrich (
The Jewish Home) called her "stupid". Four days later, the two suspects in the stabbing turned themselves in. In 2019, the LGBTQ association The Aguda – Israel's LGBT Task Force announced that gay pride events would be held in 12 locales that have never held them before. Among these are
Tiberias,
Beit Shemesh,
Zikhron Ya'akov,
Ramat Gan,
Petah Tikva,
Pardes Hanna-Karkur,
Netanya,
Yavne and
Kiryat Bialik.
Health On 23 February 2016, the Ministry of Health approved a
pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) program to prevent HIV transmission, making Israel one of the first countries to implement it. The drugs are handed out at AIDS centers in hospitals and clinics that serve the LGBTQ community, in addition to health fund clinics.
Public opinion A 2013 public opinion poll by
Haaretz showed support for same-sex marriage at 59% among Israelis. A Hiddush survey made in 2016 found that 76% of Israelis supported the recognition of same-sex marriage or civil unions. The poll showed an increase in public support on this issue in Israel. A June 2017 poll found that 79% of Israelis supported legally recognizing same-sex unions. According to a 2018
European Social Survey, when compared to 17 European countries Israel had the highest percentage of people who feel their group suffers discrimination based on sexual orientation. Israel ranked 15th in support for the freedom of gays and lesbians to live their lives as they choose. The survey highlighted a connection between greater religiosity and less tolerance, while the link between political opinions and support for LGBTQ equality weakens. According to a 2023
Pew research poll, 36% of the Israeli adults supported same-sex marriage with 56% opposed to it. The support was higher among Jewish adults (41%) than compared to Muslim adults (8%). Among Israeli Jews, support was higher amongst
Hiloni (“secular”) Jews (three-quarters) compared with 29% of
Masorti (“traditional”) Jews and 4% of
Haredi (“ultra-Orthodox”) or Dati (“religious”). In a further 2023 poll conducted by Israeli TV Channel 13, 61% of Israelis supported LGBTQ equal rights, with 52% expressing support for same-sex marriage.
LGBTQ rights movement , dedicated to Israel's LGBTQ community Since the 1970s, there has been an active
LGBTQ rights movement that has often affiliated itself with the
Israeli feminist movement and various liberal and
social democratic political parties. The oldest Israeli LGBTQ organization is
The Aguda, founded in 1975.
Media One of the first
Israeli newspapers to cover the subject of gay people was a 1962 article in the now defunct
HaOlam HaZeh. Taking a sensationalist tone, the newspaper warned of a "secret underground" movement within Israel. In the 1980s, the Tel Aviv weekly newspaper
HaIr began to publish a chronicle about an Israeli gay man, known at the time as
Moshe, who would later reveal himself to be
Gal Uchovsky. Today, the two Israeli daily newspapers have openly gay editors and/or writers, and several LGBTQ publications have come and gone. Radio stations such as Radio Tzafon and Radio Radius both have scheduled times for guests to come on the air and talk about LGBTQ social and political topics.
Pinkwashing Sarah Schulman, a writer and professor at the
City University of New York, claims Israeli
government public relations campaign exploits their LGBTQ rights record to promote public perception of Israel as a "modern democracy", a "safe and secure place for investment", and a "tourist destination with the sun and the sand". In August 2011, the
Jerusalem Post reported that the Foreign Ministry was promoting "Gay Israel" as part of its campaigns to counter the negative stereotypes that many liberal Americans and Europeans have of Israel. Critics of Israel like
Jasbir Puar, an associate professor of Women's and Gender Studies at
Rutgers University, cite the Israeli Government's comparison of gay rights in Israel and in the
occupied Palestinian territories as an example of pinkwashing. Citing WorldPride, which Jerusalem hosted in 2006, she wrote: "Within global gay and lesbian organising circuits, to be gay-friendly is to be modern, cosmopolitan, developed, first-world, global north, and, most significantly, democratic."
Joseph Massad, associate professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history at
Columbia University, has written that the Israeli Government "insist[s] on advertising and exaggerating its recent record on LGBT rights ... to fend off international condemnation of its violations of the rights of the Palestinian people."
Ido Aharoni, former head of the
Brand Israel project, responded to such criticism saying: "We are not trying to hide the conflict, but broaden the conversation. We want to create a sense of relevance with other communities."
Film and television The first Israeli LGBTQ-themed film came from openly gay director
Amos Guttman and was called ''
Nagu'a (English title Drifting
). Guttman was its co-writer. The film follows a young Israeli gay man, living and working with his grandparents, who has dreams of making a film and finding true love. Guttman, who died of AIDS in 1993, would write and direct another Israeli gay-themed film titled Amazing Grace'' (1992). Both films are considered to be autobiographies of the director. In total, Guttman directed four films and three short films. His portrayal of Israeli gay men was dark, and his films are considered to be targeted at the LGBTQ community in Israel, and not to the general public. Another notable Israeli director to tackle LGBTQ themes in films is
Eytan Fox. His first film,
Time Off (1990), was the second film made in Israel to focus on gay people. He has directed and written several other successful LGBTQ-themed films, including ''
Ba'al Ba'al Lev (1997), Yossi & Jagger (2002), Walk on Water (2004), The Bubble (2006), Yossi (2012) and Sublet'' (2020). Israeli film and television has also tackled the theme of homosexuality in the context of
Orthodox Judaism. In
Srugim (2008 - 2012), a television drama about
Modern Orthodox characters in Jerusalem, Roi reveals to Reut that he is homosexual.
Eyes Wide Open (2009) depicts a clandestine relationship in
Jerusalem between two
Haredi men played by
Ran Danker and
Zohar Strauss.
Out in the Dark (2012) was unique for depicting a gay relationship in the context of the
Arab–Israeli conflict. It tells the story of a relationship that forms between Roy (
Michael Aloni), an Israeli Jewish lawyer, and Nimer (Nicholas Jacob), a Palestinian psychology student from the
West Bank.
The Cakemaker (2017) was also a prominent addition to the canon of Israeli queer cinema. Today, there is more programming for an LGBTQ audience. In 1993, the first commercial TV network in Israel,
Channel 2, went on the air. It regularly dealt with
LGBTQ social and political topics, and, in particular, helped generate greater visibility and acceptance of transgender celebrities such as
Dana International. The LGBTQ community in Israel was also brought to the media's attention following the winning of the
Eurovision Song Contest in 1998 by Dana International, an Israeli
trans woman. At present, LGBTQ people in Israel can be seen on television in a variety of shows, mostly as hosts (such as
Assi Azar), contestants in
reality shows or characters on
soap operas. ==Palestinian issues==