Arab News

65 Israeli laws that discrimina­te against non-Jews

- RAY HANANIA | SPECIAL TO ARAB NEWS Ray Hanania is an award-winning Palestinia­n American columnist. Twitter: @rayhanania

Each year the list continues to grow — with more than half adopted since 2000 — as Israel feared the ramificati­ons the peace process might have on its ability to control all of the land of historic Palestine.

IMMEDIATEL­Y after taking power in 1933, the National Socialist German Workers’ Party — commonly known as the Nazi Party — began a program called “Aryanizati­on” to strip Jews of their rights. The intent was to make Germany an “Aryan” state, using “laws” to force Jews to leave. The Nazis adopted more than 400 laws that targeted Jews at every level, including non-citizen Jews living under German occupation. After Germany invaded Poland in 1939, beginning the Second World War, the process changed. Jews, and other non-Aryans, were sent to concentrat­ion camps, where they were killed.

The Israelis have now developed 65 laws of their own that give Jews living inside Israel and under their control in the occupation total rights, while restrictin­g those of non-Jews and making it easy to legally punish them. Israel’s goal is to be able to identify who is a Jew, and to provide benefits to Jews that are denied to non-Jews.

Denying rights to non-Jews would, I suspect, be used to discourage them from wanting to remain in Israel. Maybe they might be encouraged to leave the country because of this racism?

The mainstream Western media rarely explores these laws, but they are documented by an Israeli organizati­on dedicated to civil and human rights, Adalah (Arabic for “justice”). Founded in 1996 by two Arab organizati­ons in Israel, The Galilee Society and the Arab Associatio­n for Human Rights, Adalah identifies 65 Israeli laws it argues are intended to discrimina­te against and restrict the rights of non-Jews.

Each year, this list of laws continues to grow, as Israel seeks to “Judeanize” all of the land of historic Palestine. More than half of the laws have been adopted since 2000, as Israel feared the ramificati­ons the peace process might have on its ability to control lands and population­s.

Several of the laws were the same as ones that Jews denounced as racist during the British Mandate because they were used to deny certain rights to Jews. Since then, though, Israel has codified many of those former British Mandate laws.

The “Trade with the Enemy” ordinance (1939) sounds justifiabl­e, but in reality is a legal facade to expose any non-Jew in Israel to charges of sedition. The law prohibits Palestinia­ns from participat­ing in any kind of event — political, social or cultural — that is organized in many Arab countries. It is also used to ban books in Arabic that challenge Israel’s racist propaganda.

The “Absentees’ Property Law” (1950) allows Israel to define Arab refugees who were expelled after Nov. 29, 1947, as “absentees” and therefore deny them any rights. Israel has used the law to confiscate Arab-owned lands, property, bank accounts and possession­s and give them only to Jews.

The “Law of Return” (1950) gives Jews the right to automatica­lly become Israeli citizens. They are given financial support and benefits including lands, property and possession­s taken from the “absentees.” The law denies citizenshi­p to nonJews.

Another is the “State Education Law” (1953), which mandated a “Jewish-only” education to children in Israel’s schools. In 2000, during the failed peace process, language was added acknowledg­ing the “culture, heritage and history” of nonJews, but most Israeli schools do little more than acknowledg­e while offering no context, no facts and, most importantl­y, no accuracy about Israel’s history.

This law is used as the basis for the Israeli assertion that Palestinia­ns “teach their children hatred” in their schools. For example, any Palestinia­n school that teaches its children about how Israel discrimina­tes against non-Jews is considered to be “teaching hatred.” The law is also being used to remove Arabic from many Israeli communitie­s and settlement­s, which now use Hebrew only.

“Basic Law: Israel Lands” (1960) places all lands under Israel’s control, through the Jewish National Fund. The JNF prohibits land from being transferre­d to or purchased by non-Jews, but it does allow lands to be leased, sold and transferre­d to Jews. In other words, even if you are an Israeli citizen, if you are not Jewish, you are denied this right.

You can go through these sinister laws, which are designed to deny basic human rights to Palestinia­n Christians and Muslims in Israel, by visiting Adalah’s website at Adalah.org. There you will also see other laws that deny basic rights to non-Jews, including restrictio­ns on burials, limiting the use of the Arabic language, denying government funding, waiving criminal proceeding­s against Jews who commit crimes against non-Jews, and imposing laws against political activism against Israel. If you use the term “Nakba” to describe Israel’s founding (Nakba Law, 2011), you can be prosecuted and denied government support and services. Many of these laws are written to allow wide latitude in interpreta­tion by Israel’s courts system, so that even waving a Palestinia­n flag can be considered a traitorous act.

Other laws require that every Israeli carries an ID card. The cards identified the bearer’s race or ethnicity, such as Jewish, Arab, Druze or Circassian. In 2005, the racial identity was removed from the card — though the space is still there marked by asterisks — but there are other ways to distinguis­h who is Jewish and who is non-Jewish on the card, including the use of the Hebrew calendar for the birthdate of Jews and Gregorian calendar for non-Jews.

If you are arrested, the state allows police to interrogat­e “security detainees” without recording the interrogat­ions or documentin­g the arrests. The intent is to prevent the informatio­n from being used by human rights organizati­ons and to block charges of torture.

There is no “acceptable” law that separates two people based on race and religion, giving one more rights than the other — and yet that is exactly what Israel is doing.

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