Near Gaza City, a voice on a loudspeaker urged the crowd forward: “Get closer! Get closer!”
The charge was often led by women dressed in black, waving Palestinian flags and urging others to follow.
“We don’t want just one or two people to get closer,” said an elderly woman clutching a shoulder bag and a flag. “We want a big group.”
The atmosphere grew more charged after midday prayers, when more than 1,000 men gathered under a large blue awning. Officials from Hamas and other militant factions addressed the worshipers, urging them into the fray and claiming — falsely, to all appearances — that the fence had been breached and that Palestinians were flooding into Israel.
Several speakers reserved their harshest words for the United States and its decision to move the embassy to Jerusalem. “America is the greatest Satan,” said a cleric, holding his index finger in the air as hundreds of people did the same. “Now we are heading to Jerusalem with millions of martyrs. We may die but Palestine will live.” The crowd repeated the chant.
As the cleric spoke, more smoke rose in the sky behind him, and worshipers peeled away and began to walk toward the fence.
At 5:30 p.m., shortly after an Israeli airstrike in Gaza, organizers who had been urging people toward the fence all day suddenly began shooing them away, and the day’s action quickly subsided.
Sderot
Khan Younis
protests
ISRAEL
Protest sites
1 MILE
Abasan al-Kabira
Beit
Hanoun
EASTERN BORDER
Bani
Suheila
Rafah
Beit
Lahiya
Khan
Younis
GAZA
Tel
Aviv
Al Qarara
WEST
BANK
Tal as
Sultan
Gaza
City
Deir
al Balah
Gaza
Israel
GAZA IS ABOUT 25 MILES LONG
NORTH
Sderot
Khan Younis
protest
ISRAEL
Protest sites
Abasan al-Kabira
1 MILE
Beit
Hanoun
EASTERN BORDER
Bani
Suheila
Rafah
Beit
Lahiya
Al Qarara
Khan
Younis
Tel
Aviv
GAZA
Gaza
City
WEST
BANK
Tal as
Sultan
Deir
al Balah
Gaza
Israel
GAZA IS ABOUT 25 MILES LONG
NORTH
Sderot
Beit
Hanoun
NORTH
Beit
Lahiya
Gaza
City
Sites where
Palestinians have
protested for
seven weeks
GAZA
ISRAEL
Deir
al Balah
Al Qarara
Bani
Suheila
Abssan
Al-Kabira
Khan
Younis
Tal as
Sultan
Rafah
1 mile
By The New York Times
Hamas officials promised that the protests would continue. Khalil al-Hayya, deputy chief of Hamas in Gaza, said at a news conference that the purpose of Monday’s demonstrations was to “powerfully confront the embassy deal” and to “draw the map of return in blood.”
“The American administration bears responsibility for all consequences following the implementation of this unjust decision,” Mr. Hayyah said. “This crime will not pass.”
Hamas officials also hinted at the possibility of a military strike at Israel by the group’s military wing, the Qassam brigades.
Behind the embassy shift, a close alliance.
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