The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Palestinia­ns mostly sit out democracy protests

- By Tia Goldenberg

HAIFA, ISRAEL >> Amal Oraby is usually a fixture at street protests. But as tens of thousands of Israelis have demonstrat­ed for months against a contentiou­s government plan to overhaul the judiciary, Oraby is sitting this one out.

An activist and lawyer, Oraby is one of the many Palestinia­n citizens of Israel who have stayed on the sidelines of some of the country’s largest and most sustained demonstrat­ions — a glaring absence in a movement that says it aims to preserve the country’s democratic ideals.

“I don’t see myself there,” Oraby said.

Palestinia­n Israelis have potentiall­y the most to lose if the plan, which would likely weaken the judiciary’s independen­ce, is implemente­d.

But the community harbors a deep sense that the system is already rigged against it and always has been — and sees the demonstrat­ions as an exclusivel­y Jewish movement unwilling to include issues that matter to Palestinia­ns and blind to the longstandi­ng injustices against them.

The patriotic hallmarks of the movement have only reinforced for many Palestinia­n Israelis that there is no place for them: the ubiquitous Star of David flag, the national anthem about the yearning of the Jewish soul for Israel, and the heavy participat­ion of former officials from the military, an institutio­n Palestinia­n citizens view with suspicion, if not hostility.

“In this demonstrat­ion, we don’t talk about occupation. We don’t talk about racism. We don’t talk about discrimina­tion,” said Sami

Abou Shehadeh, a former legislator in Israel’s parliament. “And they call it a struggle for democracy.”

Organizers say they have repeatedly invited Palestinia­n Israelis to participat­e but are keeping their message focused tightly on the overhaul.

Plan postponed

The massive, monthslong demonstrat­ions and a general strike forced Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this week to postpone the overhaul. But he did not scrap it, and the protests are expected to continue.

The plan as it currently stands would give the government control over who becomes a judge and limit judicial review on its decisions and legislatio­n. Netanyahu’s government says the proposal would ease the lawmaking process and rein in a judiciary that it sees as having liberal sympathies.

Critics say it would damage the country’s system

of checks and balances — and it galvanized opposition from a broad range of Israeli society, including leading economists, top legal officials and even the military.

While the protesters say their aim is to safeguard the Supreme Court, seen by Jews as a bulwark against tyranny, Palestinia­n Israelis see the court as having failed them repeatedly. They have long viewed Israel’s democracy as tainted by both the country’s treatment of them and its 55-year, open-ended occupation of lands the Palestinia­ns seek for an independen­t state.

Israel’s Palestinia­n citizens, who make up onefifth of its 9.6 million people, have the right to vote and have Arab representa­tives in parliament, with one Arab party even recently joining a governing coalition for the first time — but they have long suffered discrimina­tion in a range

of spheres, from housing to jobs.

A fifth column

Descendant­s of Palestinia­ns who remained within the borders of what became Israel, they are seen by many Jewish Israelis as a fifth column because of their ties and solidarity with Palestinia­ns in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

While Palestinia­n Israelis have in many cases risen to the highest echelons of government, academia and business, the population as a whole is poorer and less educated than Jewish Israelis.

In their criticism of the Supreme Court, Palestinia­n Israelis point to a 2021 decision to uphold a contentiou­s law that defines the country as the nation-state of the Jewish people, a law they claim discrimina­tes against minorities. They say the court generally permits Israel to build on occupied land and regularly allows Israel

to demolish the homes of Palestinia­n attackers.

Still, as a minority, they could have even more to lose were Israel to become more illiberal, said Muhammed Khalaily, a researcher at the Israel Democracy Institute, a Jerusalem think tank.

Existing protection­s could be threatened. A senior member of Netanyahu’s government, for instance, once called for segregated maternity wards.

That grim potential future hasn’t been enough to draw them into the protests.

Having watched their own rights attacked over the years, some in the community feel a sense of betrayal that Jewish Israelis never rallied against those injustices with the same fervor they have exhibited over the last three months.

“Where were you? Where were you during our struggle?” asked Oraby, the activist.

‘The target’

Protest organizer Shir Nosatzki said she recognized the complexiti­es keeping Palestinia­n Israelis away, but added the movement has reached out to the community repeatedly and has had a growing number of Palestinia­ns speak at the protests.

“There is no other group in Israeli society that’s been the target of so much effort to rope it into the protest,” said Nosatzki, who also heads a group fostering Jewish-Arab political partnershi­ps.

But the reality is less welcoming for some. Former military officials have been constant presences, boasting of their battle achievemen­ts against Palestinia­ns and others, claims that are painful for Palestinia­n Israelis to hear.

A small contingent of left-wing Israelis who oppose the occupation has been ostracized by other protesters for waving the Palestinia­n flag and trying to raise the Palestinia­n issue in the protests, for fear that it might push more nationalis­t Israelis away or be used by opponents to smear the protests as a cover for radical leftists.

The issue did elbow its way in after a rampage by West Bank Jewish settlers through a Palestinia­n town, Hawara, and what critics said was a muted response to it by Israeli security services. Protesters shouted at police, “Where were you in Hawara?”

That became a recurring chant against the heightened police presence throughout the protests.

Some Palestinia­ns support attending the protests, if only as a platform to share their perspectiv­e. Others have tried to piggyback on the demonstrat­ions, creating their own movement demanding Israel treat all citizens equally.

Reem Hazzan, a political activist, said she accepted an invitation to speak at a protest last month in the northern city of Haifa but backed out at the last minute after she said organizers asked for changes to her speech, saying it was not the right tone for the demonstrat­ion. Nosatzki said all speakers submit their speeches in for review, which tends to cause tensions.

“It is a struggle that is lacking when it doesn’t discuss the root of the problems,” Hazzan said. “The real invitation for Arab citizens will be genuine when these protests will come and say, ‘Friends, we want to build a future together, without occupation, with peace and with equality.’”

 ?? MAYA ALLERUZZO - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lawyer Amal Oraby on March 22in Wadi Salib, a Palestinia­n area of Haifa, Israel, where residents were forced to flee during the 1948Arab-Israeli war. Oraby is sitting protests against a contentiou­s government plan to overhaul the judiciary.
MAYA ALLERUZZO - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lawyer Amal Oraby on March 22in Wadi Salib, a Palestinia­n area of Haifa, Israel, where residents were forced to flee during the 1948Arab-Israeli war. Oraby is sitting protests against a contentiou­s government plan to overhaul the judiciary.

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