CAIR LOSES A ROUND IN OKLAHOMA
Brand new state, gonna treat you great!
Gonna give you barley, carrots and pertaters,
Pasture fer the cattle,
Spinach and termayters!
Flowers on the prarie where the June bugs zoom,
Plen’y of air and plen’y of room,
Plen’y of room to swing a rope!
Plen’y of heart and plen’y of hope.” Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein 11
And thus began the end of a   quiet afternoon.    CAIR – The Council on American-Islamic Relations – was sponsoring a rally from 4:30 p.m to 6:00 p.m to “to decry Israel’s attack on humanitarian aid ship share.”
Probably the last thing in the world I wanted to do on this very hot June   afternoon was to stand on a street corner and protest the protestors. I   thought about it for a moment. Could I, in all honesty and integrity, sit   back in my comfortable, air conditioned home and do nothing? And what about my ten-year-old granddaughter who was with me until her parents got off work. Should I take her to a rally like this that could conceivably turn   dangerous?    I thought about it for a moment and knew I had to act. If not me, then who?   If not now, then when?
I quickly forwarded the article on to my email list   asking anyone and everyone that could to join me at 4:00 p.m at the   intersection. I called people whom I knew wouldn’t receive the e-mail prior   to getting home and told them of our intentions and asked them to call as   many people as they could and to please join us.
My sister was across town with her daughter who is due to have a baby any   day now. I called her and said, “Is the baby coming?” “No,” she responded.   “Then I have something more important for you to do.” I gave her   instructions and was happy when she said, “OK.” I wasn’t sure I would leave my daughter in that situation, but she is as committed to Israel as I am and she knew I wouldn’t be calling if it wasn’t significant.
I grabbed a box of Israeli window flags from my garage and threw them in the car along with a generous supply of ice water.  I donned white pants and my blue tee that showed crossed Israeli and America flags and said, “United We Stand…Divided We Fall” and backed out of the driveway. My heart and head were racing, and I wondered if I was walking into trouble. My granddaughter and I prayed as we drove towards the site of the rally where my son would pick her up. Rushing toward the freeway, I explained words to her like ‘flotilla’, ‘humanitarian’ and once again, “God’s love for the land and people of Israel.”
In the beginning, my friend Renee and I were the only ones at the intersection where the rally was supposed to be held. We took our stand across the street from the anti-Israel bunch and began waving Israeli flags at passers by.
At her suggestion, I called the local talk radio show, a conservative station, and told host Lee Matthews what we were doing. He put it on the air and soon, cars were passing by and honking in agreement with the two of us. I had told Lee that I had Israeli flags I would give out to anyone who pulled over and asked for one.
Margy (2nd from right in white pants) and her friends in Oklahoma City
A man in a white pickup truck was stopped at the traffic light going in the   opposite direction. He sat watching us as he waited for the light and I   hollered, “Would you like a flag?” He nodded yes and I ran one across two   traffic lanes to him. He took the flag and said, “I’m going to park and come   help you.” His name was David.
Every fifteen minutes, the radio station called for a report on what was   happening. I was delighted to tell them people were listening and responding   to us. He wanted to know how many there were at the CAIR site and I told him I could see seven, which later turned to eleven. As we talked on the radio, I continued to wave flags and smile at people.
Others came and joined us. One couple, Mike and Betty, said they were   sitting on their porch in El Reno – a town approximately thirty miles away,   when they heard on the radio about the anti-anti-Israel rally. Mike looked   at his wife and said, “We better get down there.”    Another couple heard about it on the radio as they were driving home from   work and they detoured to our location to join us.
A beautifully dressed young woman who lives in Northwest Oklahoma City heard about it on the radio, pulled into the Walgreen’s parking lot across the   street and waited for the very long light to change so she could literally   run across the street to join us. She grabbed a flag and began standing   watch with us.    And they continued to come. They were individuals. They were couples. Some were on their way home from work. Some were just driving by. Others heard about it on the radio and were moved to action.
They were Christians and  they knew this was late on a Friday afternoon when Jews were preparing for Shabbat and most likely wouldn’t be able to come join in the rally, so they   responded to the invitation and stood on the hot corner, waving flags and   shouting “support Israel.”
My spirits were lifted. I was thrilled to see the response and to hear the conversations of the people who joined us. They cheerfully pulled flags out of the bag and started waving them and giving them out and when we ran out, I ran back to the car and brought all I had.
We had a sign that said, “Honk for Israel” and people put the flags on their   car windows and drove around the block two, three and four times honking for Israel. When the anti-Israel CAIR bunch mimicked our sign with one that   said, “honk for Islam,” people on our side of the street honked even louder   and longer.
Our group had grown considerably. There were suddenly twelve and then twenty and more came as some left. One woman, riding on a large motorbike flying an American flag pulled into the intersection, parked the bike and said, “I came to join you.” I laughed and said, “Welcome, Biker Babe” and we continued to wave flags, hold up signs supporting Israel. I couldn’t help but give praise to God that the response from those joining us and those passing by with honking horns, were so supportive.
The CAIR group watched us and even sent someone over, dressed in   intimidating black, with an camera to take our pictures from all angles. I   made sure he got excellent pictures of us – what his rationale was didn’t   matter. What mattered was that they, the CAIR people, saw that not everyone bought their story of Israel’s unfairness to so-called humanitarian ships.
The hour and a half passed quickly and our spirits continued in spite of the   hot sun. We were tired and thirsty but we shouted with the greatest of joy  when one of Oklahoma City’s beautiful, large fire engines drove by and   tapped out a tune of support to us on their air horn. We heard it loud and   clear and I’m sure the CAIR people did as well, but there was no doubt whom the firefighters were supporting.
The rally was supposed to be over at 6:00 p.m. The hour came and went and the CAIR people stayed on. We were determined that we would win this   demonstration by sheer will power, if nothing else, and we continued to  stand on the corner, waving flags, shouting for Israel and laughing.
Finally, at 6:30, the CAIR crowd had diminished to one person against our   dozen or so remaining. We waited and watched as they packed up their last   person, their signs and flags into a vehicle and drove off. Only then, did   we call an end to our rally. One person in our group was determined to stay   on the corner until he had given out his last flag and we left him there   waving his flag and showing determination to all, reaffirming his – and our   – solidarity with Israel.”
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Posted By Judy Lash Balint to Jerusalem Diaries:In Tense Times at 6/07/2010 12:11:00 PM
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