By 71 votes to 38 the Knesset rejects Equal Rights Bill – Jewish MKs vote by 71-25 to reject equality between Jews and non-Jews
According to the idiots’ guide to ‘anti-Semitism’ otherwise known as the
IHRA
definition ‘Denying the
Jewish people their right to self-determination, e.g., by claiming that the
existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavour’ is anti-Semitic. Leaving aside the fact that the two parts
of this sentence are a non-sequitur, since you can support a Jewish right to self-determination
and still claim that Israel is a racist state (and vice versa) the existence of
something can’t be an endeavour. The language is deliberately obscure and
clumsy but it is a fact that Israel and Zionism is racist. If it is anti-Semitic to tell the truth then
that can only mean that anti-Semitism is justified!
The proof however is in the pudding. Last Wednesday Israel’ Knesset
voted by 71-38 to reject a bill which was based on Israel’s Declaration of
Independence. The Bill was based upon The Declaration of
the Establishment of the State of Israel which stated that the State
of Israel ‘will ensure complete equality
of social and political rights to all its inhabitants irrespective of religion,
race or sex’. This was preceded by
the statement that ‘The State of Israel
will be open for Jewish immigration and for the Ingathering of the Exiles; it
will foster the development of the country for the benefit of all its inhabitants;
it will be based on freedom, justice and peace as envisaged by the prophets of
Israel’ which of course contained the same contradiction that is embodied
in the description of Israel as a ‘Jewish and Democratic state.’
The Knesset |
A state based on racial domination cannot be democratic.
Likewise if you say that the State will only be open for Jewish immigration,
i.e. colonisation, then you cannot have equality. Nonetheless if this sentence
had been incorporated in Israeli law then it would have given Israel’s non-Jewish
citizens a right to equality.
Not only did all the government members vote for the Bill
but the 11 MKs from the ‘centrist’ Yesh Atid. 6 members of Yisrael Beteinu, the
far-Right party of ex-Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman abstained, as did 4
members of the Israeli Labour Party.
The Declaration of Independence, which is often quoted by Zionists
when arguing that Israel is a democratic, non-racist state was never
incorporated into Israeli law. Instead we have the recently passed Jewish Nation
State Law which says the the right to national self-determination is "unique to the
Jewish people". .
It is because a Jewish State means a state which gives
privileges to one section of inhabitants (Jews) and denies them to another
section (non-Jews/Palestinian Israelis) that a Jewish state is inherently
racist. The belief amongst the 80% of Israelis
that it is ‘their’ state is what lies behind the visceral and open racism of
the majority of Jews.
The Israeli flag flies with the Western Wall in the background |
This is manifested in popular
opinion as measured in a poll by Israel’s Channel 10.
Over three-quarters of Israeli Jews said they would object to their
child forming friendships with Palestinian youth of the opposite sex, and more
than half said they would be disturbed if their child formed friendships with
Palestinian youth of the same sex.
43% of respondents said that they were disturbed or very disturbed to
hear people conversing in Arabic in a public space, and 42% said they believe
that Jews should be hired for work over Arabs.
Exactly 50 % of respondents said it would bother them to have a
Palestinian neighbour; half of respondents also said they would not rent an
apartment to a Palestinian citizen of Israel.
37% of respondents reported discomfort over a high number of
Palestinian pharmacists, and 40% reported discomfort over the prominence of
Palestinian doctors and nurses.
Let us contrast this with a similar poll in YNet, the internet
version of Israel’s largest paper, Yediot Aharanot in an article ‘Marriage to
an Arab is national treason on the 27th March 2007, quoting a
survey by the Geocartography Institute, over half of Israeli Jews said they believed
the marriage of a Jewish woman to an Arab man was ‘national treason’. Note that they didn’t oppose such liaisons on
religious but racial and national grounds.
Over 75% of participants did not approve of apartment
buildings being shared between Arabs and Jews. 60% of participants said they
would not allow an Arab to visit their home. About 40% of participants agreed
that “Arabs should have their right to
vote for Knesset revoked”. Over half of the participants agreed that Israel
should encourage its Arab citizens to immigrate from the country and a similar
percentage said they would not want to work under the direct management of an
Arab. 55% said “Arabs and Jews should be
separated at entertainment sites”. 31% said they felt hatred, while 50% said
they felt fear.
Protest against Israel's Nation State Bill |
Over 56% of participants said they believed that Israel’s
Arab citizens posed both a security and a demographic threat to the country, in
other words that the Arab presence in a Jewish state caused them to fear that
one day there might be more Arabs than Jews.
When asked what they thought of Arab culture, over 37%replied,
“The Arab culture is inferior.”
In an article on YNet in September 2006 Poll:
62% want Arab emigration, which was based on the the Israel Democracy
Institute’s democracy index s total of 62% of Israelis wantrf the government to
encourage local Arabs to leave the country.
Only 14% of respondents said ties between Arabs and Jews are good, while
29% said a Jewish majority is required for decisions of crucial national
significance.
Yair Lapid of the 'centrist' Yesh Atid (left) and Netanyahu |
Israeli Knesset rejects bill to ‘maintain equal rights amongst all its citizens’
Mondoweizz, Yossi Gurvitz on
The Knesset voted down today, by a margin of 71-38,
the Basic Law: Equality bill, tabled by MK Mossi Raz (Meretz). The text of the
bill was clear and concise: “The State of
Israel shall maintain equal political rights amongst all its citizens, without
any difference between religions, race and sex.” This is a direct quote
from Israel’s Declaration of Independence.
Following the resignation of Defense Minister
Lieberman a few weeks back, the governing coalition has a razor-thin margin of
one vote: it controls 61 votes out of 120. However, the coalition enjoyed the
support of Yesh Atid, led by Israel’s Trump wannabe, Yair Lapid. Its eleven
votes are unlikely to have delivered victory to the opposition, however, as
many members of the Zionist Camp fled the hall before the vote.
Despite one the greatest political cons in history – “Israel is the only democracy in the Middle
East” – Israeli law never recognized equality between citizens. An attempt
to enter an equality clause to the Human Dignity and Freedom Basic Law, back in
1992, failed – mostly due to the opposition of the religious parties. The
Israeli Supreme Court, doubling as the country’s High Court of Justice, found –
or, rather, invented – emanations of equality in Israel’s Basic Laws; doing so
often required the court to fall back on the equality clause of the Declaration
of Independence, claiming it was the expressed will of the Founders.
Doing so after today’s vote will require extraordinary
powers of judicial juggling. And the court, which was never that great shining
light its supporters portray it (see, for damning example after another, Michael
Sfard’s superb “The
Wall and the Gate”) is becoming less emboldened to face the government.
Formally there is equality between Arab and Jew in Israel |
Following the tumult of the Nation State
Law, when the Druze filled the streets in protest – claiming, correctly,
the law made them second class citizens – Netanyahu promised them he’d grant
them an exemption somehow. Perhaps he’d declare them honorary Jews. Today,
Netanyahu closed the gate of equality before them.
He did so with the votes not only of his
ultra-nationalist coalition, but also with those of Lapid, whose party claims
to be a center party while serving as a gateway drug to the extreme right. And
by the absent votes of the frightened members of Labour. Those 71 votes
represent the hard core of practical Zionism – Zionism as it is, not
as it may be – who decided Israel would be a Jewish country and not a
democratic one.
The Knesset told 20% of the country’s citizens that it
would demand their loyalty, but would not grant them equality. They would have
second class citizenship, dependent on the whim of the Jewish majority. Next
time the government of Israel tells you it “shares
values” with the US, remember what that value is: 3/5 of personhood.
So it goes.
Israeli
press review: New poll shows rampant racism in Israel
Middle East Eye, 10 December 2018
Meanwhile, bill calls for increasing size of
villages that can implement 'admission committees' to keep out non-Jewish
residents
A man in the Bedouin village of Abu Nuwar in the occupied West Bank
with the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim in the background (AFP/File photo)
Tuesday 11 December 2018
New poll shows racism rife amongst Israelis
A new poll by Israeli Channel 10 TV revealed
that deep prejudice against Palestinians, including Palestinian citizens of
Israel, is still the norm amongst Israeli Jews.
Over three-quarters of respondents said they would
object to their child forming friendships with Palestinian youth of the
opposite sex, and more than half of Israeli Jews in the study said they would
be disturbed if their child formed friendships with Palestinian youth of the
same sex.
Forty-three percent of respondents said that they were
disturbed or very disturbed to hear people conversing in Arabic in a public
space, and 42 percent said they believe that Jews should be hired for work over
Arabs.
Exactly 50 percent of respondents said it would bother
them to have a Palestinian neighbour; half of respondents also said they would
not rent an apartment to a Palestinian citizen of Israel.
Some of Channel 10’s questions were designed to
replicate those asked in a CNN poll and published in November in an attempt to
measure levels of anti-Jewish racism amongst non-Jewish Europeans in Austria,
France, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
To mirror the CNN question of whether European
respondents were fearful of Jewish prominence in certain professions, the
Channel 10 poll asked Israelis how they felt about Palestinian prominence in
the country’s health care industry.
Thirty-seven percent of respondents reported
discomfort over a high number of Palestinian pharmacists, and 40 percent
reported discomfort over the prominence of Palestinian doctors and nurses. By
contrast, the CNN poll found that 28 percent of European respondents expressed
discomfort over the prominence of Jews in global finance.
The Israeli government voted on Sunday to support a
bill that would increase the size of villages that may legally implement
“admission committees” to weed out Palestinian citizens of Israel and other
individuals deemed undesirable, Israel’s Channel 13 Reshet reported.
According
to a current Israeli law passed in 2013, municipalities with up to 400 families
may form boards that may bar others from moving in. Without any requirement to
be transparent about the criteria used, these committees can deny an applicant
admittance by claiming that his or her lifestyle is incompatible with life in
the village.
Under the
new bill - proposed by far-right lawmaker Bezalel Smotrich and approved on
Sunday by the Ministerial Committee on Legislation - villages with up to 700
families would be permitted to form such boards to keep out potential
residents. The proposed number may drop to 500 or 600 before the bill is
passed into law.
The
legislation came under harsh criticism from Tamar Zandberg, leader of the
liberal-Zionist Meretz party, who argued that the bill would result in more
municipalities refusing to admit not only non-Jewish applicants, but also Jews
of Arab ethnicity, disabled citizens and members of the LGBT community.
“Not only
should acceptance committees not be expanded, but they must be abolished,”
Zandberg told the ministerial committee.
Smotrich’s
bill follows another recent effort to expand the scope of Jewish-only
settlements inside Israel’s internationally recognised borders. The
controversial Nation-State law, passed in July, originally contained language
mandating the construction of Jewish-only communities, but the provision was
dropped before the bill was voted into law.
The
original admission committees law was passed in order to circumvent a decision
by the Israeli High Court, which ruled in 2000 that the rights of a family of
Palestinian citizens of Israel had been violated when an Israeli village
refused to let them live there because they were Palestinian.
An senior Israeli
minister and member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s security cabinet
says he is confident that once the Israeli army has a pretext for a war with
its neighbour to the north, it “will return Lebanon to the Stone Age”, Channel 10 News
reported.
Responding
to a panelist who questioned whether the recent alleged discovery of tunnels on
the Israeli side of the border with Lebanon might mean that Israeli deterrence
power has decreased, Construction Minister Yoav Galant threatened to destroy
Lebanon itself – not only Hezbollah.
“I presume
that when we have the reasons, then we will know what to do,” said Galant, a
former top general in the Israeli army. “I propose that we trust in the IDF and
in its power; we know what to do. That doesn’t mean that we want a battle or a
war everyday. But if, regretfully, we get to war, we will return Lebanon to the
Stone Age – no less than that.”
Asked if he meant Lebanon, the country, or Hezbollah,
Galant said: "Both of them. It is unacceptable [that] Israeli citizens,
Israeli children, Israeli women are threatened in our cities, and in Lebanon,
it’s business as usual. When I say to return the Stone Age, I mean what I
say."
When the
show’s host pivoted to Galant’s political patronage, the minister affirmed he
was still number two on the list of the Kulanu faction of the government, but
hinted that he might switch to Netanyahu’s ruling Likud party, since he shares
its hawkish views on security.
"I
never hid that my opinions on politics and security are identical to those of
the Likud. And by the way, I’m the not the only one in the Kulanu party who
holds those views," Galant said.
Israeli
Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz similarly threatened to send Lebanon back
to "the Stone Age" in 2014 and to "the age of cavemen" in April of this
year, according to Israeli reports.
Five-thousand
Bedouin citizens of Israel may be forced off their land so that an arms factory
can be built on it, the financial journal Calcalist reported.
In the government’s zeal to remove the residents, it
announced the plan to the press as a fait accompli, although it has yet to be
officially approved.
Instead of
waiting to consider complaints against the plan, including from residents who
would displaced, the Israeli Authority for Resolving Bedouin Settlement in the
Negev issued a statement to the press claiming that the objections had already
been overruled.
The
citizens who may be displaced currently live in unrecognised Bedouin villages,
as well as in Abu Qureinat, Wadi al-Mashash, Wadi al-Na’am, Abu Talul and
Sowaween.
Representatives
of the 1,000 Bedouin families who currently live in the northern Negev desert
area say the state-owned arms maker, Ta’as, known in English as IMI Systems,
never presented its construction plans to them, or made any effort to find an
alternate solution.
When the
families pointed out that their grievances had not been heard, the government
authority said “an error in transmitting information resulted in presenting the
present stage as if the decision which is very likely to be accepted, was
accepted".
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please submit your comments below