Everyone knows that Israel's Knesset is a particularly contentious place, where views are shouted out with great emotion. I don't believe they have the floor brawls that take place elsewhere, but it's not a place where rhetoric is held back.
But when foreign dignitaries visit, that's a different matter entirely.
I noted the other day Stephen Harper's wonderful speech before the Knesset, the first ever by a Canadian Prime Minister,
Canadian PM Harper: Academic boycott part of “mutation of the old disease of anti-Semitism”.
Unfortunately, two Arab members of the Knesset heckled him and walked out when he addressed the academic Boycott, Divest and Sanction movement and the malicious propaganda line -- repeated endlessly on campuses and among some academics -- that Israel is an Apartheid state.
I think it's relevant that the heckling and walkout erupted at that moment of the speech. It shows how important the BDS movement, born as a tactic at the openly anti-Semitic 2001 Durban NGO conference, is to the anti-Israel movement internationally and at home.
The Blaze has details:
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper was heckled by an Arab Israeli member of parliament during a speech in which he slammed those who call Israel an “apartheid” state. Knesset member Ahmed Tibi later stomped out of the room as Harper was speaking....
He criticized those who support a boycott of Israel, equating it with historical anti-Semitism.
On some campuses, intellectualized arguments against Israeli policies thinly mask the underlying realities, such as the shunning of Israeli academics and the harassment of Jewish students. Most disgracefully of all, some openly call Israel an apartheid state,” Harper said during his Monday evening address.