The Jerusalem Post

Israel’s first Arab Rhodes scholar has the chutzpah to love her country and seek change

- • By ANDREW TOBIN

Lian Najami, Israel’s first Arab Rhodes scholar, is the kind of person who can be optimistic about just about anything – including having a needle stuck in her spine.

As she waited in a Haifa hospital on Wednesday morning for a lumbar puncture, Najami expressed hope that the procedure would finally put a name to her degenerati­ve neurologic­al disorder. After that, she said, anything was possible.

“Once we know what it is, we should be able to treat the symptoms better, and maybe one day we will find a cure,” she said in a telephone interview. “I’m really excited to see where the world is going to take me next.

“As an Israeli, I guess I have that chutzpah,” she added. “I always have in mind, ‘what can I do from here?’”

When Najami, 23, won the prestigiou­s Rhodes scholarshi­p last month, it was the latest of many affirmatio­ns of her relentless­ly forward-looking worldview.

The honor, which provides a free education at Oxford University, was also an opportunit­y to advance her advocacy work to make Israel a more inclusive place for people like her: A disabled Arab Muslim woman.

Najami has become a sought-after public speaker on behalf of her country. In recent years, the Haifa native was a featured speaker on leading US campuses like Harvard and Brown, at the Forbes 30 Under 30 Summit EMEA (Europe, the Middle East and Africa) in Israel, and at events in Germany organized by the Israeli Embassy.

Her message is that Arab Israelis, who make up some 20% of Israel’s citizenry, can succeed in the Jewish state. She has held herself up as living proof.

“I was able to get a great education in Israel, and my social worker really gave me a lot of help and confidence in dealing with my disability, or what I like to call my different ability,” she said.

In addition to her public speaking career, which has been facilitate­d by her fluency in five languages (Hebrew, Arabic, English, German and Spanish), Najami graduated from the University of Haifa in 2016, where she studied political science and internatio­nal affairs.

This year, she worked as a fellow in Washington for US Sen. Brian Schatz, a Jewish Democrat from Hawaii, analyzing counterter­rorism strategies, making policy recommenda­tions, and drafting bills and resolution­s. She also helped draft the senator’s speech decrying President Donald Trump’s ban on travel to the United States from seven Muslim-majority countries in which he invoked his own Jewish immigrant ancestors.

However, none of Najami’s previous accomplish­ments made joining the exclusive ranks of Rhodes scholars – they were extended last year to include Israelis for the first time – any less exciting. She said she “could not stop crying” after getting the news, and her father is still bragging to friends and acquaintan­ces.

“My family is very happy for me to be the first Arab Israeli to break that barrier and send a message to the Arab society within Israel that there is nothing to stop them,” she said. “I keep getting phone calls from my dad saying, ‘OK, I’m with this person,’ and then he hands over the phone for me to explain the whole thing again.”

Fortunatel­y, Najami is a polished speaker. When it comes to the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel, for example, she has made the case that it hurts all Israelis – including some of the Arabs it is supposed to help.

“As an Arab Israeli, I would like to tell them, ‘No thank you,’” she said. “Academic boycotts especially prevent us from exchanging and challengin­g ideas, and that is something we want here.”

Her Israel advocacy has helped make her something of a hero to many Jews.

“Lian is a prime example of why the allegation­s that Israel oppresses its minorities are false,” said Karen Berman, the CEO of the American Society of the University of Haifa. “To see someone like her receive the Rhodes Scholarshi­p is truly a testament that this is a true meritocrac­y.

“And on a personal level,” Berman added, “she’s just so lovely and inspiring.”

On the other hand, some Arabs have criticized Najami for allegedly choosing Jewish nationalis­m over the Palestinia­n cause – and whitewashi­ng Israel’s oppression of Arab Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

“They don’t understand why I need to speak out for Israel,” she said. “I tell them I’m coming from an agenda of really wanting to let the Arab-Israeli voice be heard, and to make sure the Arabs in Israel are treated equally to Jews.”

Like most Arab Israelis, Najami said she is a proud citizen of her country but would not call herself a Zionist. However, she does not identify as Palestinia­n, she said, explaining that she has not endured the same hardships as her family members living in the West Bank.

She is adamant that Israel should be a democracy for all its citizens, and is critical of ways she sees it failing to live up to this ideal. As an example, she said Israel fails to invest sufficient­ly in Arab communitie­s and denies Arabs equal access to land.

To Najami, Israel is at its best in her hometown of Haifa, where Jews and Arabs live together. She said growing up there, in a highly integrated neighborho­od, gave her an early understand­ing that coexistenc­e is possible. Her first friend was a Jewish girl.

“When I got older and people would come and say, ‘Oh, Jews are like this or Arabs are like this,’ and stuff like that,’ I would be like, ‘Wait a second, Rita is Jewish but she’s nothing like what you’re saying, so maybe you shouldn’t be generalizi­ng people and stereotypi­ng,’” Najami said.

Najami and her fiancé, Joe Ryan-Hume – a Scottish man with a doctorate in American political history whom she met while working in Congress – are making plans to move to England this summer. In the fall, Najami will start a master’s degree at Oxford, where she will study comparativ­e politics with a focus on inclusion policy. She said she hopes to bring some of the lessons she learns back to Israel.

Najami’s seemingly relentless positivity applies to everything, from her approach to the Israeli-Arab conflict to her personal life. Dealing with a neurologic­al disorder from a young age, she said, has taught her to focus less on grievance and fear and more on solutions.

“I got this chronic illness at the age of 12, when I was dancing, and running and playing football, and suddenly I couldn’t,” she said. “I could have easily played the victim, but I decided to just not focus anymore on who I was, and start focusing on what’s ahead of me and who I can be.

“That also how I look at Israel today. What we should be looking at is, how do we advance from here? How do we incorporat­e all the people who live in this country and find a way to live together?”

( JTA)

 ?? (Twitter) ?? LIAN NAJAMI
(Twitter) LIAN NAJAMI

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