Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ethiopian protests put focus on racism in Israel

Video shows policeman punching, beating ethnic soldier

- By LUKE BAKER REUTERS

“I was shocked by the (video) footage. We cannot accept it, and we will change it.’’ BENJAMIN NETANYAHU ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER, VIA TWITTER

JERUSALEM — Images of Israeli police firing stun grenades are usually set in the West Bank and involve Palestinia­n protesters. But on Sunday the situation was quite different — riot police battling thousands of Ethiopian Jews in the center of Tel Aviv.

The spark was a week-old video showing two Israeli policemen punching, beating and trying to arrest an Israeli soldier of Ethiopian descent in what appeared to be an unprovoked attack.

The two-minute video is the latest in a string of incidents that have raised uncomforta­ble questions about Israel’s treatment of ethnic minorities and its struggle to integrate newcomers into broader society, whether Jews or nonJews.

On Monday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met the soldier, Damas Fikadeh, at his Jerusalem office and hugged him.

“I was shocked by the (video) footage,” he said on Twitter. “We cannot accept it, and we will change it.”

Some commentato­rs have highlighte­d latent racism in a country that has absorbed millions of migrants over the past 60 years but still agonizes over difference­s between East European and Middle Eastern Jews, relations with its large Arab minority, and how to handle more recent arrivals from Africa.

“There is a problem, there are discrimina­tion issues, there is racism in Israel,” said Fentahun Assefa-Dawit, the director of Tebeka, an advocacy group for Ethiopian Israelis, who number around 130,000, many of them born in Israel.

“We want the prime minister to take this matter into his hands,” he said moments before he was due to meet Netanyahu. “We urge him, we demand of him, to bring these issues to an end.”

In the run-up to Israel’s election in March and the weeks since there have been a series of violent incidents, comments by politician­s and policy proposals that have fueled concerns the country has a race problem - not just when it comes to the 20 percent Arab population but to minority Jewish groups too.

Last week, an Ethiopian Jew said he was beaten by inspectors from Israel’s population and immigratio­n authority because they thought he was a migrant from Sudan or Eritrea. The immigratio­n authority said the man attacked the inspectors first.

On the day of the election on March 17, fearing he could lose, Netanyahu said “Arab voters are coming out in droves”, comments that offended the Arab-Israeli population and drew accusation­s of racism. The prime minister later apologized.

For months, Israel has been threatenin­g to imprison thousands of illegal African migrants if they do not agree to be deported to third countries in Africa, despite the Supreme Court expressing deep reservatio­ns about the policy.

In the 1990s, Israeli officials confirmed that blood donated by Ethiopian Israelis had been thrown away out of fear that it could be infected by HIV and other diseases.

Racism in Israeli society is “far more commonplac­e and far more toxic than we dare tell ourselves,” political commentato­r Nahum Barnea wrote in Yediot Ahronoth on Monday.

Ben Caspit, a columnist with Maariv newspaper, said it was not up to Netanyahu to resolve how the Ethiopian community is treated but for all Israelis to wake up and address it.

“The people who are to blame for the terrible things that the members of this lovely community have been forced to undergo on a daily basis is us,” he said.

“Those among us who turn up their noses when an Ethiopian family enters the neighborho­od, those among us who are not happy to see Ethiopian children in their children’s classroom.”

Around 20,000 Ethiopian Jews, who trace their roots to the biblical King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba, were brought to Israel on secret flights in the mid 1980s and early 1990s.

The offspring of those early arrivals have worked hard to integrate, many serving in elite units of the army with distinctio­n.

An Ethiopian woman won a recent Miss Israel beauty contest. But after mandatory military service, acceptance in the workplace has proved more of a struggle for many.

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