The National - News

ISRAEL’S FAR-RIGHT MOVES TO STRIP ARABIC OF OFFICIAL LANGUAGE STATUS

▶ Prime Minister Netanyahu takes lead from extremists in push to make Hebrew the sole state language of country

- BEN LYNFIELD Jerusalem

Right-wing Jewish nationalis­ts backed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are moving closer to stripping Arabic of its longstandi­ng status as an official language in Israel.

They are casting Arabic and those who encourage its presence as a threat to Israel’s identity as a Jewish state and say the move is vital to ensure primacy for Hebrew.

Arab and left-wing Jewish critics say the change will further undermine the status of Israel’s Arab minority, which makes up 20 per cent of the population, and also send a message to the Middle East as a whole that Israel does not wish to be part of the region.

“Marginalis­ation of language is marginalis­ation of the citizens who speak that language,” said former Knesset member Issam Makhoul as the Knesset marked its third annual Arabic Language Day last Tuesday in the shadow of the right-wing push.

The day included presentati­ons by members of the Knesset, civil society groups and scholars on the status of the language.

The proposed change is part of a fervently nationalis­tic bill, Israel as the Nation State of the Jewish People, that passed its first reading in May. Mr Netanyahu said last week he wants it to pass second and third readings and become law by the end of the Knesset session on July 18.

The bill specifies that Hebrew is the “state language” and that the right of self-determinat­ion in Israel is reserved exclusivel­y for Jews. Its provisions enable residentia­l communitie­s to be establishe­d for Jews only, barring Arabs in a move critics liken to apartheid.

Arabic was designated an official language under the British mandate, and Israel formally maintained this status. Now, however, under the bill it will no longer be official, but be rather vaguely defined as having a “special status”. In an apparent palliative to critics of the demotion, the bill says that nothing should be done “to harm the standing of Arabic in practice as it is on the eve of this basic law going into force”.

Going after Arabic – and the nationalit­y bill as a whole – are part of Mr Netanyahu’s tactic to increase his support through anti-Arab stances and statements, according to Leslie Susser, former political editor of The Jerusalem Report magazine. “By playing the anti-Arab card, he’s able to get votes for free, he’s able to get support from the Israeli right, which is most of Israel,” Mr Susser said.

Despite Arabic being an official language, it was never in practice equal to Hebrew, said Yoni Mendel, the author of Creation of Israeli Arabic and a scholar at the Van Leer Institute think tank in Jerusalem. “Many ministries do not translate their websites, you can’t really correspond with authoritie­s in Arabic, you can’t get your high school matriculat­ion statement in Arabic and there is no simultaneo­us translatio­n of Knesset sessions,” he said.

In the face of sluggishne­ss to use Arabic, Arab rights organisati­ons have petitioned the courts to enforce and promote its use, with marked success. In some cases, the very knowledge that there is legal recourse for Arabic advocates is enough to elicit translatio­ns into Arabic. Arab Knesset member Jamal Zahalka said he recently successful­ly intervened with Haifa University to promote Arabic on campus. “They responded positively because they knew that if they didn’t, the supreme court would force them,” he said. “If now Arabic loses its official status, it will be a heavy blow because we won’t be able to use the courts to force authoritie­s and institutio­ns to use Arabic.”

That is exactly what backers of the bill want. They say limiting the use of Arabic in the public sphere is essential to protecting Israel’s Jewish identity. “The approach that is at the basis of the law, which I think is justified, is that bilinguali­sm of the state is really a significan­t expression of binational­ism,” said Adi Arbel, who represente­d the Institute for Zionist Strategies, a right-wing think tank, in Knesset deliberati­ons on the drafting of the nationalit­y bill. “There is sharp opposition against the Arab population and mainly the Arab Knesset members using the language as a way to gnaw away at the status of the state of Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people.

“The attempts to diminish the supremacy of the Hebrew language in the public sphere are part of the attempts of the Arabs of Israel, of the leaders of the Arabs of Israel, to come out against the idea of the state of Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people.”

Mr Mendel has a different perspectiv­e on Arabic’s impending demotion. “This is part of the new Israeli nationalis­tic, to say the least, policies that do not see the Arab citizens of Israel as equals or as citizens.”

 ?? Heidi Levine for The National ?? Preschool play in a classroom in Haifa shows painted drawers and childrens’ drawings with the names of pupils in both the Arabic and Hebrew
Heidi Levine for The National Preschool play in a classroom in Haifa shows painted drawers and childrens’ drawings with the names of pupils in both the Arabic and Hebrew
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