The Shrinking
Space of Citizenship: Ethnocratic Politics in Israel
Oren
Yiftachel
(Oren
Yiftachel teaches political geography at Ben Gurion University
in Beer-Sheva, Israel.)
On
February 14, 2002, the Israeli government sent several light planes
to spray 12,000 dunams of crops in the southern Negev region with
poisonous chemicals. The destroyed fields had been cultivated
for years by Bedouin Arabs, on ancestral lands they claim as their
own. The minister responsible for land management, Avigdor Lieberman,
explained:
We must
stop their illegal invasion of state land by all means possible.
The Bedouins have no regard for our laws; in the process we are
losing the last resources of state lands. One of my main missions
is to return to the power of the Land Authority in dealing with
the non-Jewish threat to our lands.[1]
Right-wing
Israelis greet soldiers returning from rotation in Bethlehem,
April 24, 2002. (Menahem Kahana/AFP)
Lieberman's
words clearly proposed a forceful separation of Palestinian-Arab
and Jewish citizens of Israel. Expressions such as "our land,"
"our laws" and "their invasion" demarcate
sharply the limits of identity and rights in the Jewish state.
Not surprisingly, Lieberman (a West Bank settler, and thus, ironically,
an "illegal invader" himself) failed to mention that
the Bedouins are citizens of the state of Israel, and hence can,
and should, receive state lands for their needs. The minister
failed to explain why the state never attempted to enforce the
law by legal means. Worse, he overlooked the ramifications of
the aerial attack: a growing sense of alienation among Bedouins,
once a community keen to integrate into Israeli society.
The
destruction of the Negev crops was one of many recent attacks
on Arab rights in Israel. The state's hardening ethnic policies
and practices, coupled with increasingly confrontational Palestinian
resistance, have pried open the conflict between the state's Jewish
majority and the Palestinian Arabs who form 18 percent of the
citizenry. The result has been to shrink the space for Palestinian
citizenship.
In
Israel, as in other ethnocratic states like pre-Dayton Serbia,
Sri Lanka or Latvia, a constant tension exists between citizenship
and ethnicity. Times of ethnic conflict typically present a "golden
opportunity" to advance nationalist agendas of "ethnicizing"
control over land and resources. But the shrinking space of citizenship
is ominous: it represents a long-term threat to political stability,
with the likely specter of ethnic politics dragging communities
into cycles of protracted conflict, spawning a growing delegitimation
of the state.
After
the failure of peace talks in the summer of 2000, the eruption
of the violent intifada, the October 2000 events within
the Green Line, the growing brutality of Israel's occupation of
the Palestinian territories, the wave of Palestinian terror attacks
in Israeli cities and the September 11 events, ethnic politics
in Israel-Palestine are highly volatile. Framed by growing public
hysteria about "us" and "them," anti-Arab
sentiments and practices have become common in Israeli Jewish
discourse, leading to a notable marginalization of the state's
Palestinian minority.
A
Not So Academic Debate
During
the 1990s, a serious debate began for the first time in academic
and intellectual circles over the nature of the Israeli state,
after decades in which Israel's putative "Western and democratic"
nature was taken for granted, both in Israel and abroad. The main
triggers were worldwide discussions of democratization following
the end of the Cold War and the passage of two basic laws in 1992.
These laws declared the state to be "Jewish and democratic,"
and enshrined several key human rights as part of an expandable
"modular" constitution.
Typical
of the conventional outlook among Israeli intellectuals was the
statement by Aharon Barak, the active president of the Israeli
High Court of Justice: "Our existence as a Jewish and democratic
state, with non-Jewish minorities who deserve full equality, reflects
our basic principles and values."[2] Mainstream scholars
like Shmuel Eisenstadt and Asher Arian accorded with the Israeli
High Court, defining the state to be a liberal democracy, albeit
with certain deficiencies. A second approach was advanced by scholars
such as Sami Smooha, Yoav Peled and Ruth Gavison, who defined
Israel as an "ethnic democracy." They discerned persistent
and systematic inequalities between Arabs and Jews (especially
in the exercise of collective rights), but also an overall democratic
framework which guaranteed basic civil rights. This setting, so
they claimed, led to the gradual acceptance of the "Jewish
and democratic" formula by the state's Arab citizens, and
created conditions for sustaining political stability.
Critical
scholars, however, argued that Israel was more accurately described
as an "ethnocracy," an "ethnic state" or an
"imagined democracy," and exposed the range of structural
impediments to the establishment of a stable democratic system.[3]
The
wave of critical works highlighted the nature of Israel as not
only a Jewish, but also a Judaizing state, with features at odds
with the tenets of democratic citizenship, namely pervasive discrimination
against Palestinian citizens, the political role of religion,
the blurring of the state's geography and the ongoing military
control and settlement of the Occupied Territories, whose Palestinian
residents remain disenfranchised. These critical voices, however,
encountered strong opposition from the intellectual mainstream.
Needless
to say, scholarly positions on the nature of Israel are not purely
academic, but function as professions of faith in a political
system. Following the events of October 2000, in which 13 Arab
citizens were killed by the Israeli police during mass demonstrations
(where a Jewish citizen was also killed), and in the wake of the
intifada which has claimed nearly 2,000 lives (mainly Palestinian,
but also over 400 Israeli lives, including 120 settlers) over
20 months, it became clear that, despite mainstream scholarly
claims, the Israeli system is neither democratic nor stable. On
the contrary, Israel shows signs of fragmentation and chronic
instability, resembling Northern Ireland, Serbia or Sri Lanka.
Israeli
Jewish academia has thus played a major role in creating and maintaining
an illusion of democracy. Scholars turned a blind eye to the 35
year-old occupation, the unresolved refugee problem, the ongoing
Judaization of lands, Jewish-only immigration and the continuing
roles of religion and world Jewry in the Israeli polity. The illusion
of democracy has given internal and international legitimacy to
Israel's expansionist policies and practices, and helped foster
and preserve a system of unequal citizenship.
Despite
these undemocratic features, several important (if insufficient)
democratic bases do exist within the Israeli polity, including
the important ability of minorities to mobilize and protest in
the public arena. Israeli authorities have also taken several
significant democratic steps in recent years, including the High
Court ruling which prohibited discrimination against Arabs in
the allocation of state lands, the near equalization of budgets
for Arab local governments after decades of blatant discrimination,
the first-ever appointment of an Arab minister to the Israeli
government[4] and even the ultimately failed attempts by former
Prime Minister Ehud Barak to end the occupation of the Palestinian
territories. These are important steps, although in many respects
they run against the grain of recent popular sentiments and policy
agendas, which have taken Israel further down the ethnocratic
path.
Rethinking
Citizenship
In
Israel, systematically stratified citizenship has developed from
the combination of Judaization policies and religious-legal control.
Several types of citizenship have emerged, differentiated by the
combination of legal and informal rights and capabilities. Each
category, especially among religious groups, is also divided internally
on gender lines, with men enjoying a superior position. The groups
include: a) "mainstream" Jewish citizens, b) ultra-Orthodox
Jews, c) "pseudo-Jews" (mainly Russian immigrants recognized
as Jews under the Israeli law of return, but not recognized as
such by the religious establishment), d) Druze, f) Palestinians
holding Israeli citizenship, g) Bedouins, h) East Jerusalem and
Golan Arabs, i) Palestinians in the rest of the West Bank and
Gaza and j) immigrant labor.
Over
2001, as Prime Minister Ariel Sharon pursued aggressive anti-Palestinian
policies, the thin illusory layer of equal citizenship continued
to erode. Ethnocentric rhetoric from leaders and politicians,
both Jewish and Arab, heightened. Such escalating rhetoric led
to the indictment of MK Azmi Bishara, who is now facing charges
of "supporting a terror organization," "inciting
violence" and "endangering state security." The
charges followed his well-publicized June 2001 appearance at a
memorial service for the late Syrian president Hafiz al-Asad where
he claimed:
The Sharon
government is distinguished by the fact that it came into power
after the victory of the Lebanese resistance, which benefited
from the enlarged realm that Syria has continuously fostered between
accepting Israeli dictates regarding a so-called comprehensive
and enduring peace, and the military option. This space nourished
the determination and heroic persistence of the leadership and
membership of the Lebanese resistance. But following the victory
of this resistance, and following the Geneva summit and the failure
of Camp David, an Israeli government came into power determined
to shrink the realm of resistance, by putting forth an ultimatum:
either accept Israel's dictates, or face full-scale war. Thus,
it is not possible to continue with a third way -- that of resistance
-- without expanding this realm once again so that the people
can struggle and resist. Nor is it possible to expand this realm
without a unified and internationally effective Arab political
position.[5]
Bishara's
appearance at the ceremony, where he was seated close to some
of Israel's most notorious adversaries, irked the authorities
and Jewish public. Their anger was exacerbated by other statements
made by Bishara about the "sweet taste" of Hizballah's
victory, and by his defiance in the face of criticism, including
his declaration: "I am not an Israeli patriot." The
state's attorney general moved to indict Bishara -- marking the
first time a Knesset member was put up for trial on non-criminal
grounds, and the first time parliamentarian immunity was stripped
on the basis of political views.[6]
The
discriminatory treatment of Arab leaders became conspicuous when
the same attorney general declined to press charges against Jewish
leaders who expressed more inciting statements. For example, MK
Michael Kleiner claimed that leaders such as Bishara who speak
against their state "are routinely put in front of a firing
squad in most countries."[7] Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, spiritual
leader and political authority of the large Orthodox Shas movement,
declared in July 2001 that Israel should "bomb the Arabs
with missiles, through and through," and on another occasion
that "most people know the Arabs are snakes…and snakes should
be dealt with like snakes."[8]
These
leaders, as well as other Jewish politicians, such as the ministers
Avigdor Lieberman and Efraim Eitam or deputy minister Gideon Ezra,
who all made inciting public comments about Israel's Palestinian
citizens, but remained untouched by state authorities. In contrast,
from the end of 2001 to the beginning of 2002, three other Arab
MKs were charged with incitement, following statements supporting
the violent Palestinian intifada or the resistance of Palestinian
Arabs in Israel to oppressive policies. The chasm between Jewish
and Arab political space has thus widened significantly in the
recent past, seriously shrinking the ability of Palestinian Arab
citizens to mobilize within the confines of Jewish tolerance and
Israeli law.
Judaizing
the Jewish State
Following
the 1992 constitutional changes, the notion that Israel is a "Jewish
and democratic" state has become a near consensus among the
Jewish public, to the degree that the terms "Jewish and democratic"
are constructed as inseparable. The result has been a further
shrinking of the political space available to non-Jews, because
any activity against the Jewish nature of the state can be interpreted
as an "attack on democracy." For example, Sharon justified
the charges against Bishara by claiming that "democracy has
to defend itself," though Bishara did not criticize Israel's
democratic features, but rather sought to strengthen them. Similarly,
Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said in February 2001: "territorial
compromise is absolutely necessary for maintaining a firm Jewish
majority and hence a democracy in Israel. The only other option
is a binational state, and the loss of our proud democratic tradition."
Such
positions have been reinforced by a public discourse increasingly
concerned with the "Arab demographic danger," and the
increasingly combative stance of Palestinian citizens vis-à-vis
the state's Zionist agendas. Against this background, the further
Judaization of Israel has become a major concern for the state.
New bills attempting to "anchor" (by special majority
laws) Israel's character as a Jewish state, and as the state of
the Jewish people, have been proposed in the Knesset by prominent
MKs Limor Livnat (Likudnik minister of education), Tommy Lapid
(head of the centrist Shinui Party) and Ophir Pinhess (parliamentary
leader of the Labor Party). None has passed into law as yet, but
the efforts are continuing.
However,
two other bills did pass into law in May 2002, restricting Palestinian
Arab political activity. The first amends Israel's electoral law
by prohibiting the candidacy of any party or individual who "supports
(in action or speech) the armed struggle of enemy states or terror
organizations." The second is the "law against incitement
for violence," which specifies harsh measures, including
five-year prison sentences, for supporting anti-Israel violence.
Explicitly justified as measures to halt "subversive"
political activity, these laws makes it far easier to disqualify
Palestinian Arab (and critical Jewish) politicians from running
for the Israeli parliament, especially on the basis of supporting
(internationally sanctioned) resistance against the Israeli occupation.
Acting
on the deeply ethnocratic notion that Jews need to maintain a
strong demographic majority in all parts of the binational country,
several key personalities and institutions released plans to "combat
the danger" of rising Arab population. A prominent example
is the group of professors and generals who formed the Herzliya
Forum for National Strength. The Forum published its report in
the spring of 2001, calling upon the government to "seriously
consider" steps such as limiting the ability of Arabs to
influence the long-term future of the Jewish state, especially
in referenda on future borders, restricting Arab natural growth
and explicitly raising the option of population transfer by recommending
that Israel "find an outlet for this [Palestinian] population
east of the Jordan River, if it doesn't restrain its rate of natural
growth."[9]
"Transfer"
and Ethnocratic Logic
Children
at play in West Bank settlement of Beitar Illit overlooking
Palestinian village of Nahhalin. (Ruth Fremson/AP Photo)
Israel's
geographic borders have never been demarcated clearly, facilitating
the Judaization of lands outside the internationally recognized
(pre-1967) sovereign area, chiefly in the Palestinian West Bank.
Spatial Judaization has also been a prominent feature of Israel's
policies inside the Green Line, enabling massive expropriation
of Arab lands, the establishment of over 700 Jewish localities,
the imposition of near total Jewish municipal control (stretching
over 94 percent of the state) and the harsh neglect of dozens
of Bedouin villages regarded by the state as "unrecognized."
Clearly,
this spatial malleability stands in contrast to the basic principles
of sustainable state building, which require a relatively stable
geography. In deeply divided states such as Israel, defined spatial
boundaries are ever more necessary, given the need to construct
an overarching citizenship for the various ethnic communities,
and build a system of accepted institutions, laws and political
procedures.
But
during the last 20 months, and following the important (although
ultimately deficient) attempt by the Barak government to stabilize
Israel's borders, the manipulation of ethnic geography with the
goal of Judaizing Arab areas has gathered steam once again. First
and foremost, the idea of "population transfer" -- long
unmentionable in public -- has resurfaced. While the numbers of
leaders openly supporting transfer is still small, several Knesset
members and ministers have adopted the idea, often with feeble
qualifications such as "if the need arises," or "only
as a voluntary plan."[10] The racist transfer idea is now
echoing aloud, gaining growing legitimacy among the Jewish public.[11]
Here too, Avigdor Lieberman expressed sharp and controversial
views:
There is
nothing undemocratic about transfer. Even in Europe millions were
transferred from one place to another and it helped to bring peace...
[T]he separation, like surgery, helps healing. When I see Arabs
going to blow themselves up in Haifa or Nahariyya, or Arabs who
donate to terrorists' families -- if it were up to me, they wouldn't
have stayed here one minute, them and their families.[12]
Accompanying
these voices are several variations on the theme, such as the
vision revealed by the leader of the National Religious Party,
cabinet member Efraim Eitam.
Jordan
and Sinai are, in the final analysis, the territorial address
for meeting the national aspirations of the Palestinians. Israel
should control forever the entire territory between Jordan and
sea. We should offer the Palestinians a choice between enlightened
residency (with no voting rights) in Israel, or primitive Arab
citizenship. The Arabs in Israel are a ticking time bomb… [T]hey
resemble a cancerous growth. We shall have to consider the ability
of the Israeli democracy to continue the Arabs' participation.[13]
Eitam's
vision represents the ideal of many Zionists over the years --
to control the land, while dispensing with its (non-Jewish) people.
In effect, he is offering a mixture of measures ranging from firm
ethnic control to apartheid and future transfer, but couching
them in terms more acceptable to the Jewish Israeli ear. While
his views are militant, they fall within the accepted boundaries
of political debate in today's Israel, with the obvious effect
of shrinking further the ability of Palestinian citizens to find
an effective political strategy, beyond rhetorical provocations
or withdrawal from the public arena.
Eitam
is far from being alone. Similar strategies, with different geographical
emphases, have recently come from the heart of "leftist"
Zionism -- the Labor Party. Most prominent has been a plan proposed
in March 2002 by the minister of transportation, Labor's Efraim
Sneh, that a future Palestinian state annex Arab localities close
to the Green Line, in return for the annexation of West Bank settlement
blocs by Israel. Sneh presented his vision (ironically labeled
"stationary transfer") as democratic, humane and equal:
No Arab
will have to move from his/her home. We are offering them annexation
to the Palestinian nation, with which they openly identify. All
we say is: the 1967 borders are not sacred… [L]et's modify them
to create a better ethnic political geography: Jews in the West
Bank will be part of the Jewish state, and Arabs (who declare
day and night that they are Palestinians) will become part of
the Palestinian state, staying on their own lands. What is more
simple?[14]
Among
the Jewish public, these ideas have received growing credence,
including support from prominent intellectuals and academics such
as Ruth Gavison, former head of the Israeli Association of Human
Rights, authors A.B. Yehoshua and Amos Oz and geographer Arnon
Soffer. These leading voices all express the "need"
to reshape Israel's borders according to "ethnic principles."[15]
Recent surveys show that this idea is gaining popularity, reaching
approval rates of 50-55 percent among Jews, and even 20-30 percent
among Palestinian citizens.[16] Sneh's idea does present a real
dilemma for Israel's Palestinian citizens, who have supported
the Palestinian struggle for independence for decades, and have
increasingly reconstructed their own identity as Palestinian.
The
main impact of these proposals, which are unlikely to be implemented,
is the further diminution of citizenship. Constant geographical
manipulation of the status of Palestinians in their own homeland
represents the depth of ethnocratic values, which now dominate
Israeli society and government. Such values have recently further
elevated ethnicity over citizenship, presenting Arabs with little
prospect of using their citizenship as a meaningful political
asset.
Recently,
ethnocratic logic has also been extended to Jewish groups supporting
Palestinian rights, as exemplified by the demand of Minister of
Education Limor Livnat to prosecute university professors who
support conscientious objectors, the petition signed by 43 professors
at Ben Gurion University to ban a lecture by former Labor minister
Yossi Beilin, for his role in "orchestrating the disastrous
Oslo agreement," and the abortive attempt to dismiss revisionist
historian Ilan Pappé at Haifa University (see box).
Fault
Lines
Typically,
ethnocratic regimes construct self-fulfilling prophecies. Minorities
and groups marked as "anti-national" are marginalized
and oppressed, and when they resist, they are condemned as "disloyal"
and thus deserving of further exclusion. But the manipulation
of geography stretches wider in Israel than debates over state
borders. While less prominent on the public agenda, issues pertaining
to planning, land and development have pushed the state's ethnocratic
agenda further over the last 20 months. For example, after a lull
of several years, the state has initiated more large-scale Jewish
settlement projects within the Green Line. In early 2002, 68 new
settlements were in the process of approval, and 18 began construction.[17]
These are added to the 920 Jewish settlements already existing
in Israel-Palestine, and to the ongoing expansion of Jewish settlements
in Palestinian territories.
In
the meantime, four new Arab localities were also approved, but
these are mainly aimed at concentrating Negev Bedouins into planned
towns. The plight of the Bedouin community in the southern Negev
continues to demonstrate the dark side of the Judaization program,
which works persistently to de-Arabize land wherever possible.
Dozens of Bedouin villages -- some in existence before 1948, and
others built as a result of state-organized transfers in the early
1950s -- are now regarded as "unrecognized." Residents
are denied basic services, and pressured to move to planned towns,
in order to shift further lands to state control. The resistance
of the Bedouin has created a stalemate, and a precarious atmosphere
of inflammable conflict.
The
future tenure of state lands, which cover 76 percent of Israel's
territory,[18] has received wide coverage in the media. State
policy has aimed mainly to increase incrementally Jewish rights
to state lands, while maintaining a meager allocation for Arab
localities. But the main fault line in debates over state land
tenure has not been Arab-Jewish, but has run between a pro-privatization
coalition of Jewish farmers and developers and a group of anti-privatization
social organizations headed by the Mizrahi Democratic Rainbow.[19]
Palestinian citizens have been totally excluded from this debate,
despite their justified claim for a fairer share of state lands,
much of which were originally confiscated from Palestinian refugees.
Arab local governments cover only 2.5 percent of Israel, and the
allocation of state lands to Arab localities over the last two
decades amounted to less than one percent. Most Jewish organizations
have simply ignored Arab claims and needs in the debate over the
future of state lands.
But
Palestinian issues have nonetheless entered the heart of the debate
in one way: the pro-privatization coalition accused the Mizrahi
Democratic Rainbow of supporting the Palestinian right of return,
and planning in secret to aid Palestinian demands to get their
lands back from the state. A concerted smear campaign was launched
in early 2002, aiming to delegitimize the anti-privatization campaign.
Large banners were hung over dozens of road intersections, and
the media was flooded with claims that the Mizrahi Rainbow was
nothing but a cover for a scheme to open state lands to millions
of Palestinian returnees. In his address to the Israeli High Court
against an appeal by the Mizrahi Rainbow to halt the privatization
of land, prominent lawyer and property developer Shraga Biran
stated blatantly:
The acceptance
of this petition, God forbid, is the acceptance of a post-Zionist,
anti-nationalist argument. Would this honored court accept an
argument that property should be taken from the Jewish public
in the name of the [Palestinian] right of return? This honored
court is asked to totally reject the petitioner's attempt to apparently
erect a legal platform for the right of return and the movement
of the refugees and displaced persons into the state's borders.
Hence,
demonization of Palestinian Arabs lurks even in the background
of public and legal debates in which they are not directly involved.
In today's Israel, even the justification for putting agricultural
land to lucrative commercial uses is argued by using emotional
anti-Palestinian slogans.
Spaces
of Joint Citizenship?
The
aggravation of ethnocratic politics in Israel is not an independent
intra-Jewish process. It feeds on Jewish concerns about Palestinian
terrorism, on the hardened anti-Jewish discourse heard daily in
Middle Eastern media and on the growing defiance of Palestinian
citizens. Within this combative atmosphere, a gradual shift in
the discourse of Palestinian citizens is clearly discernible.
Issues of citizenship and equality, highly prominent in the past,
have been partially replaced by matters of national identity,
the embrace of Palestinian and regional Arab struggle against
Israeli occupation, and a wide public support for the Palestinian
right of return, which is perceived by most Jews as a taboo. Also
discernible is growing support for anti-state strategies, ranging
from Islamist agendas, which claim the entirety of Israel-Palestine
as Islamic land to be liberated, to Arab separatism within Israel
to traditional Palestinian nationalist goals of establishing one
secular state "between the river and the sea."
This
has led to a certain convergence between Islamist and secular-nationalist
forces on several issues, most notably a partial withdrawal from
Israeli political and civil life, and a growing focus on building
alternative Arab institutions. A remarkable success for this approach
was achieved during the 2001 prime ministerial elections, when
only 18 percent of Arab citizens (mostly Druze) turned out to
vote. But this success also marks a new and alarming stage in
Arab politics in Israel: Arab leaders may find it difficult to
reverse the trend of political withdrawal, which weakens their
ability to operate in the political process, and further diminishes
the value of their citizenship.
To
be sure, these are only incipient signs of ethnic separatism,
displayed at times of acute conflict. But the power and following
of separatist forces appear to be increasing, and their voices
are commonly heard in the press.[20] Like most ethnocratic states,
whose main project is the ethnicization of contested lands, institutions
and resources, Israel is now facing an increasing challenge from
an alienated and frustrated Arab public, fueled by the illusions
of "democracy" and "equal citizenship." The
more militant Arab voices are covered (and often sensationalized)
by the Hebrew media, drawing on long-term Jewish fears and suspicions
and energizing calls to deepen control over the minority and delay
state allocations to Arab localities.[21]
But
there is a further complication: the events documented above are
inseparable from the protracted ethno-national conflicts in Palestine
and beyond. The failed Oslo process, the violent intifada
and -- most acutely -- Israel's renewed aggression and brutality
toward the Palestinians in the Occupied Territories, have cast
a dark shadow over the joint future of the state's Palestinian
and Jewish citizens.
Indeed,
given the ongoing occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, and the
strengthening of Jewish settlement in these regions, the actual
existence of an Israeli state (and hence citizenship) can be viewed
as an illusion. Israel has ruptured, by its own actions, the geography
of statehood, and maintained a caste-like system of ethnic-religious-class
stratification. Without an inclusive geography and universal citizenship,
Israel has created a colonial setting, held through violent control
and a softening illusion of a nation-state and democratic citizenship.
It seems that Palestinian citizens are waking up to this illusion,
and are beginning to challenge its foundations. Occupation and
settlement, which necessitate ever intensifying oppression of
Palestinians with or without Israeli citizenship, have clear potential
to make Israel gradually cave from within.
In
the ethnocratic societies of Sri Lanka, Serbia and apartheid South
Africa, the states responded to crises of legitimacy by deepening
majority domination over disgruntled groups. Inevitably, this
led in the long term to intensive ethnic conflict, political instability
and economic decline. Other ex-ethnocratic states, such as Canada,
or more recently Slovakia and Northern Ireland, took an opposite
approach, working to democratize and equalize relations.
Will
Israel learn from the painful and violent experience of other
ethnocratic societies, and from its own bloody history? Will it
listen to growing international and local pressures to end the
occupation, redivide Palestine into two independent states and
establish equal citizenship? The signs of the post-2000 era are
ominous, showing a general mood towards further polarization and
strengthening of ethnocratic forces, driven by the militant nationalist
Jewish camp.
Strong
voices, institutions and forces in Israeli society, among both
Jews and Arabs, still struggle for equal citizenship and for improving
the terms of coexistence. These groups are at the forefront of
the fight to end Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands, to find
a just solution for the Palestinian refugees and to reopen spaces
for all Israeli citizens seeking participation in the political
and public arenas, as well as full equality in the allocation
of state resources.
A
notable example of such activity was a report prepared in late
2000 by a group of 26 Jewish and Palestinian lecturers in Israeli
universities, which sought to identify immediate and long-term
courses of action to reconstruct Arab-Jewish relations, following
the violent events of October 2000.[22] The report was submitted
to then-Prime Minister Ehud Barak and most of the relevant ministries,
and received considerable media coverage. The Report of the 26,
as it became known, charted a course for building a future democratic
Israeli state based on a new democratic "contract" between
minority and state along consociational lines. Key themes included
civil equality, Arab autonomy in diverse fields, separation of
state and religion(s), proportional power sharing in most policy
arenas and a new legal and geographical setting, ensuring individual
and collective rights. Yet the reluctance of Israeli leaders to
act on these recommendations, the apathetic and/or hostile reaction
from the Jewish public and criticism from Arab politicians and
NGOs illustrated the difficulties of finding a meaningful space
for a joint Arab-Jewish civil agenda.
The
need for Israel to democratize, establish equal citizenship and
conform to its internationally recognized borders is more urgent
than ever. But these concepts should now move from scholarly textbooks
and political speeches to state laws and government policies.
It is unclear whether the democratic forces in Israel can generate
enough strength to launch such an agenda, but without it, Israel
is most likely to sink into greater crisis and instability.
Endnotes
1Maariv, February 15, 2002. Lieberman resigned from the
government in March 2002, in protest of Sharon's "soft"
dealings with the Palestinians. In April and May, there were moves
to bring him and his far-right party, Yisrael Beiteinu, back into
the government.
2
Aharon Barak, "The Role of Supreme Court in a Democracy,"
Israel Studies 3/2 (1998).
3
See Oren Yiftachel, "Ethnocracy and Its Discontents: Minorities,
Protest and the Israeli Polity," Critical Inquiry
26 (2000) and As'ad Ghanem, "The Palestinian Minority: Challenging
the Jewish State and Its Implications," Third World Quarterly
21/1 (2000).
4
Salah Tarif of the Labor Party, a Druze, was appointed by Sharon
in February 2001 as minister without portfolio and responsible
for Arab affairs. Tarif resigned after ten months, following his
indictment on charges of corruption.
5
An excerpt from the text of the full speech, posted at http://www.adalah.org/bishara/speeches.htm.
Electronic document, accessed on May 18, 2002. His use of the
militant-sounding but somewhat vague Arabic word muqawama
for "resistance" was one of the bases for charging him
with supporting violence.
6
See coverage in al-Ittihad and Maariv, November
11, 2001.
7
Ha'aretz, September 22, 2001.
8
Maariv, July 12, 2001. In recommending the missile attack,
Rabbi Yosef used the Arabic phrase, 'ala kayf kayfak, connoting
both thoroughness and his glee at the prospect. The attorney general
opened an investigation of these comments, but concluded there
were no grounds for prosecution.
9
Herzliya Forum for National Strength, The Balance of National
Strength and Security: Policy Directions (2001). [Hebrew]
10
Benny Elon, minister of tourism, called for "voluntary transfer"
in an interview with Ha'aretz, February 7, 2002.
11
In several opinion polls in early 2002, 25-46 percent of Jews
supported the idea that "Arabs will be asked to move outside
the Land of Israel." Maariv, April 5, 2002.
12Ha'aretz, April 19, 2002.
13Ha'aretz, March 22, 2002.
14
TV interview, "Politika Show" (Channel 1), March 4,
2002. Ex-Prime Minister Ehud Barak has recently supported this
idea in an interview printed in the New York Review of Books,
June 13, 2002.
15
Not all agree with the details of Sneh's plan, but all support
the principles. See articles by Ruth Gavison, Yediot Aharonot,
March 25, 2002; Amos Oz, Ynet, April 1, 2002; A.B. Yehoshua,
Maariv, March 27, 2002.
16Maariv, April 12, 2002.
17Ha'aretz, November 6, 2001.
18
A further 17 percent are held by the Jewish National Fund and
three percent by Jewish individuals, bringing the extent of Jewish
control to over 96 percent of the state's land mass.
19
The Mizrahi Democratic Rainbow is a movement, headed by second-generation
Mizrahi Jews (those originating in the Muslim world), espousing
a socially progressive agenda for Israeli society.
20
Debates on the issue can be mainly found in the Arab newspapers
Sawt al-Haqq wal-Hurriyya and Fasl al-Maqal, published
by the Islamic movement and the nationalist Tajammu' party, respectively.
21
See two lengthy articles on the new Arab politics and growing
separatism in Ha'aretz, April 16, 2002 and Maariv,
April 19, 2002.
22
Danny Rabinowitz, As'ad Ghanem, Oren Yiftachel and R. Suleiman,
eds. After the Breakdown: New Directions for Policies Towards
the Arabs in Israel (2000).
MERIP
OP-EDS
A Country at a Crossroads The Austin-American Statesman (Austin, Texas) November 9, 2007
Kamran Asdar Ali
"A
very frank discussion"— so President Bush described
his Nov. 7 telephone
conversation with Pervez Musharraf, four days after the Pakistani
general
imposed a state of emergency and dissolved the high court expected
to rule
his continued presidency unconstitutional. And frank the discussion
probably
was: In the face of spirited protest in Pakistan, and a querulous
press in
Washington, back-channel pressure succeeded in persuading Musharraf
to
promise parliamentary elections. Yet the generous U.S. aid earmarked
for
Pakistan — on top of nearly $10 billion since 2001 — is
quite evidently not
at risk.
What may be at risk is Musharraf's tenure as head
of the military government. Full
story>>
The
war debate in Washington is bogged down. Partisan rancor is one
reason why, and bipartisan desire for US hegemony in the oil-rich
Persian Gulf is
another. But many Americans are vexed by a nobler concern: that
a
“precipitous” US departure from Iraq would leave intensified
civil war,
ethnic-sectarian cleansing and massive refugee flows in its wake.
This
concern is legitimate. Unfortunately, the sad fact is that Iraq’s
civil war
and humanitarian emergency have grown steadily worse as the US
military
deployment there wears on. Full
Story>>
Should
the United States, seeking to recalibrate the balance between
security and liberty in the "war on terror," emulate
Israel in its treatment of Palestinian detainees? That is the position
that Guantanamo detainee lawyers Avi Stadler and John Chandler
of Atlanta, and some others, have advocated. That people in U.S.
custody could be held incommunicado for years without charges,
and could be prosecuted or indefinitely detained on the basis of
confessions extracted with torture is worse than a national disgrace.
It is an assault on the foundations of the rule of law. Full
Story>>
There
is an oft-told Palestinian allegory about a family who complained
their house was small and cramped. In response, the father brought
the farm
animals inside -- the goat, the sheep and the chickens all crowded
into the
house. Then, one by one, he moved the animals back outside. By
the time the
last chicken left, the family felt such relief they never complained
of the
lack of elbow room again. Full
Story>>