person:yariv levin

  • Le mouvement BDS rebat les cartes du débat israélo-palestinien | Nathan Thrall
    https://orientxxi.info/magazine/le-mouvement-bds-rebat-les-cartes-du-debat-israelo-palestinien,2730

    Le 19 novembre Airbnb Inc. a retiré de ses offres de location les logements situés dans les colonies de Cisjordanie « qui sont au cœur du conflit entre Israéliens et Palestiniens ». En réaction, le ministre israélien du tourisme Yariv Levin a demandé à son administration de réduire l’activité de Airbnb Inc. en Israël même. Cette décision, parmi d’autres, confirme l’importance prise par la campagne Boycott-désinvestissement-sanctions (BDS). Source : Orient XXI

  • Airbnb to remove listings in Jewish West Bank settlements - Israel News - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/airbnb-to-remove-listings-in-jewish-west-bank-settlements-1.6662443

    Home-renting company Airbnb Inc said on Monday that it had decided to remove its listings in Jewish settlements in the West Bank, enclaves that most world powers consider illegal for taking up land where Palestinians seek statehood. In response, Israel’s Tourism Minister Yariv Levin instructed the ministry to restrict the company’s operations across the country.
    A statement on Airbnb’s website said: “We concluded that we should remove listings in Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank that are at the core of the dispute between Israelis and Palestinians.” 
    It did not say when the decision, which according to Airbnb affects some 200 listings, would take effect. 
    Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan called on Airbnb hosts harmed by the decision to file lawsuits against the company in accordance with Israel’s anti-boycott law and said he’ll turn to senior U.S. officials to check if the company’s decision violated the anti-boycott laws “that exist in over 25 states.”
    He said that “national conflicts exist throughout the world and Airbnb will need to explain why they chose a racist political stance against some Israeli citizens.”

    The Yesha Council of settlements said in response that “a company that has no qualms about renting apartments in dictatorships around the world and in places that have no relationship with human rights is singling out Israel. This can only be a result of anti-Semitism or surrendering to terrorism – or both.”

    Levin demanded Airbnb cancel its “discrimantory” decision, saying it was a “shameful and miserable decision.”
    Top Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said that Airbnb should have included East Jerusalem and should have said settlements “are illegal and constitute war crimes.” He added: “We reiterate our call upon the UN Human Rights Council to release the database of companies profiting from the Israeli colonial occupation.”

    Airbnb came under Palestinian criticism for such listings, which some find misleading for failing to mention the property is on occupied land claimed by the Palestinians.
    The Palestinians say that by contributing to the settlement economy, Airbnb, like other companies doing business in the West Bank, helps perpetuate Israel’s settlement enterprise. 
    “There are conflicting views regarding whether companies should be doing business in the occupied territories that are the subject of historical disputes between Israelis and Palestinians,” the Airbnb statement said. 
    The statement continued: “In the past, we made clear that we would operate in this area as allowed by law. We did this because we believe that people-to-people travel has considerable value and we want to help bring people together in as many places as possible around the world. Since then, we spent considerable time speaking to various experts. We know that people will disagree with this decision and appreciate their perspective.”
    Oded Revivi, mayor of the West Bank settlement of Efrat and a representative of Yesha, described the Airbnb decision as contrary to its mission, as stated on the website, of “help(ing) to bring people together in as many places as possible around the world”. 
    Israel captured the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem in the 1967 war and began building settlements soon after.
    While Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005, the settler population in east Jerusalem and the West Bank has ballooned to almost 600,000. The Palestinians claim these areas as parts of a future state, a position that has wide global support.
    Airbnb said that as part of their decision-making framework, they “evaluate whether the existence of listings is contributing to existing human suffering” and “determine whether the existence of listings in the occupied territory has a direct connection to the larger dispute in the region.”
    The Associated Press contributed to this report

    #BDS

  • Airbnb to remove listings in Jewish West Bank settlements
    Noa Landau, Yotam Berger, Jack Khoury and Reuters Nov 19, 2018 6:11 PM
    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/airbnb-to-remove-listings-in-jewish-west-bank-settlements-1.6662443

    Home-renting company Airbnb Inc said on Monday that it had decided to remove its listings in Jewish settlements in the West Bank, enclaves that most world powers consider illegal for taking up land where Palestinians seek statehood. In response, Israel’s Tourism Minister Yariv Levin instructed the ministry to restrict the company’s operations across the country.

    A statement on Airbnb’s website said: “We concluded that we should remove listings in Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank that are at the core of the dispute between Israelis and Palestinians.”

    It did not say when the decision, which according to Airbnb affects some 200 listings, would take effect. (...)

    #BDS

    • Airbnb se retire des colonies de Cisjordanie, menaces de sanctions israéliennes
      Par AFP — 19 novembre 2018 à 19:09 (mis à jour à 21:05)
      https://www.liberation.fr/planete/2018/11/19/airbnb-se-retire-des-colonies-de-cisjordanie-menaces-de-sanctions-israeli

      La plateforme de réservation de logements en ligne Airbnb a annoncé lundi qu’elle renonçait à faire des offres dans les colonies israéliennes de Cisjordanie occupée, provoquant des menaces de sanctions de la part d’Israël.

      La Cisjordanie est un territoire palestinien occupé par l’armée israélienne depuis plus de 50 ans. Les colonies qui y sont construites par Israël sont considérées comme illégales par la communauté internationale qui les voient comme l’un des principaux obstacles à la paix. Le gouvernement israélien conteste cette vision.

      « Nous avons conclu que nous devrions retirer de nos listes les logements dans les colonies israéliennes en Cisjordanie occupée qui sont au cœur de la dispute entre Israéliens et Palestiniens », a indiqué dans un communiqué Airbnb.

      « Nous savons que des gens vont être en désaccord avec cette décision et nous respectons leur perspective. C’est une question controversée », a ajouté le texte.

      La plateforme indique que 200 logements sont répertoriés dans les colonies, mais ne précise pas quand cette mesure entrera en vigueur.

      Le ministre israélien du Tourisme Yariv Levin a immédiatement dénoncé dans un communiqué la décision « honteuse et malheureuse » d’Airbnb. « Notre ministère a commencé à préparer des mesures immédiates pour limiter les activités d’Airbnb » en Israël.

      Il a ajouté qu’il comptait lancer un programme pour encourager la location de courte durée de logements dans les colonies de Cisjordanie.

    • Airbnb n’offrira plus de locations dans les colonies juives de Cisjordanie
      Par Piotr Smolar Publié le 19 novembre à 22h03, mis à jour le 20 novembre 2018 à 08h59
      https://www.lemonde.fr/proche-orient/article/2018/11/19/airbnb-supprime-les-locations-dans-les-colonies-juives-de-cisjordanie-israel

      La chambre est vraiment peu séduisante mais le prix attractif – 36 euros la nuit – et les collines environnantes offrent un cadre naturel magnifique. Il était encore possible de la louer, mardi 20 novembre, sur le site d’Airbnb.

      Située dans la colonie juive d’Itamar au nord de la Cisjordanie, à proximité de Naplouse, cette offre doit pourtant être retirée, à une date inconnue. La célèbre plate-forme de location a choisi d’anticiper la publication d’un rapport de l’ONG Human Rights Watch (HRW) et s’est engagée dans un communiqué, publié le 19 novembre, à ne plus proposer de logements sis dans les colonies, soit environ 200 annonces.

      « Il existe des opinions opposées pour savoir si les entreprises devraient conduire des activités dans les territoires occupés qui sont soumis à des disputes historiques entre Israéliens et Palestiniens », commence prudemment le texte. Après une longue réflexion, l’entreprise a décidé de ne pas se réfugier uniquement derrière la loi américaine, qui l’autorise à mener ses activités en Cisjordanie.

      Elle évoque, parmi les motifs de son choix, les « souffrances humaines » que ces annonces peuvent susciter et leur lien avec le conflit. En revanche, Airbnb ne précise pas si Jérusalem-Est et le plateau du Golan, annexés par Israël sans reconnaissance internationale, étaient concernés par sa mesure.(...)

    • Airbnb efface de son site les propositions de location dans les colonies israéliennes
      19 novembre 2019 – Al Jazeera – Traduction : Chronique de Palestine
      http://www.chroniquepalestine.com/airbnb-efface-de-son-site-les-propositions-de-location-dans-les-

      Al Jazeera – Le service mondial de location en ligne, Airbnb, a annoncé qu’il supprimerait ses annonces dans les colonies israéliennes illégales en Cisjordanie occupée.

      La décision de lundi entraînera la suppression d’environ 200 annonces du site Web populaire d’hébergement, qui permet aux propriétaires de louer des chambres, des appartements et des maisons à des individus.

      « Nous avons conclu que nous devrions supprimer les inscriptions dans les colonies de peuplement israéliennes situées en Cisjordanie occupée qui sont au cœur du différend entre Israéliens et Palestiniens », indique un communiqué publié sur le site Internet d’Airbnb.

      La suppression des inscriptions aura lieu dans les prochains jours, a déclaré un porte-parole d’Airbnb à l’agence de presse Reuters.

      La société a déclaré être parvenue à cette conclusion sur la base d’un rapport interne servant à évaluer la manière dont elle gère les propositions dans les territoires occupés du monde entier.

      « La législation américaine autorise des sociétés telles qu’Airbnb à exercer des activités sur ces territoires. Parallèlement, de nombreux membres de la communauté internationale ont déclaré que les sociétés ne devraient pas y exercer leurs activités, estimant qu’elles ne devraient pas tirer profit de terres accaparées », dit la déclaration.

      « D’autres pensent que les entreprises ne devraient pas retirer leurs activités de ces zones », a ajouté le responsable.

      « Nous savons que des gens ne seront pas d’accord avec cette décision et tiendront à leur point de vue. C’est une question controversée. »

      Toutes les colonies israéliennes sont illégales au regard du droit international.

      Les listes d’hébergement de Airbnb en Cisjordanie occupée ont longtemps été critiquées par la communauté palestinienne et les défenseurs des droits de l’homme.

  • Israeli Druze commander quits army over nation-state law in open letter to Netanyahu

    In a Facebook post, Capt. Amir Jmall calls on leaders of his community to work toward putting an end to the compulsory conscription of Israeli Druze

    Yaniv Kubovich
    Jul 30, 2018 5:36 PM

    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-israeli-druze-quits-idf-over-nation-state-law-in-letter-to-netanya

    In the letter, Jmall also called on leaders of his community to work toward putting an end to the compulsory conscription of Israel’s Druze. The Facebook post has since been removed.
    “This morning, when I woke up to drive to the [army] base, I asked myself, why? Why do I have to serve the State of Israel, a state that my two brothers, my father and I have served with dedication, a sense of mission and a love of the homeland, and, in the end, what do we get? To be second-class citizens,” Jmall wrote.
    >> ’When we’re in uniform they treat us well’: Israel’s Druze no longer feel like blood brothers
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    "Continue serving the country? I do not want to continue and I am sure that hundreds more people will stop serving and will be discharged from the army following your decision, Netanyahu, that of you and your government,” he continued.
    "After many thoughts ran through my head, I decided to let go and to discontinue serving the country, a country that has a government that takes and does not give back.”
    In conclusion, Jmall wrote: “I ask everyone who is against the nation-state law to share and share my proposal to community leaders to stop the conscription law for members of the Druze community.”
    The Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People, also known as the nation-state law, approved by the Knesset on July 19, affirmed that only Jews have the right to self-determination in Israel. It also downgraded Arabic to a language with “special status,” among several other controversial measures that affect the Israeli Druze.
    The nation-state law is designed to alter the application of the Basic Law on Human Dignity and Liberty in court rulings, and permits judges to give priority to Israel’s Jewish character in their rulings.

    Last week, Druze lawmakers were the first to file a High Court of Justice petition against the legislation. A hundred Druze Israel Defense Forces reserve officers added their voices to that effort on Wednesday, prompting Education Minister Naftali Bennett to speak out in support of “our blood brothers” on Twitter.
    Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon echoed similar sentiments on Thursday, telling Israeli Army Radio, “The enactment of the nation-state law was done hastily,” and adding: “We were wrong and we need to fix it.”
    On Saturday, Israeli Arab lawmaker Zouheir Bahloul (Zionist Union) announced his intention to resign from the Knesset in protest of the law. "The law oppresses me and oppresses the population that sent me to the Knesset,’’ he said.

    • Haaretz, 1er août
      Nation-state Law Backlash: Druze Leaders Say Netanyahu’s Offer May Set ’Historical Precedent’

      https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-nation-state-law-backlash-netanyahu-offers-druze-new-legislation-1

      Representatives of the Druze community said Thursday night that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s proposal to pass a law to strengthen the status of the Druze and Circassian communities is “a window of opportunity to set a historical precedent for the advancement of the Druze community and its status in the State of Israel.”
      Representatives, headed by Sheikh Muwafak Tarif, will continue talks with Netanyahu’s team, which has been appointed to make an agreement on both sides.
      Netanyahu’s proposed law follows the protest sparked by the nation-state law. The plan outlines a Basic Law and a regular law that will recognize the contribution of minorities who defend the country by “enshrining eligibility for the benefits of minority members of all religions and communities who serve in the security forces, for the purpose of closing gaps and promoting social equality.”
      Benjamin Netanyahu and the Druze representatives, August 1, 2018.
      Benjamin Netanyahu and the Druze representatives, August 1, 2018.
      >> Israeli Druze in Golan welcome end of Syrian war but fear future in Jewish nation-state
      Another demonstration against the nation-state law is slated for Saturday evening in Tel Aviv.
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      According to the plan submitted by the prime minister’s representatives, “the law will recognize the contribution of the Druze community to the security of the state, and will include support for community institutions (religion, education and culture), will strengthen Druze residential settlements, and establish new towns if needed. It will also preserve and cultivate Druze heritage.”
      Tourism Minister Yariv Levin (Likud) congratulated “the agreement we have reached with the Druze leadership. Recognizing the rights of those who serve in the security forces is an achievement.” Tamar Zandberg (Meretz) said in response: “The Prime Minister ranks Israel’s citizens, and he divides and rules the minorities from whom he has stolen equality in his Basic Law. He got scared after the fact. Netanyahu’s government has torn apart the Declaration of Independence and the values of equality on which the state was founded. Now they’re making laws in honor of the Druze community, as if equality is a prize and not a right that all of us have.”
      The proposal drew mixed reactions from the Druze community, MK Hamad Amar (Yisrael Beiteinu), one of the two Druze MKs who petitioned the Supreme Court against the nation-state law, congratulated the plan. MK Saleh Saad (Zionist Union) said he will continue with the petition and said: “I am sad that my friends have succumbed to pressures and withdrew from the petition.”
      The negotiating team of the Druze community, which includes their spiritual leader, Sheikh Muwafak Tarif, former security officials and civil servants, has had strong disagreements over the proposal. One of the team members told Haaretz that the representatives who have security backgrounds tend to accept the spirit of the plan, while others – including local council heads – oppose it.
      The source added that some of the representatives accused the prime minister of trying to implement a policy of “divide and conquer.” They said that they would settle only for annulling the nation-state law or adding to it the value of equality. The source added that the Prime Minister’s Office is concerned about the protest rally scheduled for Saturday night, and therefore is exerting heavy pressure on the representatives of the community to accept the plan and cancel the rally.

      >> ’When we’re in uniform they treat us well’: Israel’s Druze no longer feel like blood brothers
      The plan was drafted by a team formed by the prime minister on the issue of the Druze, headed by the acting Chief of Staff of the Prime Minister’s Bureau, Yoav Horowitz, and including Sheikh Tarif, ministers Ayoub Kara and Yariv Levin, MK Hamad Amar (Yisrael Beiteinu), former MK Shakib Shenan, heads of the Druze local authorities and the forum of reservist senior officers.
      The prime minister’s office called the plan “historic” in a press release, saying it “represents a revolution in the legal status of minority group members who serve in the security forces, and members of the Druze community in particular.” Sheikh Tarif welcomed the work of the team and thanked the prime minister for his quick and serious activity. The plan will be presented to the Druze community’s dignitaries.
      The plan offers to enshrine a Basic Law - Israeli constitutional equivalent - for the status of the Druze and Circassian communities, “paying respect to the contribution of the Druze community to the State of Israel in building the land, strengthening security and shaping the face of Israeli society as an egalitarian and diverse society.”
      The plan also suggests enshrining in law that members of minority groups, from all religions and ethnic groups will be eligible for benefits if they serve in the security forces. The law will also recognize their contribution if they serve.
      >> Analysis: Druze nation-state crisis: Israeli army chief forced to put out fire Netanyahu started
      Several Druze officers have left the Israeli military in recent days over the nation-state law.
      The Basic Law on Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People, also known as the nation-state law, approved by the Knesset on July 19, affirmed that only Jews have the right to self-determination in Israel. It also downgraded Arabic to a language with “special status,” among several other controversial measures that affect the Israeli Druze.
      The nation-state law is designed to alter the application of the Basic Law on Human Dignity and Liberty in court rulings, and permits judges to give priority to Israel’s Jewish character in their rulings.
      Earlier this month, Druze lawmakers were the first to file a High Court of Justice petition against the legislation. A hundred Druze Israel Defense Forces reserve officers added their voices to that effort on Wednesday, prompting Education Minister Naftali Bennett to speak out in support of “our blood brothers” on Twitter.
      Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon echoed similar sentiments, telling Israeli Army Radio, “The enactment of the nation-state law was done hastily,” and adding: “We were wrong and we need to fix it.”
      The acting Chief of Staff of the Prime Minister’s Bureau announced the formation of a ministerial committee to deal with the issue of the Druze community, to be headed by the prime minister, which will work to promote the plan and to supervise its implementation - among other things.
      Details of the plan will be formulated and worded within 45 days, in the context of a joint team of the cabinet and representatives of the community, all subject to the instructions of the law and the approval of the attorney general. Legislative activities will begin immediately with the convening of the coming winter session of the Knesset and will be concluded within 45 days from the start of the session.
      Jonathan Lis

    • Rare manifestation de la communauté druze contre une loi controversée définissant Israël
      https://www.lemonde.fr/proche-orient/article/2018/08/05/rare-manifestation-de-la-communaute-druze-contre-une-loi-controversee-defini

      Une foule immense de Druzes israéliens et leurs sympathisants a manifesté samedi à Tel-Aviv contre une nouvelle loi controversée qui, disent-ils, fait d’eux des citoyens de seconde classe. Selon les médias israéliens, quelque 50 000 personnes ont pris part à la manifestation.
      […]
      Arborant des drapeaux druzes et israéliens, les protestataires ont défilé dans le centre de Tel-Aviv an scandant « égalité ». « Malgré notre loyauté illimitée à l’Etat, celui-ci ne nous considère pas comme des citoyens égaux », a affirmé le chef spirituel de la communauté druze, cheikh Mouafak Tarif dans un discours.

  • Palestinians urge Oscar nominees to reject Israel junket
    https://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/palestinians-urge-oscar-nominees-reject-israel-junket

    Palestinians are calling on Oscar nominees to reject a travel voucher supplied by the Israeli government as part of the gift bag they will be given during the Academy Awards.

    The Israeli tourism ministry said it was behind the vouchers which are good for a “10-day VIP trip to Israel for two.”

    Tourism minister Yariv Levin made clear that the goal of the stunt is to improve Israel’s image by capitalizing on the fame of Hollywood stars.

    Israel hopes that stars including Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon and Kate Winslet will be “touring in Tel Aviv or walking through the streets of the Old City of Jerusalem” – a part of the occupied West Bank.

    “If they do indeed accept the invitation, their visit will have enormous resonance among millions of fans and followers,” Levin said.

    • Les Palestiniens demandent aux nominés aux Oscars de refuser un voyage de propagande en Israël
      http://www.pourlapalestine.be/les-palestiniens-demandent-aux-nomines-aux-oscars-de-rejeter-le-voya

      Les militants palestiniens des droits de l’homme demandent aux nominés aux Oscars de ne pas accepter les billets de voyage fournis par le gouvernement israélien () et qui font partie de l’ensemble des cadeaux remis aux nominés des catégories « acteurs » et « mise en scène ».

      Une déclaration du ministère israélien du Tourisme se targue de ce que cette initiative constitue une excellente occasion de voir d’« éminents faiseurs d’opinion » partager leur visite « avec des millions de leurs fans et partisans ».

      () Il s’agit d’un voyage de 10 jours, pour une valeur de 55.000 $

  • Arab list may seek place on sensitive Knesset security committee -
    ‘It is impossible to expose classified material to MKs who praise Azmi Bishara,’ says Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee chairman.
    By Jonathan Lis | Feb. 11, 2015 | Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/.premium-1.641941

    Quite a number of Knesset members have been worrying in recent days over the possibility that the Joint List of the combined Arab parties (Balad, United Arab List and Ta’al) and the Arab-Jewish party Hadash will become the fourth largest party in the next Knesset after the election – and demand appropriate representation on the prestigious Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. Until now, the Arab parties have never had representatives on the committee, and instead they were “compensated” with representation on other major Knesset committees.

    In addition to the ideological opposition of Arab MKs to sitting on the committee, the heads of the committee always claimed for years that there was a security risk in allowing members of Arab parties to attend confidential hearings and other meetings. “These are parties that cooperate regularly with the enemy, in coordination with them. They oppose cooperation with the Israel Defense Forces and view those who enlist in the IDF as traitors,” said current committee chairman MK Yariv Levin (Likud) Tuesday.

    “In security terms, it’s unacceptable to expose classified intelligence material to Knesset members on whose party website appears the picture and praise for [former Balad MK] Azmi Bishara, who acted on behalf of Hezbollah,” said Levin.

    It is impossible to ban the membership of Arab MKs on the committee, but “in a situation in which a Knesset member from the Arab parties sat on the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, I would hold only meetings of this forum without a security classification and open all the meetings to the press,” said Levin.

    Former MK Talab al-Sana (United Arab List – Ta’al) served for a few weeks as a regular member of the committee before the permanent composition of the committee was set after the elections. But then-committee chairman and now Strategic and Intelligence Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz canceled a series of scheduled committee meetings on defense matters after he found he could not prevent al-Sana from participating. Al-Sana at first demanded to visit the alleged nuclear reactor outside Dimona and to receive intelligence updates, but after a meeting with Steinitz – as well as criticism he received from fellow members of Arab parties in the Knesset – he decided to limit his committee activities only to meetings on foreign affairs and diplomatic issues. After a short time he resigned from the committee.

    The Joint List has not yet held a discussion on the matter and a number of its most influential leaders feel the chances they will ask for a seat on the committee are slim. The chairman of Balad, MK Jamal Zahalka, said Tuesday that he will object to placing a representative of the Joint List on the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. “We do not want to be partners in making decisions for the defense establishment in Israel,” he said.

  • The ‘Nation-state’ Bill: Jews Should Know Exactly Where It Leads | Counter Information
    https://counterinformation.wordpress.com/2014/11/27/the-nation-state-bill-jews-should-know-exactly-where-i

    One need not be a historian to see the resemblance between the controversial bill and nationality laws of in 1930s Europe.

    By Daniel Blatman

    November 27, 2014 “ICH” – “Haaretz” – Quite a few states in the 20th century passed, or tried to pass, nationality laws, through efforts that share certain similarities. All took place in countries with at least one national minority (sometimes more than one) that sought full equality in the state or in a territory that had become part of the state and in which it had lived for generations.

    Nationality laws were passed in societies that felt threatened by these minorities’ aspirations of integration and demands for equality, resulting in regimes that turned xenophobia into major tropes.

    Nationality laws were passed in states that were grounded in one ethnic identity, defined in contrast to the identity of the other, leading to persecution of and codified discrimination against minorities. Jews were the first victims of these regimes, in which phobias and suspicion replaced the principles of social and political pluralism.

    In 1937, the Polish economist Olgierd Górka wrote that the Polish state was an economic asset whose legal owners could do as they pleased with it. Decisions on national issues were thus similar to the choices made by a factory owner. The state belonged to the major group that shaped its essence and spirit, and which exercised its ownership of it — the ethnic Poles. Polish Catholicism gave the Poles the right to own the national asset known as the Polish state.

    Knesset member Yariv Levin’s explanations of his nationality bill suggests that he is following Górka’s path. According to Levin, the state’s Jewish expressions reflect the fact that Israel is not only the Jews’ nation-state, but also a state whose very lifeblood is Judaism — a situation that is unique in all the world. A unique situation in the Western, democratic world, but it has a historical precedent in the Poles’ attempt to create a state that pushed its minorities out of the national partnership.

    Romania, too — a state with many minorities, including a large Jewish one — was gripped by a fervor to be defined as the Romania nation-state.

    In an essay, the national historian Constantin Giurescu wrote that the ideal of the resurgent Romanian nation was to ensure the optimal development of the most eminent population group, the Romanians. The Romanian nation-state must advance the dominant ethnic group, he wrote, while the minorities were a “problem” that should be seen as “guest groups” or groups under the protection of the true citizens. He did not specify the rights that would be granted to such groups.

    Romania’s policy toward minorities became clearer after Ion Antonescu came to power. During World War II it went from attempting an “ethnic cleansing” of the Bulgarians to the expulsion and annihilation of the Jews and the Roma, also known as Gypsies. But few believed the debate over nationality laws in the interwar period would end in an effort to solve the nationality question by purging the nation of its minorities.

    The proposed nationality bill does not refer explicitly to the rights of minorities living in Israel and does not explicitly guarantee their equal rights. The version proposed by Levin (Likud) and MK Ayelet Shaked (Habayit Hayehudi), and presumably that of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as well, say that Israel will be Jewish and democratic and it guarantees, in a general manner, the equal personal rights of every citizen, in accordance with the laws of the state.

    But alongside this lip service, the bill specifies that national minorities are to have no say regarding the character of the state of which they are supposedly citizens with equal rights.

    Minorities have no right to any national expression in their own country. All obligatory state symbols are Jewish ones. Only Jews have the right to immigrate freely and receive citizenship. The state will cultivate only the Jewish heritage and traditions; Jewish law is to serve as inspiration for laws, and so on.

    One need not be a historian to see the resemblance between the Israeli nationality bill and nationality laws of 80 years ago. Like them, it delineates the boundaries between the most important, dominant group of citizens and the rest, who are turned into guests of a sort in their own country — tolerated ones, for the present.

    At the extreme nationalist fringe of the bill’s promoters, efforts are already under way to define its final goal. The followers of the late Rabbi Meir Kahane and members of Lehava will not settle for formulas specifying Israel’s Jewish character and the Jews’ sole claim to national privilege in the state. Their model for the nationality law is the Nuremberg Laws. Their main goal is to preserve Jewish racial purity and to wage war on marriages or romantic relationships between Jews and members of minority groups.

    Lehava’s website states: “Intermarriage is forbidden according to the will of God, who gave severe warnings in his Torah against mixing the seed of the living God with other nations and against losing the special uniqueness of the Jewish people.”

    No, they say, this is not racism. The goal is only to protect our nation. In 1936, two Nazi jurists, Bernhard Lösener and Friedrich Knost, published a book about the Jewish question in Germany that spoke about the Nuremberg Laws. The purpose of these laws, they wrote, was not to cause racial hatred. On the contrary, it was to ease and regulate the relationship between Jews and Germans over the long term.

    What can we learn from all the efforts to pass nationality laws? Mainly that we know what they lead to. We also know that many of the individuals who laid the ideological foundations for such legislation or who supported then never envisioned that they had set in motion a process whose end they could not have imagined.

    The author is a professor of Holocaust-era history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem .

  • Israel’s distinguishing between Christian and Muslim Arabs is racism Haaretz Editorial | Feb. 26, 2014

    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/1.576416

    Likud MK Yariv Levin’s new bill threatens to erode even further the concept of citizenship in Israel. According to the bill, Christian Arabs will have their own representatives on the advisory council mandated by the Equal Employment Opportunities Law.

    Ostensibly the purpose is to ensure better representation for communities whose members have a hard time finding their place in the labor market. But Levin doesn’t conceal his true goal: “To grant separate representation and separate treatment to the Christian community, which will be distinguished from the Muslim Arabs.”

    “I take pains not to call them Arabs,” Levin added in an interview with the daily Maariv, referring to Christians. According to Levin, Arabs are “Muslims who want to destroy the state from within.” The widespread support for the bill in the Knesset shows that crazy ideas like these aren’t the province of an extremist, borderline-loony MK. They’re part of the national consensus.

  • ISRAEL. Une loi distingue les arabes chrétiens et musulmans - Le Nouvel Observateur
    http://tempsreel.nouvelobs.com/monde/20140225.OBS7662/israel-une-loi-distingue-les-arabes-chretiens-et-musulmans.html

    Israël a adopté lund1 24 février un projet de loi controversé qui, pour la première fois, fait la distinction entre les citoyens arabes de confession musulmane et ceux d’obédience chrétienne, suscitant des protestations palestiniennes.

    Le texte approuvé lundi par la Knesset (Parlement israélien) élargit la Commission nationale sur l’égalité des chances dans l’emploi de cinq à 10 membres, accordant des sièges distincts à des représentants des travailleurs chrétiens et musulmans de la communauté arabe israélienne.

    « Nous avons beaucoup en commun avec les chrétiens. Ils sont nos alliés naturels, un contrepoids aux musulmans qui veulent détruire le pays de l’intérieur », a déclaré le parrain de ce projet de loi, Yariv Levin, du parti Likoud (droite nationaliste) du Premier ministre Benjamin Netanyahu, cité par les médias.
    « Une manœuvre politique de l’extrême droite »

    La nouvelle loi prévoit également des sièges réservés à la communauté druze, aux juifs ultra-orthodoxes et aux immigrés juifs d’Ethiopie, des communautés où le taux de chômage est supérieur à la moyenne.

    Un député arabe israélien de la Knesset a dénoncé un texte empreint d’un « sectarisme sans précédent ». « Il s’agit d’une manœuvre politique de l’extrême droite », a expliqué Basel Ghattas, un chrétien grec orthodoxe.

    Le texte a également été dénoncé par l’Organisation de libération de la Palestine (OLP). « Nous rejetons cette loi », a affirmé dans un communiqué Hanane Achraoui, membre du Comité exécutif de l’OLP, déplorant qu’elle cherche « à créer une nouvelle réalité au sein de notre peuple sur une base religieuse au lieu de se fonder sur l’identité nationale ».
    Diviser les arabes chrétiens et musulmans

    Les Arabes israéliens sont les descendants des 160.000 Palestiniens restés sur leur terre après la guerre qui a conduit à la création d’Israël en 1948. Cette communauté compte aujourd’hui plus de 1,4 million de personnes, soit 20% de la population totale.

    Israël - qui bénéficie du soutien idéologique et financier des chrétiens évangélistes sionistes, en particulier américains - s’efforce de jouer la carte de la division entre arabes chrétiens et musulmans dans le conflit israélo-palestinien, selon les adversaires du projet de loi.

    Ce texte a été approuvé trois mois avant le premier voyage en Terre sainte du pape François, qui doit se rendre en Jordanie, à Bethléem (Cisjordanie) et à Jérusalem du 24 au 26 mai prochain....

    #Israël
    #arabes
    #Palestine
    #musulmans
    #chrétiens
    #loi
    #knesset

    • La stratégie du diviser pour régner d’Israël : considérer les Palestiniens chrétiens comme « non-arabes »

      Par Yazan al-Saadi, Chloé Benoist
      Article publié le 21 février 2014 / Al Akhbar

      http://www.ism-france.org/analyses/La-strategie-du-diviser-pour-regner-d-Israel-considerer-les-Palestiniens

      Le projet a été proposé par Yariv Levin, président de la coalition conservatrice au pouvoir Likud-Yisrael Beitenu en janvier 2014. « Mon projet de loi accordera une représentation et un cadre de référence distincts à la population chrétienne, qui les distingueront des arabes musulmans, » avait dit Levin à l’époque. « C’est une étape importante et historique qui peut introduire un équilibre dans l’Etat d’Israël, et pour nous [les juifs] avec les chrétiens, » avait-il ajouté. « Je veille à ne pas faire référence à eux en tant qu’arabes, parce qu’ils ne sont pas arabes. »

  • Coalition chairman Yariv Levin (Likud Beytenu) is working on a series of measures to legally differentiate Christians and Muslim Arabs.
    http://www.jpost.com/Diplomacy-and-Politics/Likud-MK-pushes-measures-to-legally-differentiate-Christian-and-Muslim-Arabs-

    According to Levin, “this idea came from Christians who asked me to do this following similar activity pertaining to the Druse minority. It’s not surprising that Christians want to be separated from Muslims. This is the only place in the Middle East where they have security and freedom of worship. Many Christians don’t want to be known as Arabs, but as Maronites or Aramites.”

    (...)

    The coalition chairman asked the Interior Ministry to allow Christians to have “Christian” written as their nationality on their identity cards, as opposed to other Arabs, who have “Arab” written there.

    (...)

    Balad MK Basel Ghattas, a Christian Arab who also was the co-founder of Adalah, the legal center for Arab minority rights, told The Jerusalem Post that Levin is making “a provocative action,” which “is part of a divide and conquer policy that was used by the Zionist movement and by all colonial states in the world.”

    Asked if Arab Christians feel part of the Arab nation, he said they do and that they have roots in Arab culture, which are very strong, and Levin cannot change this.

    This move is an attempt to “leverage the situation in the Middle East and the instability where Christians are unsettled,” he said going on to criticize Levin for “cheap propaganda” and using “really marginal groups” within the Israeli Arab Christian community to support him.

    Ghattas wrote a strong letter to Levin over the matter, stating that he will fight against the “cynical manipulation,” which is fueled by a “racist ideology.”

    Arab Christians are strong enough to face attempts to divide them, he said.

    Asked about Christian Arabs that may support Levin’s proposal, he responded that they do not represent them and a campaign against this divide and conquer strategy will take place in the coming months.

    (...)

    “Levin first should decide who is a Jew and then decide who is an Arab,” Jafar Farah, the director of the Mossawa Center - The Advocacy Center for Arab Citizens in Israel, told The Post.

    “Christians always saw themselves as part of the Arab nation” and Levin is “not going to change things now,” he added.

    The Abraham Fund panned Levin’s proposals as an attempt to “divide and conquer” Israeli Arabs and took issue with Christians not being identified also as Arabs.

    “These practices are being used in order to weaken the minority’s collective identity,” an Abraham Fund spokeswoman said. “This absurd proposal [is] yet another effort to discriminate against Israel’s Muslim Arab citizens by fueling internal tensions within the Arab minority.”

    #diviser_pour_mieux_régner #colonialisme #nationalité #Israël

    The NGO added that the measures are an attempt to condition benefits for citizens on their refraining from calling themselves Arabs.

    Le chemin de croix des chrétiens en Israël
    http://www.lepoint.fr/monde/le-chemin-de-croix-des-chretiens-en-israel-08-09-2012-1503992_24.php

  • #Israel MP says Christian citizens “not Arabs,” pushes for discriminatory policy
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/knesset-member-pushes-bill-favor-christian-citizens-israel-calls-

    A member of the Israeli #Knesset is pushing forward legislation that would discriminate between Christian and Muslim Palestinian citizens of Israel, media reported on Wednesday. MK Yariv Levin, the coalition chairman for the governing conservative Likud-Yisrael Beitenu faction, is proposing a series of bills over the status of Palestinian Christian citizens of Israel, notably identifying them as “not Arabs,” Maariv newspaper reported. read more

    #Palestine #Top_News

  • Apartheid-building measures - Opinion - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/apartheid-building-measures.premium-1.531037

    For a few days, Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon held the title of the government’s chief spoiler, but he recently lost that honor to Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, who claimed (was he backed by the annual intelligence assessment?) that the Arab Peace Initiative was just spin.

    Danon started out modestly, focusing only on the Palestinians, but Ya’alon went big-time and included all Arabs. Then came Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, who mentioned a friend with shrapnel in his backside as an analogy to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He grabbed the title from Danon and Ya’alon. As my father used to say, “I’d laugh too if that idiot wasn’t one of mine.”

    While the Danon-Ya’alon-Bennett trio is pushing to the limit the public’s right to get tired of what this trio thinks, a strong right-wing axis is forming in the Knesset. It consists of around 40 MKs, most of them from the coalition, who aim to prevent Israel from making territorial concessions and to thwart any peace deal with the Palestinians.

    Although their leader has not yet been crowned, it seems the title must go to a tireless, soft-spoken legislator who makes the impression of a refined person who wouldn’t hurt a fly. His name is Yariv Levin, who chairs both the coalition and the Likud faction in the Knesset. Levin has a clear agenda: Legislation that supports the settlements and the settlers should be advanced, while legislation inimical to the settlements and the settlers should be blocked. The basic principle is that the Arabs, the converts and the migrant workers will have to fend for themselves on the other side of the fence.

    The Knesset’s main job is to pass legislation. In Levin’s book, the chief guideline is “Talk less and just pass more legislation.” If the left-wingers in academia and the courts consider such actions apartheid-building measures, let them suffer. The Land of Israel is acquired only with great pain.

    In the meantime, this approach is proving successful, and intervention from above rarely occurs. One of those rare occasions took place at the cabinet meeting this week, when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu opposed branding people responsible for anti-Arab “price tag” attacks members of a terrorist group (as sought by Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch and the Shin Bet security service). Instead, Netanyahu said they should be regarded as part of a banned organization. How pleasant it is to wake up to “Good morning, Abu Ghosh” – the site of a recent price tag attack.

    In the previous Knesset, the moderate ministerial trio of Benny Begin, Dan Meridor and Michael Eitan were sent home when Likud thinned its ranks. These officials were members of the Ministerial Committee for Legislation. In contrast, the trio’s replacement, the quartet of Limor Livnat, Yuval Steinitz, Gideon Sa’ar and Gilad Erdan, are as fluid as butter on a hot summer’s day.

    And a little child shall lead them. Just go to Levin’s website and you’ll find the following headline: “The Ministerial Committee for Legislation has approved the bill proposed by the coalition chairman on prioritizing citizens who serve the state.” The law would favor such people in areas like jobs, rents and housing.

    Levin is the mover and shaker in the legislative coalition. His next project, subordinating democracy to Judaism in a Basic Law on the Nation-State, will be debated by the Knesset in the next few days. In the previous Knesset, he headed a special committee that considered a mechanism for a referendum to authorize or rule out conceding territory “under Israeli sovereignty.”