Monday, October 7, 2024

A Pro-Palestinian Protest Disrupts The Launch Of An American Mural

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It's the kind of cultural exchange any diplomat would savor: A prominent American street artist paints a mural, dedicated to the cause of climate activism, on an apartment building in one of London's hippest neighborhoods.

But when Ms. Hartley was on her way to the dedication ceremony for this latest project on Monday morning, she got word that a small band of pro-Palestinian demonstrators had gathered in the Shoreditch neighborhood, beneath the red-and-blue mural, which rises four floors above the street.

They began chanting anti-American slogans and unfurling banners calling for justice for the Palestinians in Gaza — a message that seemed even more fraught than usual, given the timing on the first anniversary of the Hamas attack on Israel.

It was another example of how the Israel-Gaza conflict has reverberated around the world, fueling protests, large and small, on college campuses, city squares, and in this case, in a normally tranquil neighborhood.

Ms. Hartley's security team diverted her car, while Mr. Fairey, who was on hand to greet her, hurriedly relocated with embassy staff members to a nearby café. He seemed bemused by the disruption, noting that much of his work has a protest element, even if his patron on this project was a government official.

Mr. Fairey defended taking the commission from Ms. Hartley, whom the protesters branded an agent of the "genocidal" Biden administration. "To be asked to paint a mural on a social justice theme by a member of the U.S. government is a very exciting thing," he said.

The protesters saw it differently. "Shepard Fairey, Ambassador, we're disrupting your business and we'll keep disrupting your business until we get justice for the Palestinians," one shouted through a megaphone,

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