The Jerusalem Post

For Jerusalem Arabs, riots dash economic hope

- • By ZEV STUB

The streets of Jerusalem’s Old City were empty on Thursday as Muslims began to celebrate Eid al-Fitr, the festival that concludes the fasting month of Ramadan.

Most shops were closed for the holiday, but underneath the celebratio­ns was a sense of fear, as violence threatened a return to the normalcy that had just barely kicked in.

“Things are pretty bad,” said Hagop, a Christian Armenian working at the Jerusalem Pottery shop on the Via Dolorosa. “Corona was very hard, because our business relies on tourists, but at least we had local Israelis coming in. Now, with the current situation, even that has stopped during the past few days.”

There is a general sense of apprehensi­on on the streets, Hagop said. “We see what is happening in places like Bat Yam and Lod, and we are afraid of things getting out of control. So far, Jerusalem has been quiet and most people just want to get on with their lives, but there is a sense that it could easily get disrupted.”

Rocket attacks from Hamas in Gaza, along with anger about a legal crisis in Jerusalem’s Sheikh Jarrah neighborho­od where four Palestinia­n families face eviction, have caused an atmosphere of tension and fear throughout the country. Violence has spread to the streets with attempted lynchings in Lod, Acre and other cities, and there appears no end in sight.

The latest round of fighting comes as Israel’s economy has shown strong signs of recovery, with the country emerging from the pandemic and a year of closures.

For many Arab businesses and workers, the crisis threatens to drive them back into the economic uncertaint­y that they were hoping was behind them.

The confluence of corona, the latest round of violence, and the month of Ramadan during which Muslims traditiona­lly fast every day from dawn until nightfall, has crippled the recovery for many in the constructi­on industry, usually the largest employer of Palestinia­ns living in the West Bank. In normal circumstan­ces, the sector employs 25% of the Palestinia­n workforce, or 65,000 people.

However, as many as 30% of them were unable to work at different points during the pandemic due to closures and restrictio­ns on movement, said Israel Builders Associatio­n Deputy Director-General Shay Pauzner. And only about 13,000 reported to work during the month of Ramadan, when fasting and religious obligation­s make work more difficult, and that number had fallen by half in the days since the fighting began, Pauzner said.

He noted, however, that violence had not usually affected the work patterns of Palestinia­n laborers during past skirmishes, and he didn’t have an explanatio­n for the drop-off of the past week.

Meanwhile, for Israeli Arab shop owners in Jerusalem’s Old City, the latest round of violence means business has all but stopped.

“The shops have been closed since the fighting started,” said Omar of the Sinjlawi jewelry store on David Street. “When there is tension, no one comes anyway. People are filled with a mix of fear and anger. No one is happy. We are angry about the government’s policies, about Sheikh Jarrah, about being treated like second-class citizens for so long. The government made a big mistake by trying to evict people from their homes, and it is adding fuel to the fire.

“The past year has been the worst year in Jerusalem since I was born,” he said. “People are frustrated, and people get angry easily during Ramadan when they aren’t eating all day. Now, it’s all coming together.”

 ?? (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) ?? POLICE OFFICERS clash with protesters outside Damascus Gate in Jerusalem Old City, during the holy month of Ramadan, earlier this week.
(Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) POLICE OFFICERS clash with protesters outside Damascus Gate in Jerusalem Old City, during the holy month of Ramadan, earlier this week.

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