Minister calls for Jewish takeover of
Palestinian areas in Israel
Jonathan Cook, The Electronic
Intifada, 6 July 2009
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article10645.shtml
Israel's housing minister
called for strict segregation between the country's Jewish and Arab
populations last week as he unveiled plans to move large numbers of
fundamentalist religious Jews to Israel's north to prevent what he
described as an "Arab takeover" of the region.
Ariel Atias said he considered it a "national mission" to bring
ultra-Orthodox Jews -- or Haredim, distinctive for their formal
black and white clothing -- into Arab areas, and announced that he
would also create the north's first exclusively Haredi town.
The new settlement drive, according to Atias, is intended to revive
previous failed efforts by the state to "Judaize," or create a
Jewish majority in, the country's heavily Arab north.
Analysts say the announcement is a disturbing indication that the
Haredim, who have traditionally been hostile to Zionism because of
their strict reading of the Bible, are rapidly being recruited to
the Judaization project in both Israel and the Occupied Palestinian
Territories (OPT).
Atias, of the ultra-Orthodox party Shas, is drawing on a model
already successfully developed over the past decade in the West
Bank, where the Haredim, the group with the highest birth rate in
Israel, have been encouraged to move into separate settlements that
have rapidly eaten into large chunks of Palestinian territory.
Several mayors of northern cities in Israel have appealed to Atias
to help them "save" the Jewishness of their communities in a similar
manner by recruiting Haredim to swell the numbers of Jews in the
north.
Atias revealed his new drive on Thursday as he spoke at an Israeli
Bar Association conference in Tel Aviv to discuss land reform plans.
He told the delegates: "We can all be bleeding hearts, but I think
it is unsuitable [for Jews and Arabs] to live together."
His priority, he said, was to prevent the "spread" of Arab citizens,
who comprise one-fifth of the country's population and are mostly
restricted to their own overcrowded communities in two northern
regions, the Galilee and Wadi Ara.
Referring to the Galilee, where Arab citizens are a small majority
of the population, he said: "If we go on like we have until now, we
will lose the Galilee. Populations that should not mix are spreading
there."
Atias also revealed that mayors of several northern cities where
Arab citizens had started to move into Jewish neighborhoods had
asked him how they could "salvage" their cities.
One, Shimon Lankry, the mayor of Acre, where there were
inter-communal clashes last year, met with the minister only last
week. "He told me, 'Bring a bunch of Haredim and we'll save the
city,'" Atias said.
"He told me that Arabs are living in Jewish buildings and running
them [Jews] out."
The Haredim have a birth rate -- estimated at eight children per
woman -- that is twice that of the Muslim population and are
increasingly seen as a useful demographic weapon to stop the erosion
of Israel's Jewish majority.
Atias's comments brought swift condemnation from Israel's Arab
lawmakers. Mohammad Barakeh, the head of the Communist Party, told
the popular Israeli website Ynet: "Racism is spreading throughout
the government and Minister Atias is the latest to express it."
The key initiative proposed by Atias is the development of a large
Haredi town of 20,000 homes based on an existing small community at
Harish in the Wadi Ara, a region close to the West Bank.
Harish was established in the early 1990s by the housing minister of
the time, Ariel Sharon, as part of a huge settlement drive inside
both Israel and the OPT.
Harish and a dozen communities known as "star points" were built on
the Green Line -- the pre-1967 border between Israel and the West
Bank -- as a way to erode its political significance.
Most of the communities, however, were located in densely-populated
Arab areas and failed to attract Israelis.
Until recently the settler population had spurned settling in Israel
and has been drawn instead either to Palestinian areas close to
Jerusalem or to frontier communities deep in the West Bank.
Cesar Yehudkin of Bimkom, a group of Israeli town planners critical
of government planning policy, said the goal of Harish was to occupy
a large swathe of land in Wadi Ara to prevent the "natural growth"
of Arab localities. "Harish is an attractive option for rapid
development because the infrastructure for a large town is already
in place," he said.
Atias told Israel's Bar Association that Harish was a vital way to
stop "illegal Arab expansion" and that the Haredim "are the only
ones willing to live there."
The Israeli media revealed two weeks ago similar plans by Shimon
Gapso, the mayor of Upper Nazareth, a Jewish town established 50
years ago in the Galilee region to restrict the growth of the
neighboring Arab city of Nazareth.
He announced that 3,000 homes are to be built next year for the
Haredim to increase Jewish dominance of the city, which has seen a
steady migration of Arabs from Nazareth and its surrounding villages
desperate for a place to live.
Tight planning restrictions on Arab communities mean that there are
few places for Arab citizens to build legally and they are excluded
from hundreds of Jewish rural communities through vetting
committees, Yehudkin said.
Gapso, who is identified with the Yisrael Beiteinu Party of the
foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, has complained about the
"demographic threat" posed by Arabs moving into Upper Nazareth.
He recently told the Israeli media: "As a man of Greater Israel, I
think it more important to settle the Galilee than Judea and Samaria
[the West Bank] ... I urge the settlers to come here."
Some 600 ultra-Orthodox families have already signed up to live in
the new Upper Nazareth neighborhood, which has the backing of Eli
Yishai, the interior minister and leader of Shas.
In a related Judaization drive, Nefesh B'Nefesh, one of the main
organizations bringing Jewish immigrants to Israel, announced in
December a program to offer financial incentives to new immigrants
to settle in northern Israel.
Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth,
Israel. His latest books are
Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to
Remake the Middle East (Pluto Press) and
Disappearing Palestine: Israel's Experiments in Human Despair
(Zed Books). His website is
www.jkcook.net.
A version of this article originally appeared in
The National, published
in Abu Dhabi. |