Current sectionIsrael NewsIsrael Political NewsSeveral Rehavia neighborhood residents joined the police response to a petition filed by anti-gov't groups seeking to lift restrictions imposed earlier this month, when police for the first time cited provisions prohibiting demonstrations in front of elected officials' homes during the Jewish SabbathShare to FacebookShare to XArticle printing is available to subscribers onlyPrint in a simple, ad-free formatSubscribeComments: Zen reading is available to subscribers onlyAd-free and in a comfortable reading formatSubscribeBar Pelegand Josh Breiner12:48 PM • June 21 2026 IDTIsraeli police last week urged residents of a Jerusalem neighborhood near the prime minister's official residence to help efforts to restrict demonstrations against the government, Haaretz has learned.Loading...Click the alert icon to follow topics:Israel protestShabbatBenjamin NetanyahuIsraeli judiciary Israel Supreme CourtIsrael policeCommentsLoading...In the NewsIn the News: Israel-Iran Live UpdatesU.S.-Iran DealElectionsIsrael-LebanonEbola in IsraelCaroline GlickHaQuizHaaretz PodcastPolice Urge Netanyahu's Neighbors to Join Appeal Against Anti-gov't ProtestsYaacov Agam, Israeli Artist Who Pioneered Kinetic Art Worldwide, Dies at 98IDF Names Fourth Soldier Killed on Friday in Southern LebanonWe Were AGs and Top Court Justices. This Bill Will Lead Israel Toward AutocracyDonald Trump Has Fulfilled My Dream: For Israel to Pay for Its ActionsRemembering and rebuilding two years laterICYMIHumiliated by Trump on the Iran Front, Netanyahu May Set the Middle East AblazeIsrael Is Conducting a Systematic Campaign of Ethnic Cleansing in the West Bank'Once-in-a-lifetime Discovery': 1,700-year-old Roman Busts Found in IsraelNetanyahu's Mouthpieces Turn on Trump, Revealing a Deeper Israeli IngratitudeTrump and Netanyahu Hurtling Toward a Rupture That Could Shock U.S.-Israel TiesIsrael Is Bleeding Support in U.S. and Pouring Tens of Millions to Change That