Anti-Arab Racism and Incitement in Israel
March, 26 2008
Background and Context
When
One
measure of the cumulative impact of these discriminatory
policies is socioeconomic: while just 16 percent of Jewish
citizens in
In
October 2000, Israeli police used live ammunition against
unarmed civilians demonstrating their solidarity with
Palestinians in the
While
the Or Commission recommended a number of measures to
redress the sharp disparities between Jews and Arabs in the
country, families of the victims regarded the report as a
whitewash. The Commission failed to examine the forensic
evidence in each of the killings, and none of the killers,
nor any responsible official, were ever brought to justice.5
By 2007, according to Elie Rekhess of the Moshe Dayan Center
at Tel Aviv University, there remained "yawning" gaps
between Jews and Arabs in Israel and "the bottom line" is
"that the conclusions and recommendations of the 2003 Or
Commission remain conspicuously unimplemented."6
Amidst
the increasingly precarious situation of Palestinian
citizens of Israel, prominent and broadly representative
leaders of that community published in 2007 a series of
documents setting out visions for Israel as a state of all
its citizens with equality for all.7 The response of the
Israeli body politic was overwhelmingly to view these
initiatives as an unwelcome threat to the "Jewish character"
of the state. Israel's Shin Bet secret police, responsible
among other things for many "targeted killings" in the
Occupied Territories, went so far as to warn that it would
"disrupt the activities of any groups that seek to change
the Jewish or democratic character of Israel, even if they
use democratic means."8
Unlearned Lessons: The Jabal al-Mukkabir "Pogrom"
On March
10, a week after a Palestinian opened fire in the Mercaz
HaRav yeshiva in Jerusalem killing eight students,
apparently in revenge for Israel's killing of dozens of
civilians in Gaza, a mob of hundreds of Israeli Jews
converged on the Jabal al-Mukkabir neighborhood in Occupied
East Jerusalem where the gunman's family lived. In what
Haaretz termed an "organized, synchronized pogrom," the mob
threw stones at Palestinian homes smashing windows and
destroying water tanks, damaged cars and chanted "Death to
the Arabs" while police did little to stop them.9 Haaretz
observed that such an attack "could never take place in a
Jewish neighborhood," and noted that while "Israel and the
Jewish world raise a huge cry over every suspicion of an
attack on Jews because of their ethnicity, it is intolerable
that residents of the capital [sic] are attacked solely
because of their nationality."10
Although
the mob action had been planned and advertised days in
advance, the Israeli police had done nothing to prepare for
it. "The district police didn't need to be surprised," said
the former
This
event indicates that
Racist
Statements and Incitement by Religious and Political Leaders
One of
the most blatant examples of public incitement in the days
before the attack on Jabal al-Mukkabir was a circular widely
distributed and posted around
Among
the signatories was Rabbi Ya'acov Yosef, son of Rabbi Ovadia
Yosef, the former Sephardic chief rabbi of
Other
statements have been aimed at delegitimizing, intimidating
and threatening with expulsion Palestinian citizens of
Israeli
extremists appear to be getting the message. Representatives
of three Arab parties have reported that their Knesset
members have been receiving death threats in the mail daily.
A spokesman for one Knesset member said, "We have always
received threats but they have recently escalated to the
point where we are growing truly concerned."16
Several
rabbis have used the excuse of "security" in the wake of the
Mercaz HaRav shooting to issue racist halakhic (religious)
rulings against Arabs. Rabbi Dov Lior, chairman of the
rabbinical council for settlers in "Judea and
Rabbi
Chaim Kanievsky, considered a world-wide Orthodox authority
on Jewish law, held "that it is completely forbidden to hire
Arabs, especially in yeshivas; there is a concern for
endangering lives." Indicating that security might not be
the only motivation for this ruling, Kanievsky added that
Jews should refrain from hiring any non-Jews, "unless there
exists a huge disparity between the costs of the labor," in
which case non-Jews could be hired.18
While
these are recent examples, Mossawa, an Arab civil rights
advocacy group in
Silence
is Consent
Leaders
in the Palestinian community in Israel worry that the
escalating incitement will provoke further violence against
them. A spokesman for Muhammad Barakeh, an Arab member of
parliament, said that the recent upsurge in death threats
had been reported to Knesset security, "But we have seen
nothing happen. I do not feel they are taking this threat
very seriously."20 Another Arab Knesset member urged
Israel's two chief rabbis to condemn the rabbinical calls
for revenge, fearing that these statements might incite the
assassination of community leaders.21 There are no reports
that the chief rabbis responded to this plea. Indeed, while
a handful of Israeli Jewish voices have been raised in
protest, it was most often to decry the deafening silence.
A
spokesman for the Religious Action Center for Reform Judaism
condemned an "ever growing phenomenon of racist incitement
that distorts Judaism and is also illegal." The group called
on Israel's attorney general to "shake off his apathy" and
begin to enforce anti-incitement laws.22 Haaretz complained
that "the continued inactivity in the face of acts of
incitement and violence by the extreme right is shared by
all the law-enforcement authorities—the police, Shin Bet,
State Prosecutor's Office and the courts."23 A Haaretz
reporter noted "the dizzying increase in incitement, curses
and insults leveled" at Arab Knesset members, "a spike that
has gone almost without protest or the involvement of the
Knesset Ethics Committee."24 Another commentator in the same
newspaper observed that "as long as no one demonstrates
whenever a Knesset member curses Arabs; and as long as the
number of people who rent apartments to or hire Arabs can be
counted on one hand, Israeli society cannot be a bsolved of
the sin of racism."25
A
Society in Crisis
"Israeli
society is reaching new heights of racism," said Sami
Michael, one of the country's most celebrated equality
advocates and president of the Association for Civil Rights
in Israel (ACRI).26 A growing body of research indicates
that racist sentiments are not the preserve of the
right-wing fringe but increasingly prevalent across Israeli
Jewish society.
One
particularly disturbing indicator is that the chant "Death
to the Arabs" is voiced not just by mobs of right-wingers
angered by this or that Palestinian attack. Rather, "in the
late 1990s and onwards," writes Amir Ben-Porat, a professor
in the Department of Behavioral Sciences at Ben Gurion
University, "‘Death to the Arabs' became a common chant in
almost every football [soccer] stadium in Israel." Ben-Porat,
who authored a study on the use of the chant, says that
because of the importance of soccer in Israeli society and
its high profile in the media, "This chant is heard far
beyond the stadium."27
In its
2007 Israeli Democracy Index, the Israel Democracy Institute
found that 87 percent of all Israeli citizens rated
Jewish-Arab relations in the country as being "poor" or
"very poor."28
In
addition:
• 78
percent of Israeli Jews opposed having Arab parties or
ministers join Israel's government.29
• Just
56 percent of Israeli Jews support full equality for
Palestinian citizens of Israel and an identical number
agreed that "Arabs cannot attain the Jews' level of cultural
development."30
• 75
percent of Israeli Jews agreed with the statement that
"Arabs are inclined to violent behavior" (as compared with
54 percent of Palestinian citizens of Israel who had an
equivalent view of Israeli Jews).31
• 43
percent of Israeli Jews agreed that "Arabs are not
intelligent" and 55 percent agreed that "the government
should encourage Arab emigration from the country."32
A recent
Haifa University survey found that half of Israeli Jews
object to Arabs living in their neighborhoods (56 percent of
Arabs supported residential integration with Jews).33
Similarly, ACRI reported that 75 percent of Israeli Jews
surveyed said they would not agree to live in the same
building as Arabs. The same survey found that more than half
of Israeli Jews felt that Arabs and Jews should have
separate recreational facilities.34
There
are two consistent trends among all these surveys: both
Palestinian citizens of Israel and Israeli Jews hold some
prejudices towards each other, but on almost every measure,
Israeli Jewish views of Arabs are more negative and extreme
than Arab views of Jews; second, the negative trends have
risen markedly in recent years as the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict has intensified. Between 2005 and 2006, there was a
26 percent rise in racist incidents targeting Arabs, and the
number of Israeli Jews reporting they felt "hatred" towards
Arabs doubled to 30 percent.35
While
the conflict is undoubtedly the overarching context for
these sentiments, an important contributing factor may be
the consistently dehumanizing and denigrating stereotypes of
Arabs that have for decades been presented to Israeli Jewish
schoolchildren in their textbooks and media.36
Discrimination against United States Citizens
An
outgrowth of the institutional and societal racism against
Arabs in Israel is mistreatment that some United States
citizens have received at the hands of Israeli authorities.
The
State Department recently warned travelers that "American
citizens whom Israeli authorities judge (based on their name
or other indicators) may be of Palestinian origin are likely
to face additional, and often time consuming questioning by
immigration and border authorities."37 The warning adds that
the "United States Government seeks equal treatment for all
American citizens regardless of national origin or
ethnicity," or as State Department spokesperson Sean
McCormack put it, "You have a blue American passport, you
should be treated like an American citizen."38
Yet,
while Arab American civil rights advocates have reported
dozens of such cases of discrimination to the U.S.
government,39 American citizens who are considered Jewish by
Israel are accorded special treatment, including free
Israeli-government sponsored "Birthright Israel" trips and
enticements to emigrate to the country. This is a
long-standing problem; in 1987, the State Department lodged
an official protest over the mistreatment of African
Americans and Palestinian Americans traveling to Israel.40
Conclusions and Implications
Anti-Arab racism and incitement are persistent and growing
problems in Israel and symptoms of hyper nationalism that
seeks to consolidate and justify the state's "Jewish
character." For decades, the mistreatment of Palestinians in
Israel has been virtually ignored by Palestinian national
leaders, as well as by international policymakers and
organizations under the doctrine of non-interference in the
internal affairs of sovereign states.
Yet, the
precarious position of Palestinian citizens of Israel is
closely linked to the fate of Palestinians under military
occupation in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and refugees
outside the country. It stems from the same set of
historical events 60 years ago. All three categories of
Palestinians are targets of discriminatory or abusive
Israeli policies intended to preserve Israel as a "Jewish
state." In the context of a "solution" to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, some Israeli politicians
increasingly speak of population or territorial "exchanges"
that would strip Palestinian citizens of Israel of their
citizenship and otherwise violate their fundamental human
rights. Palestinian citizens of Israel have raised the alarm
about this growing existential threat, but they have
received little international solidarity.
Israel's
official institutions have failed for decades to demonstrate
any willingness or capacity to treat Palestinian citizens as
equal to Israeli Jews either in law or in practice. Israeli
police act, in effect, as a uniformed sectarian militia
protecting Jewish privilege rather than as an impartial
police service for a modern, democratic state.
Although
most international actors are not yet ready to do so, it is
inevitable that the situation inside Israel will eventually
have to be internationalized. A good example of the
successful internationalization of an "internal" situation
is the role external actors played in overseeing the
transformation of the Royal Ulster Constabulary from a
uniformed sectarian militia into the present-day Police
Service of Northern Ireland and otherwise supporting the
Northern Ireland peace process. There must also be external
pressure on Israel to curb and punish racist incitement and
to launch broad public initiatives, particularly in schools,
to combat hateful stereotypes of Arabs.
As
Israeli politicians and parties increasingly propose
"solutions" that treat all Palestinians, whether citizens or
not, as equally inferior, Palestinians in the diaspora, the
Occupied Territories and inside Israel must urgently engage
with each other to formulate common strategies to protect
and advance their human and political rights.
Ali
Abunimah is a fellow at the Palestine Center in Washington,
DC. He is an expert on Palestine, the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict and is the author of One Country: A Bold Proposal
to End the Israeli-Palestinian Impasse. Abunimah also
co-founded The Electronic Intifada, an online publication
about Palestine and the Palestine-Israeli conflict,
Electronic Iraq and Electronic Lebanon.
The
views expressed in this information brief are those of the
author and do not necessarily reflect those of The Jerusalem
Fund.
1See
Ilan Pappé, The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine, Oneworld
Publications, 2004; Benny Morris, The Birth of the
Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited, Second Edition,
Cambridge University Press, 2004.
2For an
excellent overview of legal discrimination against
Palestinian citizens of Israel see Jonathan Cook, Blood and
Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish and Democratic State,
Pluto Press, 2006.
3Asher
Arian, Nir Atmor, Yael Hadar, The 2007 Israeli Democracy
Index, The Israel Democracy Institute, June 2007, p. 63
(http://www.idi.org.il/english/article.asp?id=31052007141057).
4James
Bennet, "Police used excessive force on Israeli Arabs, panel
says," The New York Times, 2 September 2003.
5See
Jonathan Cook, "Still no justice for October 2000 killings,"
The Electronic Intifada, 26 February 2008
(http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article9329.shtml).
6Elie
Rekhess, "Israel and its Arab Citizens - Taking Stock," 16
October 2007, Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and
African Studies at Tel Aviv University
(http://tau.ac.il/dayancenter/Israel%20and%20its%20Arab%20Citizens.pdf).
7The
four documents are: The Future Vision of the Palestinian
Arabs in Israel published by The National Committee for the
Heads of the Arab Local Authorities in Israel
(http://www.adalah.org/newsletter/eng/dec06/tasawor-mostaqbali.pdf);
The Democratic Constitution published by Adalah The Legal
Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel
(http://www.adalah.org/eng/constitution.php); An Equal
Constitution for All? On a Constitution and Collective
Rights for Arab Citizens in Israel published by Mossawa
Center - The Advocacy Center for Arab Citizens in Israel
(http://www.mossawacenter.org/files/files/File/An%20Equal%20Constitution%20For%20All.pdf);
and The Haifa Declaration
(http://www.mada-research.org/archive/haifaenglish.pdf).
8Yoav
Stern, "Arab leaders air public relations campaign against
Shin Bet," Haaretz, 6 April 2007
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/846247.html).
9Nadav
Shagrai, "Right-wing demonstrators try to storm home village
of Mercaz Harav gunman," Haaretz, 17 March 2007
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/964814.html).
10"Limp
police in the face of a pogrom," Haaretz editorial, 18 March
2008 (http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/965315.html).
11"Top
police officer slams police response to E. Jerusalem clash,"
Haaretz, 17 March 2008
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/objects/pages/PrintArticleEn.jhtml?itemNo=964769).
12"Rightist rabbis urge ‘measure for measure' revenge on
foes," Haaretz, 12 March 2008
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/963518.html).
13See
"Israel frees 3 Jewish radicals Killers of Arabs served less
than 7 years of life sentence," Associated Press, December
27, 1990.
14Shahar
Ilan, "MK Eitam to Arab MKs: One day we will expel you from
Israel," Haaretz, 5 March 2008
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/961199.html).
15Shahar
Ilan, "Lieberman to Arab MKs: One day we will ‘take care of
you,'" Haaretz, 10 March 2008
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/962767.html).
16Sheera
Claire Frenkel, "Death threats to Arab MKs on the rise," The
Jerusalem Post, 14 March 2008.
17Nadav
Shagrai, "Top Yesha rabbi says Jewish law forbids renting
houses to Arabs," Haaretz, 20 March 2008
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/966208.html).
18Neta
Sela, "Prominent rabbi to yeshiva heads: Don't hire Arabs,"
Yediot Aharonot, 17 March 2008
(http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3519643,00.html).
19Press
release, "Mossawa Center releases racism report detailing
over 169 cases," Mossawa, 19 March 2008
(http://www.mossawacenter.org/default.php?lng=3&dp=2&fl=25&pg=1).
20Sheera
Claire Frenkel, "Death threats to Arab MKs on the rise," The
Jerusalem Post, 14 March 2008.
21Yoav
Stern, "Arab MK to chief rabbis: Slam rabbinic calls to harm
Arabs," Haaretz, 17 March 2008 (http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/965263.html).
22Nadav
Shagrai, "Top Yesha rabbi says Jewish law forbids renting
houses to Arabs," Haaretz, 20 March 2008 (http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/966208.html).
23"Limp
police in the face of a pogrom," Haaretz editorial, 18 March
2008 (http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/965315.html).
24Shahar
Ilan, "The vision of an Arab-free Knesset," Haaretz, 24
March 2008 (http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/967364.html).
25Avirama Golan, "Racist? Us?", Haaretz, 19 March 2008
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/965789.html).
26Yuval
Yoaz and Jack Khoury, "Civil rights group: Israel has
reached new heights of racism," Haaretz, 9 December 2007
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/932384.html).
27Amir
Ben-Porat, "Death to the Arabs: the right-wing fan's fear,"
Soccer & Society, Vol. 9, No. 1, January 2008, pp. 1-13.
28Asher
Arian, Nir Atmor, Yael Hadar, The 2007 Israeli Democracy
Index, The Israel Democracy Institute, June 2007, p.61
(http://www.idi.org.il/english/article.asp?id=31052007141057).
29The
2007 Israeli Democracy Index, p.64.
30The
2007 Israeli Democracy Index, pp. 66-67.
31The
2007 Israeli Democracy Index, p. 67.
32The
2007 Israeli Democracy Index, p. 68.
33Fadi
Eyadat, "Poll: Half of Jews oppose living in neighborhoods
with Arabs," Haaretz, 13 March 2008
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/963698.html).
34Bachar
Awawda and Attorney Alla Heider, "Index of Racism for 2006:
Racism against Israeli Arabs - Citizens of the State of
Israel," The Center Against Racism, April 2007, cited in The
State of Human Rights in Israel and the Occupied
Territories, 2007 Report, Association for Civil Rights in
Israel (ACRI), p.14
(http://www.acri.org.il/pdf/State2007.pdf).
35ACRI,
p.14.
36For an
important and systematic study of this phenomenon, see
Daniel Bar-Tal & Yona Teichman, Stereotypes and Prejudice in
Conflict: Representations of Arabs in Israeli Jewish
Society, Cambridge University Press, 2005. Bar-Tal is
Professor of Social Psychology at the School of Education,
Tel Aviv University. Teichman is Professor of Clinical
Psychology in the Department of Psychology, Tel Aviv
University.
37State
Department, "Travel Warning: Israel, The West Bank and
Gaza," 19 March 2008
(http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/tw/tw_922.html).
38"U.S.
to Israel: No bias vs. Arab-Americans," Associated Press, 20
March 2008.
39American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), "ADC
Sends First Hand Accounts of Israel's Entry Denials of U.S.
Citizens to Secretary Rice," 20 March 2008
(http://www.adc.org/index.php?id=3290). 40Dan Fisher, "Israel will review its border control practices," The Los Angeles Times, 18 July 1987.
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