Israeli LGBTQ soldiers hope the war in Gaza will bolster their fight for equal rights at home
One month after his fiancée was killed in the Israeli militarys Oct. 7 battle against Hamas terrorists in Kibbutz Beeri, Omer Ohana received a small bit of solace: His government passed a bill granting recognition to same-sex partners of fallen soldiers.
My love! From this day forward I am an IDF widower, he wrote from the Knesset gallery, where he witnessed the passage of the bill, for which he had campaigned.
It is a description I would give anything in the world to give up, a title that in my life I never thought I would receive six days before we were supposed to get married, when you left to save lives and rescue families held captive in Beeri, wrote Ohana, to his fiance, Sagi Golan. You fell in battle against cruel terrorists and today, in your honor, we received equality in death. Now we will continue to demand equality also in life.
That sentiment has become a rallying cry among Israels LGBTQ soldiers, many of whom feel the war has placed their status in stark relief: They have been called to risk their lives on the front lines in Gaza but are denied rights afforded to heterosexual couples at home including the right to wed in Israel. Opposition to same-sex marriage comes in large part from religious political parties, many of whose haredi Orthodox constituents do not serve in the military.
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This is similar to what happened almost 80 years ago among African-American and some Latino groups who fought in WWII, only to return home as second-class citizens, if that. I am not sure if there was also a movement among Native populations as a result of their participation in WWII and returning to a land that demanded their service, but refused to treat them as equals.