It's been almost a month now that the residents of Holon - Israel's ninth largest city, just south of Tel Aviv - have had their streets adorned with signs and posters that many say “malign the public and the IDF.” The exhibit, scheduled to last until the end of March, is co-sponsored by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel - and includes posters and displays depicting the IDF as a cruel army that threatens children and bombs kindergartens. The controversy in Holon over the exhibit, which encompasses many city streets, has intensified over the weeks, as the municipality refuses to remove it. On Monday, it will reach the Knesset. At the request of Likud MK Danny Danon, the Education Committee, headed by MK Zevulun Orlev (Jewish Home), will hold a session on the matter. Representatives of the Ministries of Education, Defense, and Culture have been invited, as have those from the Holon Municipality - which refuses to cancel the exhibit - teachers unions, student councils, and more. Some signs in the exhibit depict the religious public as the only sector to benefit from the counter-terrorism partition fence, and others portray the Israeli public as caring only about protecting themselves from rockets and not about the Arabs in Gaza. In a sharp letter to Interior Minister Eli Yishai, who has jurisdiction over city governments, Im Tirtzu Association head Ronen Shoval wrote, "There is no need to point out that the entire objective of this exhibit is to continue the demonization of the IDF and its soldiers, depicting them as cruel and unethical, in order to prepare the ground for elements in and outside of Israel to persecute them and put them on trial. All this is to make it harder for the State of Israel to protect and defend itself and exist as a Jewish state."