"Not All Israeli Citizens Are Equal" by Yousef Muayyer, 2012
May 23, 2012
NEW YORK TIMES
Not All Israeli Citizens Are Equal
By YOUSEF MUNAYYER
Washington -- I’M a Palestinian
who was born in the Israeli town of Lod, and thus I am an Israeli
citizen. My wife is not; she is a Palestinian from Nablus in the
Israeli-occupied West Bank. Despite our towns being just 30 miles apart,
we met almost 6,000 miles away in Massachusetts, where
we attended neighboring colleges.
A series of walls,
checkpoints, settlements and soldiers fill the 30-mile gap between our
hometowns, making it more likely for us to have met on the other side of
the planet than in our own backyard.
Never is this reality more profound than on our trips home from our current residence outside Washington.
Tel Aviv’s Ben-Gurion
International Airport is on the outskirts of Lod (Lydda in Arabic), but
because my wife has a Palestinian ID, she cannot fly there; she is
relegated to flying to Amman, Jordan. If we plan
a trip together — an enjoyable task for most couples — we must prepare
for a logistical nightmare that reminds us of our profound inequality
before the law at every turn.
Even if we fly together
to Amman, we are forced to take different bridges, two hours apart, and
endure often humiliating waiting and questioning just to cross into Israel
and the West Bank. The laws conspire to separate us.
If we lived in the
region, I would have to forgo my residency, since Israeli law prevents
my wife from living with me in Israel. This is to prevent what Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu once referred to as “demographic
spillover.” Additional Palestinian babies in Israel are considered
“demographic threats” by a state constantly battling to keep a Jewish
majority. (Of course, Israelis who marry Americans or any
non-Palestinian foreigners are not subjected to this treatment.)
Last week marked
Israel’s 64th year of independence; it is also when Palestinians
commemorate the Nakba, or “catastrophe,” during which many of
Palestine’s native inhabitants were turned into refugees.
In 1948, the Israeli brigade commander Yitzhak
Rabin helped expel Lydda’s Palestinian population. Some 19,000 of
the town’s 20,000 native Palestinian inhabitants were forced out. My
grandparents were among the 1,000 to remain.
They were fortunate to
become only internally displaced and not refugees. Years later my
grandfather was able to buy back his own home — a cruel absurdity, but a
better fate than that imposed on most of his neighbors,
who were never permitted to re-establish their lives in their hometowns.
Three decades later, in October 1979, this newspaper
reported that Israel barred Rabin from detailing in his memoir what
he conceded was the “expulsion” of the “civilian population of Lod and
Ramle, numbering some 50,000.” Rabin, who by then had served as prime
minister, sought to describe how “it was essential
to drive the inhabitants out.”
Two generations after
the Nakba, the effect of discriminatory Israeli policies still
reverberates. Israel still seeks to safeguard its image by claiming to
be a bastion of democracy that treats its Palestinian
citizens well, all the while continuing illiberal policies that target
this very population. There is a long history of such discrimination.
In the 1950s new laws
permitted the state to take control over Palestinians’ land by
classifying them “absentees.” Of course, it was the state that made them
absentees by either preventing refugees from returning
to Israel or barring internally displaced Palestinians from having
access to their land. This last group was ironically termed “present
absentees” — able to see their land but not to reach it because of
military restrictions that ultimately resulted in their
watching the state confiscate it. Until 1966, Palestinian citizens were
governed under martial law.
Today, a Jew from any
country can move to Israel, while a Palestinian refugee, with a valid
claim to property in Israel, cannot. And although Palestinians make up
about 20 percent of Israel’s population, the
2012 budget allocates less than 7 percent for Palestinian citizens.
Tragically for
Palestinians, Zionism requires the state to empower and maintain a
Jewish majority even at the expense of its non-Jewish citizens, and the
occupation of the West Bank is only one part of it. What
exists today between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea is
therefore essentially one state, under Israeli control, where
Palestinians have varying degrees of limited rights: 1.5 million are
second-class citizens, and four million more are not citizens
at all. If this is not apartheid, then whatever it is, it’s certainly
not democracy.
The failure of Israeli
and American leaders to grapple with this nondemocratic reality is not
helping. Even if a two-state solution were achieved, which seems
fanciful at this point, a fundamental contradiction
would remain: more than 35 laws in ostensibly democratic Israel discriminate against Palestinians who are Israeli
citizens.
For all the talk about
shared values between Israel and the United States, democracy is sadly
not one of them right now, and it will not be until Israel’s leaders are
willing to recognize Palestinians as equals,
not just in name, but in law.
Yousef Munayyer
is executive director of the Jerusalem Fund.