In Israel, tiny Druze minority galvanizes opposition to nation-state law
Israel鈥檚 Druze, a minority within a minority, are respected by Israeli Jews for their military service and loyalty to the state. Now they are in the vanguard of a fight for equal rights and democracy.
Israel鈥檚 Druze, a minority within a minority, are respected by Israeli Jews for their military service and loyalty to the state. Now they are in the vanguard of a fight for equal rights and democracy.
In decades of demonstrations at Rabin Square, it was an unprecedented sight. With Tel Aviv鈥檚 20-story City Hall lit up in the five-colored Druze Arab flag, tens of thousands of Jewish and Druze demonstrators on Saturday chanted in Arabic and Hebrew, 鈥淓quality, Equality.鈥
The outpouring was a protest against Israel鈥檚 recently passed 鈥渘ation state鈥 law, a piece of constitutional legislation enshrining the country鈥檚 Jewish character that critics say downgrades Arab citizens of Israel, who make up 21 percent of the population, and omits mention of democratic values.
Participation in the high-profile mass protest was a departure for the Druze, a small religious minority within the larger Arab minority who are celebrated in Israel for their patriotism and military service but have strained relations with other Israeli Arabs.
But the protest against the nation-state law has put the community in a dramatic new position: as leaders in the campaign for equal rights between all Arabs and Jews in Israel.
鈥淚鈥檓 happy that there are so many people that are supporting us. I鈥檓 happy that we are waving the Druze flag at Rabin Square,鈥 says Aezz Abrukin from the Druze village of Isfiya in northern Israel.
Wearing a shirt with the Jewish Star of David rendered in the colors of the Druze flag, Mr. Abrukin explains that his father was killed serving in Israel鈥檚 Border Patrol, and that he flies the Druze and Israeli flag on his jeep every Independence Day.
鈥淭he prime minister should support us. He should turn on the television and see what is happening here,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e need to change this law. I鈥檓 not political, but we need a law that will protect our rights, like others.鈥欌
Dubbed, 鈥淏asic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People,鈥 the law has been hailed by supporters like Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a necessary formalization of the country鈥檚 Jewish identity. Detractors say the law is unnecessary at best, and a nationalist trampling of Israel鈥檚 democracy and minority rights at worst.
The legislation elevates the status of Hebrew over Arabic (until now an official language in Israel), encourages 鈥淛ewish settlement,鈥 and omits any reference to democracy or equality for Israel鈥檚 Arab population. The July 19 passage of the law triggered a wave of criticism among a wide swath of Jews and Arabs.
The Druze, who number about 150,000 out of Israel鈥檚 population of nearly 9 million, saw the law as an insult to their patriotism and contribution to the country. In the weeks since the law鈥檚 passage, two Druze officers publicly resigned from the Israeli military, bemoaning that they had been reduced to second-class citizens.
鈥淲e believe it鈥檚 a bad law for all minorities, but specifically for those minorities who see themselves as Israelis,鈥欌 says Amir Khnifess, a recent post-doctoral fellow in political science at Georgetown University who runs a center promoting Druze ties to Israel.
An old alliance
The turnout Saturday night 鈥渟hows you that the struggle is not unique to the Druze community 鈥 it鈥檚 also a struggle for every other Israeli who feels hurt,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e were singing the [Israeli national anthem] 鈥楬atikvah,鈥 and we were united with our Israeli identity, but what we won鈥檛 accept is a law that defines us as second-class citizens.鈥
The cooperation between Israeli Jews and Druze 鈥 part of a Middle Eastern community that also forms minorities in Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan 鈥 extends back to before Israel鈥檚 establishment in 1948.
It was an alliance of minorities. Labeled infidels by some Muslim religious leaders, several Druze groups in British Mandatory Palestine threw in their lot with the Zionists, assuming that the Jews鈥 history of suffering anti-Semitism would make them sensitive to minority rights.
In recent decades, the Druze have enthusiastically embraced service in combat units, while Druze politicians have been elected to the parliament on the ticket of both right-wing and left-wing Zionist political parties. Their patriotism has kept the Druze at a distance from most 海角大神 and Muslim citizens, who, although they seek equal rights as well, increasingly identify as Palestinians and recoil from Zionism. The Druze are often insulted by fellow Arabs as 鈥渄ogs鈥 of the Zionists.
Now the Druze 鈥 despite some initial discussion of a separate deal with the government to address the community鈥檚 status 鈥 聽find themselves at the forefront of a fight for equal rights for all Arab citizens in Israel.
鈥淭he wave of demonstration by the Druze community against the nation-state law can be the beginning of a more comprehensive process,聽in which the Druze could be the spearhead of a struggle for the equality of all Israeli citizen minorities, Muslim and 海角大神s,鈥欌 wrote Israeli author David Grossman on the eve of the rally in the Haaretz newspaper.
Wide support for Druze
The Druze reputation as enthusiastic soldiers earns them legitimacy and sympathy across a wide spectrum of Israelis. Though a survey by Israel鈥檚 Walla! News website found that 58 percent of Israelis support the law, 54 percent of respondents in the same poll said the Druze campaign against the law is justified.
鈥淭he pain of the Druze is genuine and should be respected,鈥 said Israeli Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked, of the far-right Jewish Home party, in an interview with Israeli Army Radio Sunday. Shaked nonetheless defended the law and said it shouldn鈥檛 be changed.
Despite that respect, the Druze say they face the same discrimination as other minorities in civilian life. The Druze complain they can鈥檛 get authorization to build in their villages and suffer discrimination when job hunting.
鈥淚t鈥檚 easy to identify with the Druze. I was a paratrooper, and I served with them,鈥欌 says Dror Schneider, an engineering consultant who attended the rally and criticizes the discrimination they often face. 鈥淚f they try to rent an apartment in Tel Aviv, who will rent to another Arab?鈥
In an effort to mollify the Druze last week, Mr. Netanyahu offered to invest more government funds in Druze villages and pass a law recognizing the status of minorities who serve in Israeli security forces. At the same time, however, Netanyahu and his political allies alleged that the Druze didn鈥檛 understand the law and had been misled by Israeli left wingers. Druze leaders ultimately rejected the offer.
鈥淭hey said this has nothing to do with money, this has to do with our Israeli identity,鈥 says Eran Zinger, a Middle East editor at Israel鈥檚 public broadcast corporation, Kan. 鈥淭heir role is to remind Israelis that first Israel is for [all] Israelis, and only then Israel is for the Jews.鈥
No separate deals
Though the Druze and other Arab groups speak a different political language, they share the same goal of changing the law or nullifying it, Mr. Zinger says.
A group of Druze Israeli parliamentarians were the first to submit a petition to Israel鈥檚 Supreme Court against the law, a move followed by other Israeli opponents of the government. This Saturday, the Druze protest will be followed up by another Rabin Square demonstration by other Arab groups.
While Druze groups aren鈥檛 likely to join, Mr. Khnifess says the Druze campaign would continue and that there would be no separate deals with the government.
鈥淭hat doesn鈥檛 solve the problem with the basic law; it complicates the whole situation, and divides all of Israeli society into more groups,鈥欌 he says. 鈥淲e will continue our struggle, until the law is removed or amended, until it provides equality for all citizens.鈥