Stabroek News Sunday

Israel’s Arab minority rallies against new nation-state law

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TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Thousands of protesters rallied in Tel Aviv on Saturday against Israel’s new law declaring it the nation-state of the Jewish people, legislatio­n that has angered the country’s Arab minority and drawn criticism abroad.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has defended the law, which says only Jews have the right of self-determinat­ion in the country and downgrades Arabic from an official language, saying it is necessary in order to fend off Palestinia­n challenges to Jewish self-determinat­ion.

The protesters, mostly Israeli Arabs, waved Palestinia­n flags and held up signs that read ‘equality’ in Arabic and Hebrew.

“The law legitimize­s racism,” said Laila al-Sana, 19, from a Bedouin village in Israel’s southern Negev desert. “It’s very important to show we are here, to resist,” she said.

Israel’s Arab population comprises mainly descendant­s of the Palestinia­ns who remained on their land after the 1948 war at the time of the creation of the modern state of Israel. Hundreds of thousands were forced to leave their homes or fled.

Many of Israel’s Arab citizens also identify as Palestinia­n. They make up about a fifth of the state’s 9 million people. Israeli law grants them full equal rights, but many say they face discrimina­tion and are treated as second-class citizens.

“When I heard about the law I felt I should defend my hometown, our land, the land of my ancestors,” said 68-yearold Sheikha Dabbah at the rally.

Largely declarativ­e, the law was enacted just after the 70th anniversar­y of the birth of the state of Israel.

It stipulates that “Israel is the historic homeland of the Jewish people and they have an exclusive right to national selfdeterm­ination in it”. It also downgrades Arabic from an official language alongside Hebrew to a “special status.”

“I feel ashamed that after 70 years I have to accentuate my nationalis­m instead of being generous towards all those who live here,” said Gila Zamir, 58, a Jewish Israeli from the Arab-Jewish city Haifa.

Netanyahu posted on his Twitter page a video from the demonstrat­ion of a few protesters waving the Palestinia­n flag and chanting: “With spirit, with blood we shall redeem you, Palestine” and wrote: “There is no better evidence of the nation-law’s necessity.” Separate TV footage showed a few Israeli flags being waved.

Critics have said the new law is undemocrat­ic because it differenti­ates between Jewish and non-Jewish citizens. Its defenders say civil equality is guaranteed in existing legislatio­n.

Arab leaders in Israel have said the law verges on apartheid. Rights groups and Jewish groups in the Diaspora have spoken against the legislatio­n, as have the EU, Egypt and Israel’s own president.

Last Saturday a protest against the law by Israel’s Druze community, which numbers about 120,000 citizens, drew a far larger crowd.

The Druze are ethnic Arab members of a religious minority that is an offshoot of Islam incorporat­ing elements of other faiths.

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