Segregation
of Jews and Arabs in 2010 Israel is almost
absolute
By Amnon Be’eri-Sulitzeanu; October 29,
2010, Haaretz
Under the guise of the deceptively mundane name "Amendment to the
Cooperative Associations Bill," the Knesset's Constitution, Law and
Justice Committee this week finalized a bill intended to bypass
previous rulings of the High Court of Justice. If indeed this
legislation is approved by the Knesset plenum, it will not be
possible to describe it as anything other than an apartheid
law.
Ten years ago, the High Court of Justice ordered the town of Katzir
to accept the family of Adel and Iman Kaadan, Arab citizens of
Israel, as members of the community. Seven years later, the court
issued a similar ruling against the Galilee village of Rakefet,
which, like Katzir, is Jewish. Now, however, the legislature has
come up with a proper "Zionist" response to the justices: If it
becomes law, the amendment will give acceptance committees of
communal villages the authority to limit residence in their towns
exclusively to Jews.
Using polished and sanitized language, the bill would allow such
committees in small rural suburbs to reject applications from
families that "are incompatible with the social-cultural fabric of
the community, and where there are grounds to assume that they will
disrupt this fabric."
In other words, if admissions committees were previously forced to
exercise some degree of creativity if they wanted to hide their
national-ethnic grounds for rejecting Arabs, now, as Rabbi Akiva
said, "All is foreseen, and freedom of choice is granted" (Pirkei
Avot 3 ). Arabs? Not here. Sorry, the law is with us on this.
Those who feign innocence, including some from the center of our
political map, will say, "The bill is not intended to keep out
Arabs. What's wrong with supporting the right of communities to
protect their unique way of life?"
Indeed, what is wrong with that? There's no argument that the
vegetarians of Moshav Amirim, in the Galilee, have a right to
defend themselves against an invasion of carnivores, just as the
practitioners of transcendental meditation at Hararit, in the
Misgav region, need to be able to meditate without interruption,
but those communities are genuinely unique in character. This is
not the case for the dozens of yeshuvim kehilati'im (literally,
"community settlements" ) all over Israel, whose principal cultural
feature is the fact that their residents are Jewish and Zionist -
hardly a population under imminent threat, whose unique way of life
needs protection.
Several months ago, we were given a glimpse of just how quickly the
new law will be implemented, when several such villages,
anticipating the Knesset's action, hurriedly established bylaws
that effectively barred Arabs. In the communities of Yuvalim and
Manof, in the Misgav area, applicants are now required to declare
their allegiance to the Zionist vision, while in Mitzpe Aviv, a bit
to the south, applicants must declare their identification with the
values of Zionism and the definition of Israel as a Jewish and
democratic state.
It's not as if Arab families are standing in line to move to these
gated communities, which were established mainly in the 1970s and
'80s by Zionist organizations like the Jewish Agency and the Jewish
National Fund for the purpose of "Judaizing" areas like the Negev
and the Galilee. No one ever expected these towns to provide the
answer to the horrendous housing shortage faced by Israel's Arab
population. For them, not a single new town has been established
since 1948, with the exception of a few impoverished Bedouin
settlements in the Negev. Nor has the central government seen fit
to assist or give approval to the existing Arab municipalities in
the drawing up of master plans that would allow them to implement a
program of growth and development to meet the needs of a growing
population or mitigate their poor quality of life.
And this is without even mentioning cities like Upper Nazareth,
Safed or Carmiel, where a variety of statements have been made -
sometimes by the most senior municipal officials themselves - that
are designed to push Arabs out or prevent their integration into
these cities.
Segregation of Jews and Arabs in Israel of 2010 is almost absolute.
For those of us who live here, it is something we take for granted.
But visitors from abroad cannot believe their eyes: segregated
education, segregated businesses, separate entertainment venues,
different languages, separate political parties ... and of course,
segregated housing. In many senses, this is the way members of both
groups want things to be, but such separation only contributes to
the growing mutual alienation of Jews and Arabs.
Several courageous attempts - particularly in mixed cities and
regions - have been made to change the situation, bridge the rifts
and promote integration. These range from efforts to develop mixed
educational frameworks, to joint economic ventures and other
interventions intended to foster good neighborly relations based on
equal opportunity. Until now, these attempts addressed a situation
of de facto segregation. From today, however, segregation will be
de jure, to the shame of Israel.
Amnon
Be'eri Sulitzeanu is the co-executive director of the Abraham Fund
Initiatives, an organization that promotes coexistence and equality
between Israel's Jewish and Arab citizens.