Palestinian supporters organized multiple protests across the Bay Area on Friday, calling for an end to Israel’s invasion of Gaza and for the current pause in fighting across the region to become permanent.
The protests — including one at Westfield Valley Fair Mall in the South Bay and another at San Francisco’s City Hall — came as a delicate, four-day truce took hold in Gaza. The cease-fire marked the first pause in fighting across the war-torn area in nearly seven weeks — helping to ensure the release of 24 hostages held by Hamas in an internationally-brokered deal that also included the release of numerous prisoners held by Israel.
The war began when Hamas fighters stormed Israel on Oct. 7 and killed at least 1,200 people while taking about 240 others hostage. In response, Israel has bombarded and invaded Gaza in a campaign that has left more than 13,000 Palestinians dead, including thousands of children.
In San Francisco, hundreds of Palestinian supporters gathered outside City Hall and demanded the cease-fire be made permanent. And in the South Bay, waves of protesters marched through Westfield Valley Fair Mall in a demonstration that was intended to coincide with Black Friday, when businesses typically offer special deals and shoppers are normally out in force.
The South Bay protest began about 2 p.m. and included a march through Santana Row before protesters made their way to the mall, said Omar Khoury, 25, a protest organizer with Silicon Valley for Palestine. Videos posted to social media showed a throng of demonstrators marching through the mall while holding signs and waving the Palestinian flag.
“Our central demand is that this pause is not enough,” Khoury said. “We wanted to show the world that we cannot have business as usual as this genocide continues in Palestine.”
A statement from the San Jose Police Department said that officers monitored the protest and that “no crimes were reported.” The department added that protesters appeared to disperse about 3:30 p.m.
Attempts by this news organization to reach operators of the Westfield Valley Fair Mall were not successful Friday.