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Israel’s new challenge: violence among its own citizens

Arab and Jewish Israelis are increasingly clashing with one another; ‘an existential threat’.

Israeli forces detain a group of Arab-Israelis in the mixed Jewish-Arab city of Lod on May 13, 2021, during clashes between Israeli far-right extremists and Arab-Israelis. Picture: Ahmad Gharabli/AFP
Israeli forces detain a group of Arab-Israelis in the mixed Jewish-Arab city of Lod on May 13, 2021, during clashes between Israeli far-right extremists and Arab-Israelis. Picture: Ahmad Gharabli/AFP

Rockets fired by Hamas flew into Israel throughout the week, slamming into towns like Lod and Bat Yam. Another complicated challenge is coming from within, with neighbour turning against neighbour in an escalation of communal violence that Israel’s Arab and Jewish citizens haven’t seen for decades.

On Tuesday night, hundreds of residents of Lod, a city near the country’s main airport, came out waving Palestinian flags and set fire to cars, apartments inhabited by Jews and a synagogue in a mixed neighbourhood. Israel’s president, Reuven Rivlin, described the events as a “pogrom.” Similar scenes occurred in the northern city of Acre, usually a tourist magnet.

The following night, a Jewish mob invaded the seaside promenade of Bat Yam, just south of Tel Aviv. Looking for Arabs, they dragged one man out of a passing car, severely beat him, and then vandalised an Arab-owned ice-cream parlour and a falafel restaurant.

Since then, a series of similar incidents have spread around the country, often involving criminal gangs, according to local residents — tearing at Israel’s social fabric just as it teeters on the brink of a potential war.

Israeli soldiers prepare their artillery unit near the border with Gaza Strip on Friday. Picture: Amir Levy/Getty Images
Israeli soldiers prepare their artillery unit near the border with Gaza Strip on Friday. Picture: Amir Levy/Getty Images

On Friday, the Israeli military stepped up its operation in the Gaza Strip, adding tank and artillery fire from the ground to its campaign of air strikes. Israeli ground forces have also moved along the boundary with Gaza. A total of 126 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed in the five-day operation, and eight Israelis were killed by rockets and missiles fired from Gaza.

Several people died or ended up in intensive care with life-threatening injuries from the communal violence within Israel’s borders.

Complicated internal challenge

In many ways, the strife between Israel’s Jews and its two million Arab citizens, a fifth of its population, represents a more complicated challenge than the country’s external enemies. While Gaza and the West Bank lie behind security barriers and barbed wire, Israel’s Arab and Jewish citizens are linked by myriad day-to-day connections, despite often diverging political outlooks.

Video footage shared online that emerged Friday morning showed a band of young Arab men roaming Haifa streets at night with baseball bats and shouting “Allahu Akbar,” and a similar band of Jewish men, also mostly dressed in black, going through a nearby neighbourhood and shouting “Death to Arabs.” “I’m terrified. With Hamas, there will be an understanding, and it will all end at some point. But what about us? We are staying here. We don’t have anywhere else to go,” said Issawi Freij, an Arab-Israeli politician from the left-leaning Meretz party. “Tomorrow, I and my neighbour will have to meet again, in the falafel store, in the restaurant, in the hospital, at our job in the high-tech company.”

This video grab obtained from a footage released by Kan 11 Public broadcaster on May 12, 2021, shows a far-right Israeli mob attacking who they considered an Arab man, on the seafront promenade of Bat Yam. Picture: AFP PHOTO/HO/ Kan 11 Public Broadcaster
This video grab obtained from a footage released by Kan 11 Public broadcaster on May 12, 2021, shows a far-right Israeli mob attacking who they considered an Arab man, on the seafront promenade of Bat Yam. Picture: AFP PHOTO/HO/ Kan 11 Public Broadcaster

Yair Lapid, the opposition leader who was mandated by Mr. Rivlin earlier this month to form a new government, warned that the future of Israel is at stake. “What has been happening on Israeli streets in recent days is an existential threat,” he said.

Protests are growing in the West Bank as well, with Palestinians staging demonstrations in several cities against Israel’s shelling of Gaza. At least seven Palestinians were killed as Israeli forces fired on protesters, according to the Palestinian Authority’s health ministry. An Israeli military spokesman said that 5,000 Palestinians engaged in “violent riots,” and threw molotov cocktails, set fire to tires, threw stones and shot fireworks at Israeli soldiers.

Unlike Palestinians in the West Bank or Gaza, Israel’s Arab citizens — Palestinian families who stayed behind when Israel was formed in 1948 — on paper have full citizenship rights. Israel’s Arabs vote and receive the same social benefits as Jews, though Israeli human-rights groups say discrimination over jobs, education and housing is widespread in practice.

A blooded bandage lies on the road at the scene where an Israeli Arab man was attacked and injured by an Israeli Jews mob on May 12, 2021 in Bat Yam, Israel. Picture: Amir Levy/Getty Images
A blooded bandage lies on the road at the scene where an Israeli Arab man was attacked and injured by an Israeli Jews mob on May 12, 2021 in Bat Yam, Israel. Picture: Amir Levy/Getty Images

Arabs have served as Supreme Court justices, cabinet ministers and ambassadors. Many Arab citizens live in mixed neighbourhoods, and speak fluent Hebrew. In East Jerusalem, which Israel claims as part of its undivided capital and which Palestinians seek as the capital of their future state, most Arabs are permanent residents rather than citizens.

In a reversal of the usual roles, the Palestinians in the West Bank, occupied since 1967, are worrying about their kin inside Israel. “Every Palestinian living anywhere between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean is just sitting on edge, terrified of what’s going to come next,” said Fadi Koran, 33, a community organiser in Ramallah, the political centre of the West Bank.

With the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict increasingly remote, the current strife shows just how difficult it would be to achieve coexistence should a single state be formed one day. Only some 44% of Israelis and 43% of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank support a two-state solution, according to a 2020 poll.

The conflagration came at a time when Israel’s Arab citizens seemed on the brink of unprecedented political power. At the end of this week, an opposition government led by Mr. Lapid was supposed to end Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s 12-year rule, thanks to support by politicians from an Islamist Arab political party. That transition now looks unlikely to happen.

In predominantly Arab Nazareth, former Israeli politician Hanin Zoabi, an Arab citizen and champion of the Palestinian cause, said she used to go to the gym in the predominantly Jewish Upper Nazareth across the road. Now, she’s too afraid to cross that road — and so are the Jewish residents of Upper Nazareth, she said.

Arab and Jewish Israeli women demonstrate together to call for coexistence and a halt of the ongoing violence between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas movement at the entrance of Jaffa, near the Israeli coastal city of Tel Aviv, on May 14. Picture: Gideon Markowicz/AFP
Arab and Jewish Israeli women demonstrate together to call for coexistence and a halt of the ongoing violence between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas movement at the entrance of Jaffa, near the Israeli coastal city of Tel Aviv, on May 14. Picture: Gideon Markowicz/AFP

Ms. Zoabi welcomed the fear. “We should be afraid of each other,” she said. “This is the scene of a struggle, and I like it much more than a false coexistence.” In northern Israel’s main city of Haifa, long touted as a model of coexistence, self-defence groups started to form in the mostly Arab neighbourhoods Thursday as community leaders warned that they faced the worst danger since most of Haifa’s Palestinian residents became refugees in 1948.

“The Arabs don’t trust the police. They see the settlers and the police as the same: Both refer to the Arabs as an enemy,” said Hassan Jabareen, whose Adalah legal centre for Arab rights in Haifa was attacked by a group of Jewish rioters Wednesday night.

Israel Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said it was “absolutely incorrect and misleading” that the country’s law enforcement was biased against Arab citizens. Some 750 people have been detained so far because of alleged participation in this week’s unrest, the large majority of them Arab, he said.

In Lod, the city worst hit by communal violence, unrest escalated following Tuesday’s funeral of a local Arab man who had been shot dead the night earlier by a Jewish resident. A video of that incident posted on social media shows a group of Arab men moving toward the shooter with rocks and a firebomb just before he pulled the trigger. The shooter has been arrested and remains in custody pending investigation, according to Israel Police. Several Jewish politicians described the killing as legitimate self-defence.

Some in the city’s Arab minority see parallels with Palestinians in Jerusalem’s Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood, whose pending eviction by Jewish settlers helped spark the current crisis.

“The story of Jerusalem is like Lod. We feel that they also want to remove us from our homes,” said Maha al-Naqib, a former Lod city council member.

Israelis take cover in a shop as a siren rings during an attack of rockets from the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip into Israel, on May 13 Picture: Gil Cohen-Magen/AFP
Israelis take cover in a shop as a siren rings during an attack of rockets from the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip into Israel, on May 13 Picture: Gil Cohen-Magen/AFP

Though few Arabs in Lod admire Hamas, she added, some felt relief when the Islamist movement’s rockets — which killed two local Arab residents — began falling on Israel: “When you feel that you’re weak all the time and that you’re being discriminated against, you don’t care who’ll come to your defence, even if it’s rockets that can actually kill you.” During a visit to Lod on Friday, Mr. Netanyahu said that Arab politicians aren’t doing enough to stop the communal strife, and that they — like him — must be clear that all violence of Arabs against Jews and Jews against Arabs must stop.

An Israeli woman stands at a restaurant that was attacked the previous night in Israel's Mediterranean city of Bat Yam on May 13. Picture: Gil Cohen-Magen/AFP
An Israeli woman stands at a restaurant that was attacked the previous night in Israel's Mediterranean city of Bat Yam on May 13. Picture: Gil Cohen-Magen/AFP

Tensions in Lod centred on a relatively new 70-family Jewish community called Garin Torani. Established in a mostly Arab neighbourhood, and attracting many settlers from the West Bank, it includes an academy where young men study Torah and prepare physically for their military draft. The building was firebombed by rioters Tuesday, and a group of men and women were already working to repaint the ashen walls and fix the electrical wiring.

“We’re going to keep on living here, and we’re going to make it work again,” said Taha’el Harris, a 27-year-old teacher. “They’re not my enemies,” she said of the Arabs living nearby. “But it’s very disturbing that I don’t know where my neighbours were last night and if they’re part of the whole thing.” “They want to get rid of us and all the Jews from this country,” added Aviel Cohen, a 19-year-old student at the academy.

Not all Jews in Lod feel the same. Nisim Dahan, 72, who moved to the city from Morocco when he was 2 years old, recalled decades of peaceful coexistence: playing together, eating together and living next to one another. Now, three husks of burnt-out cars serve as a reminder of recent violence in front of his home. Mr. Dahan said he feared his home would have been burned, too, if his lifelong Arab friends hadn’t protected him.

“Jews and Arabs are destined to live with each other,” he said, adding a popular phrase in Arabic, “Your neighbour that is close is better than your brother far away.”

The Wall Street Journal

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/israels-new-challenge-violence-among-its-own-citizens/news-story/580a59252312c7f28ecb98087f488f5a