海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Arab-Israeli 鈥榩ragmatist鈥 was a big hit. Elections loom as daunting Act II.

鈥楿niting in the face of adversity.鈥 鈥楻eaching across divides.鈥 The value of these political goals seems almost self-evident. But in the rough and tumble of Israeli politics, the animosities and challenges are real.

By Dina Kraft , Correspondent
Haifa, Israel

In his trademark dark suit and no tie, Ayman Odeh enters a cafe here in his hometown, on a hill overlooking the Mediterranean.

A pair of young men听rise instantly听to shake听the Arab parliamentarian鈥檚 hand and embrace him. Soon after, a father approaches, hands Mr. Odeh his infant daughter, and takes their picture.

奥丑别苍听翱诲别丑eventually gets up to leave the cafe,听which serves both apple strudel and听kanafeh,听traditionally Jewish and Arab desserts, he is swarmed by smiling well-wishers, most of them Arab, but some Jewish.

This is Haifa, where he seems most at ease.听It鈥檚听not just his home turf,听where听he came of age politically, and was elected to the听city council two decades ago when he was just 23. It鈥檚 also a city where Jews and Arabs live relatively integrated lives.听It鈥檚 Haifa鈥檚 example that has shaped him and his brand of pragmatic politics.

A world away in听Jerusalem, 100 miles to the south, the reception听in the hallways of the Knesset has often felt decidedly less warm.听There Odeh has spent the last four years heading听the third-largest faction in Israel鈥檚 parliament.

The Joint List is a political alliance composed of the country鈥檚 four听established听Arab parties.听They鈥檙e not an obvious ideological fit: a mash-up of communists, feminists, Islamists, and Palestinian nationalists.听In 2015听Odeh led this newly minted bloc of 鈥淎rab鈥 parties 鈥撎齭o-called听because听their deputies and constituencies听are mostly Palestinian citizens of Israel 鈥 to the strongest Arab electoral showing in Israeli history.

To be sure, the Joint List was听borne of self-preservation. In a move apparently targeting Arab parties, a right-wing Jewish party had pushed through a measure raising the threshold for gaining a seat in the Knesset. Uniting听was the parties鈥 way to survive.

Now, facing a challenge to his own political survival, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called snap elections for April. For Odeh, the vote will be his first real test of staying power.

Different kind of politician

When Odeh, a secular Muslim with a wide smile and accessible demeanor, emerged on the national stage ahead of the 2015 elections, he brought with him a new sensibility, one that espoused the politics of cooperation, of Jewish and Arab citizens of this country working together.

That image is a departure from the image among many Jewish Israelis of Arab lawmakers as confrontational advocates of the Palestinian agenda at best, and fifth columnists at worst.

鈥淲e have to fight to have a democratic atmosphere in Israel. There are Jews and Arabs here who are against the path of Benjamin Netanyahu,鈥 Odeh, a critic of many of the prime minister鈥檚 policies, says in an interview. 鈥淭he struggle has to be a shared Arab-Jewish struggle.鈥

Odeh, who lists both Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela as having inspired him, calls this common cause between Arabs and Jews an 鈥渁lliance of the disadvantaged,鈥 and says he wants to tap into the frustration over the vast and growing economic gaps in Israel.

For Jewish Israelis on the center and left, his appeal has also come from his vocal support for a two-state solution to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Odeh emphasizes the rights of both peoples to self-determination. But he also warns that not making any moves toward a resolution has only one end: a single state where an Israeli minority rules over a Palestinian majority without voting rights.

In the Arab sector, where the effects of systemic discrimination run deep, Odeh campaigned on economic equality, promising to bring more women into the workforce, secure public transportation for Arab towns, and advocate for often impoverished Bedouin communities.

A major success: the almost $4 billion five-year plan to upgrade housing, public transportation, and education in Arab villages and towns.

Ron Gurlitz, co-director of Sikkuy, an organization that promotes equal rights for Arab citizens, says Odeh spent hours in negotiations that helped ensure the plan鈥檚 passage.

鈥淎yman sees the world as full of opportunities and acts accordingly,鈥 Mr. Gurlitz says. 鈥淢any times he succeeds 鈥 through these meetings with senior Israeli bureaucrats and ministers. This is part of what makes him a leader.鈥

Yet Odeh has also had to do his share of arm-twisting 鈥 and compromising 鈥 to keep the Joint List together, and things are looking shaky for the upcoming election: four members of the list鈥檚 13 have announced they will not run again.

鈥淵ou have to be a magician to be head of a list that faces so many problems internally and externally,鈥 says Eran Singer, Arab Affairs Editor for Israeli Public Broadcasting.

Feeling unwanted

鈥淢any Arabs feel they don鈥檛 have the same rights as Jews, and this is part of the challenge Ayman Odeh faces,鈥 Mr. Singer says. 鈥淗e is the head of a list of mainly Arab members of Knesset who feel the Israeli establishment does not want them as part of the government or even part of the country.鈥

It has not been an easy ride, acknowledges Odeh. Hostility from some of their right-wing Jewish counterparts in the Knesset 鈥 catcalls of 鈥渢raitors,鈥 derision for speaking Arabic, and more 鈥 is familiar territory for Odeh and his fellow Arab lawmakers.

Israel鈥檚 Palestinian citizens, as many now prefer to define themselves,听are made up of those Palestinians who stayed in Israel after the 1948 war that led to the Jewish state鈥檚 independence. The majority fled or were pushed out during the fighting. Today they make up 20 percent of Israel鈥檚 8.2 million people.

In the hours before the polls closed for the 2015 elections, fearing that his voters were not coming to the polls听to secure his victory over a Labor party alliance, Netanyahu made an on-camera get-out-the-vote plea, warning听that听鈥渄roves of Arabs鈥澨齱ere听casting ballots. While the 11th-hour election ploy has been roundly denounced by the left as racist, Netanyahu鈥檚 remarks still sting.

Odeh acknowledges that some Palestinian citizens, particularly the younger generation, have been turned off by politics under Netanyahu. They see an assault on their identity and culture both in political rhetoric and in the actual passage of nationalist bills aimed at diminishing their status. This has reinforced their sense that they are not wanted by their fellow citizens.

Odeh and his fellow Joint List members ripped up copies of the controversial nation-state law when it was still a bill on the Knesset floor while shouting the word 鈥渁partheid.鈥 Odeh himself said in a statement at the time of its passage that Israel had just approved 鈥渁 law of Jewish supremacy and told us that we will always be second-class citizens.鈥

Wavering support

Eid Jebele, a high school teacher in Haifa, political activist, and commentator in the Arab media, had been an ardent Odeh supporter in the last election. He likes him personally and says he has been a stellar speaker who articulates the needs of the community.

But he has been disappointed by what he describes as capitulations to the more Palestinian听nationalist elements in the party, including a decision not to join forces with Meretz, a progressive party, as a voting bloc because they are a Zionist party. Another was Odeh鈥檚 decision not to attend the funeral of Shimon Peres, the former president and longtime Labor party leader. Decisions like these have hurt him with many in the community, he claims, as has infighting within his home communist party of Hadash.

鈥淪o the hopes people had in him have begun to vanish,鈥 Mr. Jebele says. He says he won鈥檛 be voting for the Joint List in the next election, but instead will vote for Meretz.

Mohammed Dawarshe, director of Planning, Equality, and Shared Society at Givat Haviva, the Center for Shared Society in听Israel, is concerned by the double challenges Odeh faces 鈥 both within the list and from the Knesset at large.

Mr. Dawarshe says he is grateful for Odeh鈥檚 championing of shared society, but speculates he could have been more effective in the Knesset.

鈥淗e is a good man with good intentions working in a very tough environment,鈥 he says. 鈥淓ither because he is young or because he is lacking national political experience, it鈥檚 hard for him to deal with the sharks.鈥

But despite the setbacks to his vision of binational Arab-Jewish cooperation, Odeh clings to this answer, saying, 鈥淲e can听despair听and go away, or we can say 鈥業 want a binational identity for this country and say I will wave the flag for both nationalities together.鈥

鈥淚 am confident in my identity and I want to influence the state. It鈥檚 not going away and I鈥檓 okay with that. I don鈥檛 want to play on the Arab playing field alone,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 call on our public to join in, we are not a small minority. But I say alone we cannot succeed.鈥