Israel’s
Palestinian Minority Thrown into a Maelstrom
Jonathan Cook
June 16, 2010
Jonathan
Cook is a journalist based in Nazareth. He is author of Blood
and Religion (2006), Israel and the Clash of Civilizations (2008)
and Disappearing Palestine (2008).
For
background on tensions between Palestinians in Israel and
the state, see Peter Lagerquist, “Recipe
for a Riot: Parsing Israel’s Yom Kippur Upheavals,” Middle
East Report Online (November 2008).
For
background on the October 2000 events, see Jonathan Cook,
“Impunity
on Both Sides of the Green Line,” Middle East
Report Online, November 23, 2005.
For
background on Azmi Bishara’s case, see Amnon Raz-Krakotzkin,
“They’re Hounding Bishara Because He’s Right,” Middle
East Report 243 (Summer 2007).
Order
the issue via a secure server at www.merip.org. |
The first
reports of Israel’s May 31 commando raid on a Gaza-bound aid
flotilla surfaced among the country’s 1.4 million Palestinian
citizens alongside rumors that Sheikh Ra’id Salah, head of the
radical northern wing of the Islamic Movement of Israel, had
been shot dead on the lead ship, the Mavi Marmara. Salah
is alive, but at the time his demise seemed confirmed when it
emerged that large numbers of police had been drafted into northern
Israel, where most of the Palestinian minority lives, in expectation
of widespread violence.
At the first
spontaneous demonstrations in the north, participants expressed
shock that Israel had killed international peace activists in
international waters -- a rumored number of 20 dead later dropped
to nine. But in a community used to intermittent bouts of extreme
violence from Israel’s security forces, few seemed to doubt that
the order might have been given to execute Salah. The sheikh,
who has repeatedly been arrested and is facing a series of trials,
has long been public enemy number one among Israeli Jews for
his campaign to protect the Haram al-Sharif from what he regards
as an attempted Israeli takeover. The Haram al-Sharif is a compound
of mosques in the Old City of Jerusalem that includes al-Aqsa
and is believed by Jews to be built over two ancient Jewish temples.
Half-jokingly, a protester in Nazareth wondered aloud whether
a military commander had overheard the prime minister, Benjamin
Netanyahu, ask: “Who will rid me of this turbulent sheikh?”
Breaking
the Siege of Gaza
The flotilla,
which was attacked more than 60 miles off Israel’s coast early
in the morning, was not the first to bear aid for Gaza, but it
was the first to include a delegation of Palestinian leaders
from inside Israel. Palestinians are roughly one fifth of Israel’s
population. Most of the main Israeli-Palestinian political factions
and institutions were included: Salah and his counterpart in
the Islamic Movement’s more moderate southern wing, Sheikh Hamad
Abu Da‘bas; Muhammad Zaydan, head of the Higher Follow-Up Committee,
the umbrella body dominated by local mayors; and Hanin Zu‘bi,
a first-term member of the parliament, the Knesset, from the
nationalist Tajammu‘ party (Balad in Hebrew). Alongside them
was Lubna Masarwa, a resident of Kafr Qara‘ in northern Israel
and an activist with the Free Gaza Movement, which organized
the aid convoy.
Before they
set off, the group of Palestinian-Israelis knew their participation
would upset a broad swath of Israeli Jewish opinion. Since 2006,
when Hamas won the Palestinian Legislative Council elections,
Israel has been progressively tightening a blockade of Gaza to
the point that today only a few dozen items are allowed in and
less than a quarter of the cargo trucks that once entered the
enclave each day are still permitted to do so. The policy has
become more severe as its goal has become less clear: Is it to
stop “arms smuggling” by Hamas, as Yuval Diskin, the head of
the Shinbet, Israel’s secret police, claimed on June 15; or to
wage “economic warfare,” as suggested by a recent Israeli document,
punishing Gaza’s inhabitants for voting for Hamas; or to act
as leverage on Hamas to stop rocket fire on nearby Israeli communities,
although such attacks all but ceased long ago; or to force the
release of Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier held captive by Hamas
since 2006? Most Israeli Jews do not seem overly concerned which
justification is deployed.
Meanwhile,
in strenuously denying aid agency reports that the blockade has
created a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, Israeli officials have
left the Jewish majority to conclude that those who oppose the
blockade do so because they support Hamas -- “a terrorist organization
committed to the destruction of Israel,” as commentators regularly
remind the public. It was therefore hardly surprising that, a
few days before the flotilla set sail for Gaza on its stated
mission to “break the siege,” the popular news website Ynet claimed
that Knesset member Zu‘bi would be traveling on a ship alongside
“prominent Hamas-affiliated activists,” while the headline asked
rhetorically: “MK in Service of Hamas?”
But what Zu‘bi
and the other Palestinian-Israeli leaders probably could not
have appreciated was that this flotilla, unlike its predecessors,
was about to make waves not only domestically but internationally.
They were about to be thrown into a maelstrom of events that
would provoke denunciations from around the globe, turn a spotlight
on the legitimacy of Israel’s blockade, tear apart Israel’s key
regional alliance with Turkey and further embarrass a weak US
administration that is desperately trying to breathe life into
a sham Israeli-Palestinian “peace process” as its own occupations,
in Iraq and Afghanistan, continue to falter. As a result, the
participation of Palestinian-Israelis in the flotilla dangerously
reinforced the Jewish majority’s perception of the minority as
a fifth column.
War and
Loyalty
‘Adil Manna‘,
a Palestinian historian at the Van Leer Institute in Jerusalem,
notes that, when Israel feels isolated and under threat, “it
becomes much more intolerant of criticism from inside the country,
from the [Palestinian] Arab minority especially. Dissent is seen
as a strategic danger.” And Israel has rarely felt so isolated
or perceived its international standing to be so threatened.
The raid on
the flotilla, in which eight Turks and a dual Turkish-American
citizen were killed and dozens of other passengers wounded by
Israeli commandos, followed two regional confrontations involving
Israel still at the forefront of the international community’s
memory: a month-long clash in 2006 with the Lebanese political
party-cum-militia Hizballah, in which more than 1,000
Lebanese civilians were killed; and a three-week assault on Gaza
in 2008-2009 in which some 1,400 Palestinians died, again most
of them civilians. An international consensus regarded the large-scale
loss of civilian life in both confrontations as constituting
at the very minimum a “disproportionate” Israeli response, whereas
Israel maintained it had a right to wage its own version of the
“war on terror.” A UN-mandated report on the Gaza attack by Richard
Goldstone, a respected international jurist, tipped the balance
of world opinion decisively against Israel by suggesting that,
while both Israeli forces and Hamas had committed war crimes,
Israeli forces had committed the bulk of them.
As international
opprobrium has grown, Israel has subjected the leaders of its
Palestinian citizens to ever greater scrutiny, not only over
their positions on the long-running conflict between Israel and
the Palestinians but also on Israel’s regional confrontation
with Hizballah and wider confrontation with the international
community. In the minds of most Israeli Jews, the question of
where the Palestinian minority stands on these issues overlaps
with the question of whether Palestinians can be trustworthy
citizens. Avigdor Lieberman, the foreign minister, and his Yisrael
Beiteinu party rode to success in the 2009 general election,
winning 15 seats and becoming the third largest faction in Knesset,
by exploiting popular suspicions of the minority with the campaign
slogan, “No loyalty, no citizenship.”
The issue
of the minority’s loyalty had been widely debated since the beginning
of the second intifada, in October 2000, when Palestinian
citizens protested in support of the Palestinians in the Occupied
Territories. Police entered their towns and villages to greet
the demonstrators with rubber bullets and live fire, killing
13 and injuring hundreds in a few days. Those events were misleadingly
presented by the Israeli leadership as an internal uprising by
rebels conspiring with the Palestinians under occupation to overthrow
the state from within.
But the 2006
bombardment of Lebanon and the later attack on Gaza have been
equally significant for majority-minority relations, expanding
the dimensions of the loyalty debate. The Jewish majority perceived
these two confrontations as the salient battles in a clash of
civilizations that pitted Israel against the region and its aspiring
hegemon, Iran. The Palestinian minority, on the other hand, regarded
the confrontations as further proof that Israel was a militarized
and militaristic state with an insatiable appetite for territory
and no ability to make peace with the Palestinians and its other
neighbors. This unbridgeable gulf in worldviews was bound to
set Palestinian citizens on a collision course with their own
state.
The Enemy
Within
In the summer
2006 Lebanon war, Palestinian communities, like Jewish ones,
came under Hizballah rocket fire from southern Lebanon. Although
18 Palestinian citizens were killed in the north, the minority’s
political sympathies remained largely with Hasan Nasrallah, Hizballah’s
leader, throughout. Most Palestinian citizens were impressed
by Nasrallah’s knowledge of the Israeli political scene and grasp
of their experiences inside a Jewish state, and also believed
-- unlike their Jewish compatriots -- that Israel, not Hizballah,
had willed the hostilities. But even after a truce was called
in its battle with Hizballah, Israel entered a new phase of conflict
with its Palestinian citizens. The first major political casualty
would be Azmi Bishara, the outspoken leader of the Tajammu‘ party,
who had been a thorn in Israel’s side for a decade with his popular
campaign to reform Israel from a Jewish state into a “state of
all its citizens.” In the wake of the 2006 war, Bishara found
himself facing a new and potent “one-size-fits-all” accusation
of spying for Hizballah. The charge, publicized by the Shinbet
while he was abroad in the spring of 2007, left him in exile.
The Gaza attack
of 2008 further stoked suspicions of Palestinian citizens’ disloyalty.
Reflecting the polarization of majority-minority worldviews,
demonstrations against Israel’s three-week attack on Gaza, Operation
Cast Lead, were organized and supported chiefly by the Palestinian
minority.
Historians
have noted the decades of quietism from the Palestinian minority
that followed Israel’s establishment in 1948. That trait can
be attributed, initially at least, to the destruction of Palestinian
society before and during the 1948 war: Most Palestinians left
in the new Jewish state following the flight of 80 percent of
their compatriots lived in poor, rural communities that had little
direct involvement in national politics and were administered
by the Israeli army until 1966. For two decades, Palestinian
society would struggle to regenerate a leadership under the strictures
of military rule. When a leadership did belatedly emerge in the
late 1970s and 1980s, the minority’s representatives remained
largely passive, awaiting directions from the PLO leadership
in exile. In essence, they needed an answer to the question of
what ultimate goal the Palestinian struggle aspired to: Was it
to liberate the minority from its compromised existence in a
Jewish state, presumably in some variation of the one-state model,
or to trade the minority for peace in a partitioned territory?
When the answer
came with the 1993 Oslo accord -- they were to remain inside
Israel as an ethnic minority -- the Palestinian leadership responded
with a tentative civil rights movement aimed at ending Israel’s
self-definition as a Jewish state. Bishara’s “state of all its
citizens” slogan would be the rallying cry through the late 1990s.
But the October 2000 events showed in lethal fashion that Israel
was not ready to concede, or even debate, the privileges enjoyed
by the Jewish majority. Change was not going to occur from within.
Looking
to the Outside World
Faced with
Israeli intransigence, the Palestinian minority’s leadership
began looking outside Israel for support. Civil society organizations
led the way by focusing on advocacy that highlighted the minority’s
plight to international bodies such as the UN and the European
Union. In quick succession in late 2006 and early 2007, two Palestinian
NGOs, Mada and Adalah, and the Higher Follow-Up Committee each
published a separate position paper in English -- collectively
nicknamed the “Vision Documents” -- that argued for Israel’s
transformation into a liberal democracy. The Shinbet signaled
clearly that it regarded these documents as an “existential threat”
to Israel. With the approval of the attorney general, the Shinbet’s
director, Yuval Diskin, issued a stark warning to the authors:
“The Shinbet is required to thwart subversive activity by elements
who wish to harm the nature of the State of Israel as a democratic
Jewish State -- even if they act by means of democratically provided
tools -- by virtue of the principle of ‘defensive democracy.’”
This political
backdrop was on view as Palestinian NGOs in Israel not only led
non-violent demonstrations against Operation Cast Lead in December
2008 but also highlighted to the world the police repression
of their protests, which led to the arrest of many hundreds of
activists, including children. The involvement of Israeli-Palestinian
NGOs in assisting the Goldstone investigations in 2009 only fueled
the sense among Israeli Jews that the minority had been unmasked
as a fifth column. And almost as background music to these developments,
the separate prosecutions of two Palestinian MKs have gathered
steam: Muhammad Baraka, head of the joint Palestinian-Jewish
Communist party, Jabha (Hadash in Hebrew), is charged with attacking
security personnel during protests; and Sa‘id Nafa‘, a Druze
member of the Tajammu‘ party, is to stand trial for traveling
to Syria with a delegation of Druze leaders.
In addition,
since Cast Lead, Israeli-Palestinian NGOs have deepened their
solidarity with Palestinians under occupation by becoming actively
engaged in a fledgling international movement to boycott Israel.
Their intimate familiarity with the self-defined Jewish state
and their direct experiences of institutional discrimination
make them persuasive advocates for such a boycott, as Israel’s
leadership appeared to appreciate. It was not surprising, therefore,
that in May Amir Makhoul, head of Ittijah, an umbrella organization
for Palestinian civil society groups in Israel, became the latest
major public figure to run afoul of the Shinbet.
During Cast
Lead, Makhoul had been called in for interrogation by the Shinbet
over his role in organizing the protests, and threatened that,
if he continued his activities, he might be “disappeared to Gaza.”
His brother, ‘Isam Makhoul, a former Jabha MK, said he now regarded
that threat as tellingly prophetic. In early May, Amir Makhoul
was arrested and effectively “disappeared” when a blanket gag
order was imposed on his detention. The gag was only lifted when
word spread on the Internet. After nearly two weeks, during which
time Makhoul was denied access to lawyers and says he was repeatedly
tortured, the Shinbet had the confession they were seeking. (At
the same time, another community activist, ‘Umar Sa‘id, was arrested.
Apparently his confession will provide a vital link in the Shinbet’s
claims against Makhoul.) In a pattern now becoming familiar,
Makhoul was charged with spying on behalf of Hizballah, supposedly
providing the Lebanese militia with the locations of security
facilities and, more vaguely, helping it with analyses of Israeli
society and political trends.
Kidnapped
on the High Seas
Following
the May 31 attack on the flotilla, Palestinians inside Israel
waited anxiously all day for news of Sheikh Ra’id Salah’s condition,
and that of the other four Israeli-Palestinian participants,
as nearly 700 peace activists were forcibly brought to the Israeli
port of Ashdod on their captured vessels. As the world debated
the finer points of maritime law, Palestinian citizens who are
Muslims wondered whether their state’s act of piracy -- or “state-sponsored
terrorism,” as the Higher Follow-Up Committee referred to it
-- had included executing their spiritual leader. In Umm al-Fahm,
Salah’s home town in northern Israel, stone-throwing youths and
police briefly clashed. Apparently keen to preempt further damage
to Israel’s image from the sheikh’s presumed death, the Israeli
media reported that commandos had fired at Salah in an act of
self-defense, after shots had been seen coming from his cabin.
Later, Salah’s wife was escorted to a hospital operating room
by Israeli officials who appeared to believe the sheikh was the
seriously injured man on the operating table. He was not.
A little more
than 24 hours after the Israeli navy’s raid, it emerged that
Salah and three other Israeli-Palestinians had been remanded
into custody for a week, while suspicions that they had attacked
the commandos were investigated. The next day, June 2, as Israel
was forced to release the international peace activists under
severe US and Turkish pressure, Adalah, a legal center for the
Palestinian minority, pointed out that the four were facing “selective”
investigation and possible prosecution for alleged acts committed
outside Israel’s jurisdiction. The courts released them to a
week of house arrest, though they are still being investigated
for possession of weapons and conspiracy to commit an offense,
and are banned from leaving the country. Salah’s release provoked
a flood of complaints from Jewish politicians. A typical response
came from Yisrael Hasson, of the supposedly centrist Kadima party
and a former deputy head of the Shinbet, who equated the release
of Salah with that of the late Sheikh Ahmad Yasin, founder of
Hamas. “In 1997 Bibi [Netanyahu] and Lieberman released Sheikh
Yasin, and in 2010, they’re releasing Salah,” he said. (Yasin
was assassinated by Israel in 2004.)
In his court
appearance, Salah confirmed the minority’s suspicions of an attempted
assassination, saying the “soldiers tried to kill me. They fired
in the direction of someone else they thought was me.” Salah’s
deputy, Sheikh Kamil Khatib, claimed Netanyahu and Defense Minister
Ehud Barak had plotted to kill the sheikh.
One of the
first people on the flotilla to be released, on the morning following
the commando attack, was Hanin Zu‘bi, after police were advised
that her parliamentary immunity ruled out her continuing detention.
In the short time she was held, however, she says she was interviewed
three times by police, who questioned her about possessing a
weapon. Zu‘bi hurried back to her home town of Nazareth to hold
a press conference. She offered an account of the commando raid
that would be substantiated by the other passengers after their
release but at this early stage was chiefly notable for conflicting
in almost every respect with a narrative being hastily constructed
by Israeli officials. Israel, which had seized all the passengers’
cameras and video equipment, slowly released heavily edited,
and in some cases doctored, video and audio footage to try to
support its claims. (Huwaida Arraf, a Palestinian-American in
the convoy, identified her own voice in recorded transmissions
said by Israel to be from the Mavi Marmara. But Arraf
had been aboard a smaller vessel.)
Israel argued
that many of the passengers had been armed with knives and even
guns; that they had attacked and tried to “lynch” soldiers who
arrived “almost barefoot,” as minister Benny Begin told the BBC;
that several soldiers had been “kidnapped” and their lives put
at risk by armed passengers; and that the soldiers had held off
opening fire until the last possible moment, when their lives
were in substantial danger. To make this improbable story seem
more plausible, Israel’s deputy foreign minister, Danny Ayalon,
also claimed that many of the passengers, particularly the Turkish
contingent belonging to an Islamic humanitarian organization,
were really terrorists allied with al-Qaeda -- an allegation
the Foreign Ministry eventually had to withdraw, though the claim
that there were terrorists on board the Mavi Marmara was
maintained.
Zu‘bi, by
contrast, argued that their ships had been attacked far out in
international waters in darkness, creating confusion and panic;
that the navy had opened fire on the lead ship, the Mavi Marmara,
where most of the activists were, before a single commando had
stepped onto the deck; that she was sure there were no weapons
on board the Marmara and that a later search by the navy
that she witnessed revealed none; that two of the three bodies
she saw had gunshot wounds to the head, indicating executions
(later autopsies in Turkey would reveal five had wounds to the
head, and that the nine dead had been shot a total of 30 times,
often from close range); and that she had witnessed two passengers
slowly bleed to death after her attempts to alert the soldiers
in Hebrew were ignored. She concluded: “Israel had days to plan
this military operation. They wanted many deaths to terrorize
us and to send a message that no future aid convoys should try
to break the siege of Gaza.”
Fisticuffs
in the Knesset
A brief but
stormy debate between Palestinian and Jewish MKs on Israel’s
attack on the aid flotilla took place the next day, June 2, but
was cut short by Matan Vilnai, the deputy defense minister, who
transferred it to the less public arena of the foreign affairs
committee. Zu‘bi, however, managed to revive the debate in the
chamber by demanding her right to make a five-minute statement.
The ensuing scenes took aback even seasoned politicians such
as Yossi Sarid, a dovish former minister. He observed: “For the
first time in its history, the Knesset came dangerously close
to fisticuffs, with only a small step separating an exchange
of words and an exchange of blows.”
Many MKs,
including ministers, had left the chamber in protest as Zu‘bi
rose to speak. As she stood at the podium, a deputy speaker who
had been left in charge struggled to contain the outpouring of
loathing directed at Zu‘bi as Jewish parliamentarians shouted
the epithets “traitor,” “terrorist” and worse at the novice legislator.
Anastasia Michaeli, a far-right MK from Lieberman’s party, charged
the podium and was intercepted by security guards as she tried
to grab Zu‘bi. (Michaeli was later invited to address an anti-violence
conference sponsored by the Interior Ministry in which she defended
her actions, saying: “I couldn’t allow myself to stay silent.
I acted out of a conviction that we will not allow anyone to
harm Israel’s sovereignty.”) After five minutes of pandemonium,
the speaker, Reuven Rivlin, arrived to try to restore order.
Despite a dozen MKs being ejected, Zu‘bi barely uttered a few
sentences, between long enforced pauses as MKs spewed out abuse
and personal insults -- including one who yelled “Check if she
has a knife!” -- before Rivlin brought her speech to an abrupt
end.
Some observers
were surprised that the insults hurled at Zu‘bi were not restricted
to the right-wing MKs. In fact, legislators from the opposition
Kadima party were as vehement and abusive in their denunciations.
One, Yulia Shamalov Berkovitz, called out that the Palestinian
MKs were “parliamentary spies.” Zu‘bi, an articulate woman who
previously headed a media monitoring center, deftly pressed the
buttons most likely to produce uproar in the Knesset. In her
brief address, she told the MKs that it was a “mitzvah,”
or Jewish holy commandment, to join the flotilla and break the
siege of Gaza; she called for an international inquiry to hold
Israel to account; and she demanded the return of photographs
and video footage confiscated from the passengers, noting that
this evidence would prove who was telling the truth about what
had occurred.
Sarid, the
former leader of Israel’s tiny left-Zionist party, Meretz, may
have been appalled by the behavior in the chamber but he was
no more sympathetic to Zu‘bi than the rioting MKs. He did not
accuse her of treason like the right wing, but he was equally
dismissive of her participation in the flotilla. He blamed her
for grandstanding and, smugly positioning himself as if separating
disputatious children, castigated her in the same terms as her
near-assailant Michaeli. “Don’t think for a moment that the vitriol
on either side was born of genuine outrage. Everything was pre-planned
and calculated to gain the public’s adoration, whatever the constituency,”
he observed.
A Darker
Agenda
Sarid’s putdown
was by far the gentlest treatment Zu‘bi would receive at the
hands of Jewish politicians, public and the local media. In a
poll conducted by Tel Aviv University for Ha’aretz, 80
percent of Israeli Jews said they thought Zu‘bi should be punished
for joining the flotilla. Shortly after her Knesset appearance,
a Facebook page in Hebrew was set up calling for her execution,
quickly garnering thousands of members who appeared unashamed
to put their names to such a campaign. Death threats poured into
Zu‘bi’s office -- more than were ever sent to Azmi Bishara, according
to Zu‘bi’s assistant who once ran Bishara’s office -- and flowed
at a lesser rate into the offices of the other Palestinian MKs
as well. Overnight Zu‘bi had swept Salah from the top slot in
the Jewish majority’s list of monsters. Knesset officials outfitted
Zu‘bi with a bodyguard after the Shinbet reported that it was
aware of more than a dozen concrete plots to kill her.
The focus
in the days following the commando raid has been chiefly on Zu‘bi.
Eli Yishai, the interior minister and demagogic leader of the
ultra-Orthodox Shas party, got the ball rolling by announcing
that he was applying to the attorney general for approval to
revoke Zu‘bi’s citizenship. Legal safeguards should mean he is
unlikely to succeed, but the struggle to do so will strengthen
the right and weaken the already besieged legal establishment
in Israel. Yishai has also promised to present legislation to
revoke the citizenship anyone defined as a traitor, saying of
such a bill: “I believe most of the people support this and that
the Supreme Court will accept it.”
In a further
indication of the right’s ascendancy, the Knesset’s house committee
agreed a week after the attack on the flotilla to strip Zu‘bi
of several parliamentary privileges, including banning her from
leaving the country by confiscating her diplomatic passport and
denying her the right to claim legal costs -- moves that are
designed to look as though the ground is being prepared to put
her on trial. State prosecutors told the committee that she is
still being investigated for attempting to enter a closed military
zone (that is, Gaza) and violence against commandos. Yariv Levin,
head of the committee and a senior member of Netanyhu’s Likud
party, claimed: “The committee’s decision expresses the feelings
of the entire nation that harsh steps should be taken against
MKs who harm Israel Defense Forces soldiers and question our
ability to be here. MK Zu‘bi now knows that she will be made
to foot the bill for her behavior.”
The campaign
to denigrate Zu‘bi, as Levin’s comment and Yishai’s proposed
bill suggest, has been hijacked by a darker agenda of suggesting
more generally the treachery of the Palestinian leadership in
Israel and, mostly implicitly so far, the Palestinian citizens
whom they represent. The most significant move against the minority
since the commando raid was the submission of a bill -- already
nicknamed the “Zu‘bi law” -- that would allow a sitting MK to
be expelled from the parliament if he or she does any of the
following: deny Israel’s existence as a Jewish and democratic
state; incite racism; or support the armed struggle of a terrorist
group. Given the highly distorted definitions used in Israeli
political discourse, such legislation could easily be used to
expel all ten of the Palestinian MKs serving in Palestinian parties
or the joint Palestinian-Jewish Communist party. The bill’s backers
appear to believe that this may be a more effective way to ban
the Palestinian parties than their previous attempts during general
election campaigns through the partisan Central Elections Committee.
The courts have consistently, if narrowly, overturned the Committee’s
decisions.
The Zu‘bi
law is only the latest in a steady stream of what have been termed
“loyalty laws” submitted since Netanyahu came to power in 2009.
Ja‘far Farah, director of the Mossawa advocacy group for the
Palestinian minority, says 23 bills have been proposed to limit
the freedoms and rights of Palestinian citizens or their leaders
over the past year. The flagrantly anti-democratic nature of
these bills has resulted in most being rejected at an early stage
by a ministerial committee on the advice of legal officials.
But as pressure builds -- and incidents like Makhoul’s arrest
and Zu‘bi’s defense of the aid flotilla outrage the Jewish majority
-- breaches in the dam are widening. The Nakba Law, which can
be used to end state funding for any organization or institution
that commemorates the dispossession of the Palestinians in the
1948 war, is the most notable to have passed. Many similar loyalty
bills directed at the minority and their leaders are in the pipeline.
One being considered would require MKs to swear allegiance to
Israel as a Jewish and Zionist state, and another would revoke
the citizenship of anyone convicted of spying or terrorism.
In a commentary
in the liberal Ha’aretz newspaper, Ruth Gavison, a distinguished
law professor and founder of the Association for Civil Rights
in Israel, the oldest and largest human rights group in the country,
hinted at an emerging Jewish consensus against the Palestinian
minority that cuts across all Jewish political divisions. While
denouncing the demagoguery of the right, she observed that “it
can be argued -- even if it is not necessary to do so -- that
participation in international activities likely to embarrass
the state and thwart its policies (such as unofficial visits
to enemy states) should be seen as reason enough to prevent a
person from serving as a member of Knesset, in accordance with
reasonable judicial review process.”
Darker
Still
Unlike the
case of Operation Cast Lead, protests by Palestinian citizens
against the lethal raid on the aid flotilla have been mostly
muted, apart from the brief period when it appeared that Salah
might have been killed. The relative quiet may in part reflect
the short timeline of the events: The last peace activists had
been deported within three days. But the strength of feeling
among the minority was evident from the strict observation of
a general strike called for June 1 by the Palestinian leadership.
More likely, the reluctance by Palestinian citizens to come out
onto the streets to protest can be ascribed to the current political
climate in Israel. When Palestinian students demonstrated alongside
small numbers of Jewish left-wing activists in the main universities,
their numbers were dwarfed by counter-demonstrations by right-wing
students, mobilized by a rapidly growing nationalist youth movement
called Im Tirtzu. The defining image of Israel’s reaction to
the commando raid was of mobs of young right-wing Jews, almost
lost in a sea of blue-and-white flags, baying through the night
in fury at the Turkish embassy in Tel Aviv.
If the blockade
on Gaza is justified in the minds of Israeli Jews as collective
punishment of the enclave’s Palestinian population for supporting
Hamas, a similar skewed logic is being applied to Israel’s Palestinian
citizens. According to this thinking, those who sent Zu‘bi to
the Knesset and those who revere Salah should be held accountable
-- and punished -- for their representatives’ actions. The minority
seems only too aware that the calls to expel Zu‘bi from the Knesset
or revoke her citizenship will not end there. A poll by Haifa
University in May showed that 62 percent of Palestinian citizens
feared they are under threat of expulsion from Israel. And Israel’s
mood is likely to grow darker still.

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