Spitting in the Face of
Israel's Arab Citizens
The success of the Joint List is the Arab
public’s message — an outstretched hand — to
its Jewish compatriots, which is the
antithesis of the message it received in
return.
By Haggai Matar and Yael Marom
March 18, 2015 "ICH"
- Nearly one quarter of Israeli voters
cast their ballots for a prime minister
whose
central message to the public on election
day was that Arab citizens of Israel are
the enemy.
An almost equal number of
people cast their votes for: the guy who
joined him in delivering that message, the
head of the most right-wing party in the
Knesset (Naftali Bennett); the guy who based
his entire campaign on
incitement against Arabs (Avigdor
Liberman); the guy who said he would not sit
in a government that relies on the votes of
Arabs (Moshe Kahlon); and, the guy who
rejected an outstretched hand from the Arab
parties offering to form an alliance of the
oppressed (Arye Deri). Their levels of
support are even higher if you look only at
the Jewish voting public.
Meet the 34th government
of Israel, ladies and gentlemen.
Do not discount the
message delivered at the ballot box on
Tuesday, especially considering the massive
victory of the Joint List, the third-largest
party in the next Knesset. With 14 seats
representing over 400,000 voters, and with
above-average voter participation, the
success of the Joint List is the Palestinian
public in Israel’s message to its Jewish
compatriots, which was the antithesis of the
message it got in return.
For weeks, Joint List
chairman Ayman Odeh has been all over
Israeli television, radio, newspapers and
every type of online media. He broadcast a
message of openness, of
partnership, of
striving for equality, of
democracy, of a struggle for social
justice — for all Israelis. He spoke of
reconciliation and of turning a new leaf.
Tuesday night, when
Israeli television was busy interviewing
every politician in the land, save for those
gathered in Nazareth, long before there was
a clear picture of the results, Odeh and MK
Dov Khenin sent a message to Isaac Herzog.
They told him they would recommend him as
the next prime minister if he took them on
as partners. It could have been historic.
That outstretched hand
should not be taken for granted. These
elections came after two years in which the
Knesset did everything in its power to
broadcast to the Arab public that it doesn’t
deserve representation (from
raising the electoral threshold to the
attempted
disqualification of MK Haneen Zoabi).
Even Yair Lapid and
the Zionist Camp took part in that.
That outstretched hand
should not be taken for granted after a
summer in which Israel
launched a war in Gaza and killed over
2,000 Palestinians. The same summer in which
incitement by government ministers and
members of Knesset against the Arab public
reached new heights, in which we say
waves of
Palestinians being fired from their jobs,
attacks on the streets, mass arrests of
hundreds of protesters, among them children
and public figures, of
police shooting to death Arabs
because they are Arabs. And all of that
goes without mentioning the decades of
home demolitions, land appropriations,
discrimination in budgeting and much more.
If you take everything the
Palestinian public in Israel has gone
through, especially in recent months, and if
you then look at the overwhelming vote for a
message of hope and partnership espoused
by Ayman Odeh and the Joint List — only then
can you understand just how extreme the
landscape has become. Only then can you see
just how outstretched his hand was, and how
ugly the spit directed at their faces was.
The answer to the 34th
government of Israel must be an opposition
that prioritizes Jewish-Arab partnership. It
must be the project of the Left as it faces
down what will likely be a large, murky wave
of hostile and racist legislation and
policies. Just as important, that
partnership must be there to address the
very real danger that the Palestinian public
might simply give up on the Jews, for
reasons that are understandable and even
justified, instead choosing to disengage
from the political system that spat in its
face.
We must emphasize our work
together, our joint struggle — our coherent
opposition to the occupation and
discrimination, to the corruption of
politics, to the continued assault on
whatever traces of democracy remain here.
Get ready.
Yael Marom is Just
Vision’s public engagement manager in Israel
and a co-editor of Local
Call, where this article was originally published
in Hebrew.