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Israeli Democracy: Arabs Need Not Apply

Ellen Davidson | 09.12.2007 21:31 | Anti-racism | World

Ellen Davidson is a longtime Jewish- American peace activist from New York who traveled to Palestine on a delegation with the Middle East Children’s Alliance, mecaforpeace.org.

Israeli Democracy: Arabs Need Not Apply
Ellen Davidson

December 9, 2007

NAZARETH— Israel is frequently cited as "the only democracy in the Middle East." The 1.2 million Palestinians living inside Israel’s borders, would beg to differ.

Beginning with the founding of Israel as a Jewish state in 1948, Palestinians have been treated as second-class citizens and enemies from within. Each of the "Basic Laws," the foundation of the Israeli legal system, begins with a statement that Israel is a Jewish state. For example, the purpose of the Basic Law: Human Dignity and Freedom is "to establish the values of the State of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state."

From 1948 until 1966, Palestinians inside Israel were subject to military law, while Jews lived under civilian law. During that time, 66 percent of Arab-owned land was confiscated. In 1947, Jews owned 6.7 percent while Palestinians held the rest. Today, Israeli Palestinians, 20 percent of the population, own 2.5 percent of the land.

Discrimination inside Israel falls broadly into four categories, according to Mohammad Zeidan, general director of the Nazareth- based Arab Association for Human Rights (AHR): laws that give different privileges and rights to Jews and non-Jews; indirect discrimination not specifically linked to religion; institutional discrimination, such as allocation of municipal funds; and racism in public life, including cultural discrimination.

The legal discrimination can be seen explicitly in laws that offer automatic Israeli citizenship to Jews from anywhere in the world, while non-Jews who are married to Israeli citizens face a difficult process for acquiring citizenship.

In order to be elected to the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, political parties must formally recognize Israel as a Jewish state, so even advocating complete equality for Palestinians inside Israel would disqualify a party from running candidates.

Legal discrimination also plays a role in land allocation. Nearly 20 percent of Israeli land is controlled by the Jewish National Fund, which is legally mandated to use the land only to benefit Jews. Much of this land was confiscated from its Palestinian owners by the military or taken away under the "absentee" laws of 1950, which declared that landowners who were not occupying their land in the years 1948 to 1952 forfeited their rights to it. Having been made refugees during the war of 1948, many Palestinians were robbed of their lands by these laws. In addition, many Palestinian villages had been declared "military zones" by the Israeli army. The owners frequently were living a few miles away, waiting for the military to allow them access to their land, only to have the title stripped from them.

Indirect discrimination is equally insidious: Many social services such as student and housing loans are predicated on having a military service number. Since Palestinians are exempt from military service, few Israeli Arabs have this number. Orthodox Jews are also exempt from military service, but they can go to the military service office and get assigned a number, giving them the same access to the privileges associated with military service. Many help-wanted ads specify that the position is open to candidates "after military service," another way of saying, "Arabs need not apply."

Institutional discrimination crops up in community development plans, where Palestinian neighborhoods are held to existing land allocations, while Jewish neighborhoods grow unchecked. In the Arab city of Nazareth, for example, the population of 13,000 Palestinians in 1947 lived on 3,000 acres. In 2007, with a population of 70,000, the city occupies only 3,100 acres, with strict limitations on any expansion.

On the hilltops surrounding it, the mainly Jewish city of Nazareth Illit (built on confiscated Palestinian land) with a population of 50,000, sprawls across 11,250 acres. When the original Palestinian owners of the land went to court to protest the confiscation of their property for "public" purposes, arguing that they were also the public, the court ruled that absorption of immigration was the main "public purpose" of the time.

In 1965, the Israeli parliament adopted the Planning and Construction Law governing development in the country. Dozens of villages were declared "unrecognized" and the land classified as non-residential agricultural land. Some 100,000 Israeli Palestinians live in these villages, which Zeidan says are more aptly called "dis-recognized," They receive no government services such as electricity, water and sewage, although they pay the same taxes as other citizens, and all structures are considered illegal and subject to demolition.

Municipal funding is also plagued by inequity. In Jerusalem, for example, the population of approximately 700,000 includes 270,000 Palestinians. Social services in mainly Palestinian East Jerusalem receive 12 percent of the city budget. Education in East Jerusalem gets 15 percent of the budget. Per capita income in East Jerusalem is 1,311 shekels per month (or $341), versus 5,968 (or $1,520) in West Jerusalem.

Israel maintains two educational systems, one in Hebrew for Jews and one in Arabic for Palestinians. According to Ittijah, the Union of Arab Community-Based Organizations, 75 percent of Jewish schools have career and vocational guidance services, while only one-quarter of Arab schools do. Government-funded preschools do not operate in Arab towns.

Cultural discrimination flows from the other three forms of discrimination, says the AHR’s Zeidan. Israeli culture is steeped in racism, he says. More than half the population believes that political rights such as voting should be withdrawn from Palestinians living inside Israel. The Ysrael B’tenah Party, which with 12 seats is the fourth largest party in the Knesset, openly speaks of "transfer" of the Palestinian population. "The space that we can act inside Israel is getting smaller and smaller," says Zeidan.

While Israel is legally a bilingual state — Hebrew and Arabic — you are more likely to encounter signage in Russian or English than in Arabic. ATMs, for instance, are mostly in Hebrew, English and sometimes Russian. Many government offices refuse to conduct business in Arabic.

"Israel is a democratic state for Jews and Jews only," says Fida Ibrahim Abu Ata, public relations director of Ittijah. "And that is how it should be stated, as plain and vivid as this."



Peace, Propaganda, and the Promised Land
 http://www.freedocumentaries.org/film.php?id=169

A Field Guide to Hasbara ( Propaganda) from the WUJS
 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/01/284723.html

The Origin of the Palestine-Israel Conflict
Published by
Jews for Justice in the Middle East

As the periodic bloodshed continues in the Middle East, the search for an equitable solution must come to grips with the root cause of the conflict. The conventional wisdom is that, even if both sides are at fault, the Palestinians are irrational "terrorists" who have no point of view worth listening to. Our position, however, is that the Palestinians have a real grievance: their homeland for over a thousand years was taken, without their consent and mostly by force, during creation of the state of Israel. And all subsequent crimes—on both sides—inevitably follow from this original injustice.

This paper outlines the history of Palestine to show how this process occurred and what a moral solution to the region's problems should consist of. If you care about the people of the Middle East, Jewish and Arab, you owe it to yourself to read this account of the other side of the historical record.

 http://www.ifamericansknew.org/history/origin.html

Ellen Davidson

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Meanwile, back in the real world....

10.12.2007 05:13

Israelis Embark on Journey to Mecca
Written by Rachelle Kliger
Published Thursday, December 06, 2007
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An Israeli woman at the Ka'aba in Mecca. (Ahmad Jum'a)
Saudi Arabia is expecting more than two million visitors this month for the annual Hajj, a momentous event in the Muslim calendar.

The four-day pilgrimage brings together Muslim worshippers from all corners of the globe to take part in an event that every able Muslim must carry out at least once in his or her lifetime.

As in previous years, there will be pilgrims from a most unlikely destination: some 4,500 Muslims have departed for Mecca from their homes in Israel, a Jewish country with no diplomatic ties with Saudi Arabia.

The spiritual weight of the Hajj is enough to overcome the political complications involved in a delegation of Israelis traveling to enemy soil.

The process is done through the mediation of Jordan, which signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1994, and with the knowledge of the Israeli and Saudi authorities.

Israeli Muslims wishing to embark on the journey usually contact one of several associations dealing with pilgrims. Non-Muslims cannot take part in the event. The pilgrims register their details and submit passport photos, which are then sent to the Jordanian Ministry of Islamic Trust (Waqf).

Once they cross the border from Israel into Jordan, a local official collects their Israeli passports and they are issued temporary Jordanian passports. The documents are valid for a month or two months, depending on the season.

The Jordanian passports are presented at the border crossing with Saudi Arabia, and the pilgrims then head for Mecca as Jordanian nationals.

The 22-hour bus ride from the Allenby Bridge on the Israeli-Jordanian border to Medina in Saudi Arabia is spread over two days. The pilgrims then spend seven days in Medina, the second holiest place in Islam and the burial place of the Prophet Muhammad, before embarking on an additional five-hour ride to Mecca.

Ahmad Jum’a, a 25-year-old student, has been to the kingdom six times for the ‘Umra, the minor pilgrimage. A member of the Nazareth-based Salam Association for Hajj and ‘Umra, he is also qualified to guide groups from Israel during their pilgrimages to Saudi Arabia.

Jum’a was born in Sullam, an Arab village in northern Israel. He is an Arab Muslim and has Israeli citizenship. In the temporary Jordanian passport he receives for the Hajj, his birthplace is documented as Amman, but he says the Saudis are under no illusion as to where these special pilgrims come from.

“The Saudis know we’re from Israel because they can see it on some of our documents,” Jum’a says.

He testifies that in all his visits to the kingdom he has never encountered problems from Saudi officials on account of his Israeli citizenship.

“They respect their visitors. It’s a religious ritual and they allow every Muslim around the world to come and do it. It’s a religious obligation,” he says.

Jum’a notes the beefed-up security around the holy places in Saudi Arabia during the pilgrimages. Surveillance cameras both inside and outside the mosques are abundant, and there are many security officers, including women, scouring the crowds for abnormal behavior, he says.

“They don’t allow you to take photographs. If they catch someone they nab them quietly and you usually only hear about it two days later. The security is very heavy, even in the toilets.”

The Muslim pilgrims from Israel are not allowed to roam the Saudi kingdom freely.

“They take our Jordanian passports when we get to Medina,” he says. “If I want to go to [the Saudi capital] Riyadh, there are roadblocks all around and they don't let us through. I think they're concerned about espionage.”

Muslims in Israel?

Jum'a is one of more than 1.2 million Arabs living in Israel. The majority of them, about 80 percent, are Muslim. Excluding Arabs in eastern Jerusalem, who have residency status, Israeli Arabs have full Israeli citizenship and are represented in the parliament and in the government.

But not everything is rosy for this large minority. Israeli Arabs frequently protest they are discriminated against by the government in budget allocations, employment, and in the attitude of the security system towards them. Many say they are equal citizens only on paper, not in practice.

Because of their strong historic and family ties with the Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, they are often depicted in the mainstream media as a fifth column and a security threat.

The complicated reality of Arabs and Muslims in Israel is a little-known fact in the Muslim world, Jum’a says.

Their existence is met with curiosity, and sometimes with resentment.

Once he has fulfilled his religious obligations of the pilgrimage, Jum’a spends the rest of his time mingling with the crowds and talking to Muslim pilgrims about life in Israel.

Pilgrims flock to Saudi Arabia from throughout the Middle East and beyond, stretching from Mauritania to Pakistan.

Explaining that he is a Muslim Arab with Israeli citizenship often leaves his audience gobsmacked.

Frequently, when asked where he is from, he responds, “Palestine.”

“So they ask, ‘Where from in Palestine?’ and I say I'm from inside the Green Line. They say, ‘What's that?’ and I say, ‘I'm from Israel.’ Then they ask me: ‘Are there Muslims living inside Israel?’ and I say, ‘Yes.’ Sometimes these encounters go well and at other times they accuse me of being an Israeli collaborator and they don't want to hear about Israel.”

Mixed Reactions

In his many chats with fellow Muslims in Mecca, the questions Jum’a is confronted with sometimes highlight a genuine interest in the lives of Muslims in Israel.

During his most recent trip in September, Jum’a met a Saudi who was keen to hear more about what Israeli Arabs study, their standard of living and their relations with their Jewish neighbors.

“He asked where I work and whether they let me pray during work hours,” Jum’a says.

Another Saudi said he would gladly visit Israel, if there were a peace agreement between the two countries.

Jum’a also encounters anti-Israel views. He holds the Arab media partially to blame for this, for failing to provide an accurate and comprehensive picture of Israeli culture and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

“The Arab media always shows negative things about Israel and as a Muslim Arab living inside Israel I want to show a positive side of the country. I tell them there are good things in Israel and that we live side by side with the Jews. There are problems sometimes but the relations with our Jewish neighbors are generally good.”

On his recent trip to Medina he found a group of four Palestinians from a refugee camp in Lebanon. They told him they agreed with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadi Nejad that Israel should be wiped off the map.

In a rare dialogue captured on his home video camera, Jum’a explains that Arab Muslims like himself have a different status than Arabs living in eastern Jerusalem, who do not have Israeli citizenship.

The Muslims in Israel have freedom and passports, he tells them. They have a good economic situation and good jobs; they get along with their Jewish neighbors and they benefit from Israel’s services.

On a separate occasion he was talking with a Syrian pilgrim who, it transpired, had been a commander in the Syrian army in the 1967 War (Six Day War). Upon hearing that Jum’a was from Israel, the officer attacked him verbally and expressed support for Hizbullah.

Jum’a, a student of Middle Eastern studies, retaliated with a detailed review of Syria’s history, poor economic situation, its lack of freedom and the persecution of dissidents.

The Syrian officer was stunned by Jum’a’s knowledge, and astonished when he learned this was being taught in Israeli universities by Jewish lecturers.

“When I’ve completed the ritual, I talk politics,” Jum’a says. “I feel that I’m an envoy and wherever I go I need to explain the good things and bad things about Israel.”

Jum’a is not alone in this conviction.

Sheikh ‘Ali Bakr, 47, an imam from northern Israel who works for the Israeli Interior Ministry, has been to Saudi Arabia 24 times on pilgrimages. Bakr does not feel a contradiction in holding Israeli citizenship and attending the Hajj.

“On the contrary, I feel we’re a bridge between Israel and the Arab countries. We can bring people closer together,” he says. “Some think that Israeli Arabs are neglected and underprivileged, so we tell them that’s not the case, that we live here as equal citizens and that we fit well into the Jewish social fabric.”

Reality Check
- Homepage: http://www.themedialine.org/news/news_detail.asp?NewsID=19820


How much it must have changed in three days.

10.12.2007 07:08

According to the annual report of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI), published on 8 December 2007, racism against Palestinian citizens of Israel has dramatically increased in the past year, including a 26 percent rise in anti-Arab incidents.

The ACRI report maintains that over two-thirds Israeli teenagers believe Arabs to be less intelligent, uncultured and violent. Over a third of Israeli teens fear Arabs all together.

The annual report cites ACRI's racism poll, taken in March of 2007, in which 50 percent of Israelis taking part stated they would not live in the same building as Arabs, will not befriend, or let their children befriend Arabs and would not let Arabs into their homes.

Fifty percent of those polled also stated they believed Israel should encourage its Arab citizens to emigrate.

The report includes a section dealing with the recently approved Jewish National Fund bill, which allows Jewish National Fund land—which make up 13 percent of all State owned land—to be allocated to Jews only.

According to the report, Palestinian citizens of Israel are subject to constant racial profiling, which defines them as a security threat, resulting in demeaning and degrading treatment at airports and public venues.

The ACRI says that bills introduced in the Knesset contribute to delegitimize the country's Palestinian citizens, such as ones that would link the right to vote and receive state allowances to military or national service.

They also include bills that require ministers and MKs to swear allegiance to a Jewish state and those that set aside 13 percent of all state lands owned by the Jewish National Fund for Jews only.

"Arab citizens are frequently subject to ridicule at the airports," the report states.

The report goes on to state that Palestinian citizens of Israel "are subject to 'racial profiling' that classifies them as a security threat. The government also threatens the freedom of expression of Arab journalists by brandishing the whip of economic boycott and ending the publication of government announcements in newspapers that criticize its policy."

 http://www.alternativenews.org/news/english/acri-annual-report-racism-against-palestinian-citizens-of-israel-up-significantly-20071209.html

Reality Check Checker


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