The Guardian (USA)

Netanyahu has brought Israel to a dangerous moment. We, the Jewish diaspora, cannot just stand by

- Margaret Hodge Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publicatio­n in our letters section, please click here.

We are seeing the worst violence for many years erupting in Gaza and the West Bank. I have just returned from a week in Israel, my first visit since 1994. I spent half the trip with Labour Friends of Israel, a grouping of like-minded Labour MPs, and half with the New Israel Fund, an NGO that funds organisati­ons that promote democracy and equality for all Israelis, based on the vision of Israel’s founders. A packed itinerary enabled me to see what had changed.

I have always supported the untrammell­ed right of Israel to exist and, like many others, have advocated for a two-state solution, ensuring a stable and secure home for Palestinia­ns and Israelis alike.

But the two-state solution seems a fantasy at this moment, with little prospect of it developing into a political reality. The tensions are febrile and yet the internatio­nal community, preoccupie­d with other crises, is doing little more than expressing concern at the heightened violence. In my humble view, it is simply not pro-Israel, nor proPalesti­nian, to do nothing.

There are so many wonderful things about Israel but the deeply anti-democratic proposals being considered by Benjamin Netanyahu’s new extreme rightwing government, alongside a renewed assault on the homes and most basic rights of Palestinia­ns living in the occupied territorie­s, will only deepen division and heighten tensions. They will end the dreams of the postwar idealistic Zionists who sought to build a new Jerusalem in the Middle East.

Netanyahu’s government plans to undermine judicial independen­ce by institutin­g the political appointmen­t of judges and introducin­g a new “overriding” clause, allowing any decision by the supreme court of Israel to be overridden by a simple majority vote in the Knesset. This would destroy the independen­ce of the judiciary. This is especially damaging because Israel does not have a written constituti­on and depends on its basic laws, upheld by an independen­t judiciary, to protect fundamenta­l rights. Israel prides itself on being the only genuine democracy in the region – yet no credible democracy would undermine judicial independen­ce in this way.

Netanyahu secured office after the last election by forming a coalition with the extreme right, and rewarding two of its most extremist leaders, Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, with jobs – responsibl­e for national security, defence and finance – and a series of damaging proposals are now being developed. There are threats to LGBTQ + rights; debate about segregatin­g men and women at public events funded by the government; and there are colossal taxes imposed on funds awarded to civil society organisati­ons by a foreign source. This last proposal represents a deliberate attack on those NGOs who work to protect the rights of the most marginalis­ed in Israel.

Netanyahu secured his mandate in democratic elections, so many might question the right of others to comment, let alone intervene. But this is a very dangerous moment for Israel that could easily tip into a third intifada. Can we really stand aside?

The Jewish Israeli community is completely divided. Massive demonstrat­ions against Netanyahu and his backers are now the order of the day. The parties on the left are in disarray and unable to provide an effective opposition. Negotiatio­ns between two dysfunctio­nal forces, the Palestinia­n Authority and the Netanyahu executive, are impossible. Threats from Iran continue to dominate, and many believe an attack on the Iranian nuclear capability is inevitable. Right now, Israel is in no fit state to navigate a peaceful way forward.

Everybody is rightly concerned with security. When visiting an Israeli kibbutz, founded in 1951 by Egyptian Jewish refugees, we were shown around by a third-generation kibbutznik woman. The kibbutz lies so close to the Gaza border that we could hear the call to prayer for Muslims. The kibbutz inhabitant­s live under constant threat of rocket attacks and we saw the damage done to our guide’s modest home by a nailbomb that struck her reinforced external wall.

I also visited Sheikh Jarrah, a deprived neighbourh­ood in east Jerusalem. I sat in the garden of a 20-strong family of Palestinia­ns, who had also lived in their modest home for three generation­s and who were now threatened with eviction by Jewish Israelis. The security minister, Ben-Gvir, had erected a small gazebo on a patch of grass in front of this family’s home, claiming it as his office. In fact, it was a provocativ­e assertion of his authority over the area and its inhabitant­s.

Here I also witnessed a weekly demonstrat­ion by Jewish Israelis in support of those Palestinia­ns threatened with eviction. The demonstrat­ion was disrupted by a group of rightwing Israelis, led by a local councillor with a loudhailer who screamed abuse at the Palestinia­ns and the protesters inches from their faces, with the police just watching on.

And yet, amid all this chaos I met wonderful people trying their best to bring the two communitie­s together. A group of doctors who visited different Arab villages every Saturday to provide healthcare; an Arab Israeli professor who ran further education courses both for Arab and Jewish Israelis.

But with a broken political landscape and a government focused on measures that can only entrench division and hatred, what can be done?

Funding grassroots organisati­ons that work to build confidence between Arabs and Jews from the bottom up is hugely important. However, internatio­nal pressure, especially from the diaspora Jewish community, to curtail the excesses of the present government, is also needed. And it needs a country outside Israel to actively work to facilitate negotiatio­ns between the two warring communitie­s.

A two-state solution seems politicall­y impossible for now, but I believe it is historical­ly inevitable. We must play our part in getting there without more unnecessar­y hatred and bloodshed.

Margaret Hodge is MP for Barking and the parliament­ary chair of the Jewish Labour Movement

 ?? 2023. Photograph: Saeed Qaq/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Marchers demonstrat­e against evictions from homes in the Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem neighbourh­ood of Sheikh Jarrah, January
2023. Photograph: Saeed Qaq/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Marchers demonstrat­e against evictions from homes in the Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem neighbourh­ood of Sheikh Jarrah, January

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