Israel’s Arab Citizens And The Jewish State
28 Feb, 2007
As another sign of the growing power of Global Jihad, Israel's Arab minority has rejected the idea of Israel as a Jewish state. In a manifesto, "The Future Vision of the Palestinian Arabs in Israel", drafted by 40 academics and activists under the sponsorship of the Committee of Arab Mayors in Israel and endorsed by an unprecedented range of Arab community leaders, Arab leaders have declared that Israel is a bi-national state and Arabs are an indigenous group with collective rights, not just individual rights.
- They couldn’t be wrong more.
 - 
            Blinded by their 
            anti-Semitism, Arabs ignored the fact that neither are they an 
            indigenous group nor 
            is the Jewish nationhood is a new phenomenon in Palestine; the 
            Jewish nation was born during 40 years of wandering in the Sinai 
            more than five thousand years ago and has remained connected with 
            Palestine ever since. “Even after the destruction of the last Jewish 
            commonwealth in the first century, the Jewish people maintained 
            their own autonomous political and legal institutions: the Davidic 
            dynasty was preserved in Baghdad until the thirteenth century 
            through the rule of the Exilarch (Resh Galuta), while the 
            return to Zion was incorporated into the most widely practiced 
            Jewish traditions, including the end of the Yom Kippur service and 
            the Passover Seder, as well as in everyday prayers. Thus, Jewish 
            historic rights were kept alive in Jewish historical consciousness.”
            
            http://www.jcpa.org/jl/vp507.htm
            
            
 
Palestinian Arabs, on the other 
          hand, never had a separate identity. They always 
          thought of themselves as Arabs rather than as Palestinians. It is 
          a matter of record that the Arabs owe their presence in Palestine to 
          the Ottomans who settled Muslim populations as a buffer against 
          Bedouin attacks and Ibrahim Pasha, the Egyptian ruler who brought 
          Egyptian colonists with his army in the 1830s.  And during all those 
          times when Arabs lived under the Ottoman rule, they never showed any 
          desire for national independence.  According to Bernard Lewis, “From 
          the end of the Jewish state in antiquity to the beginning of British 
          rule, the area now designated by the name Palestine was not a country 
          and had no frontiers, only administrative boundaries; it was a group 
          of provincial subdivisions, by no means always the same, within a 
          larger entity.”
Lewis notes, "There had been a 
          steady movement of Jews to the Holy Land throughout the centuries." In 
          135 CE Jews took part in the Bar Kochba revolt against imperial Rome 
          and even re-established their capital in Jerusalem.  Defeated by the 
          most brutal of the Roman legions under the command of the emperor 
          Hadrian, Jews were forbidden to reside in Jerusalem for nearly five 
          hundred years.  Once a year on the ninth of the Hebrew month of Av, 
          they were allowed to weep at the remains of their destroyed Temple at 
          a spot that came to be called "the Wailing Wall."  In the meantime, 
          the Roman authorities renamed Judea as Palestina in order to 
          obliterate the memory of Jewish nationhood.
          A resolution adopted by the first 
          Congress of the Muslim Christian Association which met in Jerusalem in 
          February 1919 underlines the Arab understanding of the situation 
          conclusively.  It said, "We consider Palestine as part of Arab Syria, 
          as it has never been separated from it at any time.  We are connected 
          with it by national, religious, linguistic, natural, economic and 
          geographical bonds."
          Similarly, the representative of the 
          Arab Higher Committee to the United Nations submitted a statement to 
          the General Assembly in May 1947 that said, "Palestine was part of the 
          Province of Syria" and that, "politically, the Arabs of Palestine were 
          not independent in the sense of forming a separate political entity."  
          A few years later, Ahmed Shuqeiri, later the chairman of the PLO, told 
          the United Nations Security Council, "It is common knowledge that 
          Palestine is nothing but southern Syria."
          
          
          http://www.aish.com/jewishissues/middleeast/Arab-Israeli_Conflict_1_Pre-State_Palestine.asp
          
          
          Jerusalem has always remained a 
          Jewish majority – a symbol of Jewish yearning to be an independent 
          nation as they thrived in communities in many of Palestine’s towns.  
          “By 1864, a clear-cut Jewish majority emerged in Jerusalem - more than 
          half a century before the arrival of the British Empire and 
          the League of Nations Mandate.  During the years that the Jewish 
          presence in Eretz Israel was restored, a huge Arab population influx 
          transpired as Arab immigrants sought to take advantage of higher wages 
          and economic opportunities that resulted from Jewish settlement in the 
          land.  President Roosevelt concluded in 1939 that "Arab immigration 
          into Palestine since 1921 has vastly exceeded the total Jewish 
          immigration during the whole period."
          
          http://www.jcpa.org/jl/vp507.htm
          
          
          
           
          
          The present Arab 
          declaration challenging the Jewish character of Israel cannot be 
          ignored because it is not just an expression of dissatisfaction by a 
          minority about their socio-economic situation but a reminder that 
          Islamist radicalism and fundamentalism has now decided to challenge 
          openly the legitimacy of the Jewish state using Arab citizens of 
          Israel as its proxy in Israel. It must not be forgotten that the 
          Israeli Arabs are part and parcel of the same Global Jihad that has 
          been murdering our gallant soldiers on the war fronts in Iraq and 
          Afghanistan.   
          
          
           
          
          The international 
          community has to act to stop these serious acts on the part of Global 
          Jihad to undermine the only democracy in the Middle East.  It is 
          important to note that Israel is the target of Global Jihad for the 
          same reasons as the United States of America and other open societies 
          everywhere in the world.
          
           
          
          Israel is the only 
          democracy
          in the region 
          
          As all of the Muslim states, without 
          any exception, are either autocracies or theocracies or both, they 
          feel threatened by the very existence of a truly democratic state in 
          their midst.  This is a common experience of anyone who visits the 
          region that for the oppressed populations of the Muslim countries, the 
          Jewish state serves as a beacon of hope.  During my first visit to 
          Israel, I was pleasantly surprised to see that most of the Arabs that 
          I had a chance to talk with preferred to live under the Jewish state.
           
          Israel is a pluralistic 
          society
          Israel is the only pluralistic 
          democracy, respectful of human rights, that exists in the Middle East. 
          The evidence of Jewish pluralism is everywhere; the Arab population in 
          Israel was freer than the populations in any Arab state.  Israel’s 
          Arab citizens had full freedom of expression and demonstration.  They 
          were enjoying full voting rights. They were free to elect their own 
          leaders to the Knesset.  They had their own political parties.  
          Newspapers owned and managed by Arabs were thriving.  In fact the 
          Israeli Arabs had full rights to citizenship.  Having been born and 
          brought up in a Muslim society, I couldn’t believe my eyes as I saw 
          Arab citizens of Israel having more dignity, self respect and rights 
          than any of the Muslims living in any of the Muslim states.
          
           
          
          Israel is truly an 
          open society 
          
          Israel is the only state in the whole 
          Middle East where women had total freedom of pursuing happiness.  I 
          saw Muslim women going to schools, colleges and universities without 
          any restriction or inhibition.  I noted with interest that right along 
          with hijab and veil-wearing Arab female students there were many who 
          were wearing jeans.  Such an open society is definitely a threat to 
          the traditional Arab society in which women cannot be allowed any kind 
          of freedom – as free and independent women in a traditional Muslim 
          culture is a sign of diminishing male authority and respect.
           
          From a strict Islamist fundamentalist 
          point of view, a society that allows its women to operate freely and 
          independently is a society representing Jahiliya – the era of 
          darkness, of ignorance and shamelessness.  Islam, in an Islamist’s 
          view had come to destroy the pillars of shamelessness that supported 
          the era of jahilya.  For Global Jihad representing the strictest and 
          manipulated version of Islam the Judeo-Christian culture today is a 
          symbol of all that was Jahilya. And Israel’s Jewish heritage and 
          foundations are a direct threat to the domination and continuance of 
          Islamist obscurantism. 
          
           
          I saw Arab businesses thriving in 
          Israel.  To my amazement, most of my Jewish friends were recommending, 
          supporting and promoting them.  Such an Israeli tolerance for a people 
          who have never stopped from aiding their enemies was unbelievable.   I 
          visited a number of Arab institutions and found them flourishing.  
          This again explains why the Arabs do not want Israel to exist; it is 
          setting an example for a just society that respects human beings 
          irrespective of their color, creed or ethnicity and above all without 
          stopping to think for a moment that they are potentially an enemy.
           
          It is now a common experience in 
          Israel that the Arabs living under Muslim Arab authorities want to be 
          treated in Israeli hospitals, when suffering from life threatening 
          illnesses.  And there never have been an instance when any Israeli 
          hospital has ever refused treatment to any Muslim Arab, even in cases 
          when the person who came for treatment was suspected of being a 
          potential terrorist.  The world knows that some of the Arabs who 
          received treatments in the Israeli medical facilities did in fact come 
          back as homicide bombers causing death and destruction to the innocent 
          citizens of Israel.
           
          It is a real experience to be in 
          Israel.  Just like in the U.S., the Jewish state has citizens who have 
          come from more than hundred countries and represent diverse ethnic, 
          religious, and racial groups.  All of the continents, Asia, Africa, 
          Australia, the Americas and Europe are represented there and everyone 
          enjoys equal rights.  One cannot find even a shade of discrimination 
          in any form.
           
          It is a model for the region
          “Israel's economic, political, 
          scientific and social success have the potential to become a model for 
          the region.  The more sensible Arabs in Gaza or the Palestinian 
          Authority, when comparing the miserable life imposed upon them by the 
          bullies of al Fatah, Hamas or Hezbollah with the very superior 
          lifestyle of their Arab-Israeli brothers inevitably conclude that 
          liberty and rationality bring dividends.
           
Israel, which comprises some 10,000 square miles, compared with Arab countries that total over five million square miles — not including Iran — has shown itself to be a model of democracy and decency. Over one million Arabs live in Israel with full rights of citizenship. They vote and serve in Israel’s parliament. And yet, bereft of oil, Israel’s per capita gross domestic product tops 24,000 dollars (compared with the oil-rich Saudi Arabia whose per capita GDP hovers at 13,000 dollars), and it remains a thriving bastion of democratic liberalism in an ocean of oligarchies and dictatorships.”
           
          Consequently the Jewish state has 
          already become a magnet for the Arabs living in the neighboring Muslim 
          states, explaining the fast growing population of Arabs in the Jewish 
          state; the fast growth is not just because of the birth rate but is 
          also because of the immigration on many pretexts of Arabs from 
          neighboring countries.
          
           
          The rejection of Israel as a Jewish 
          state by Israel's Arab minority has 
          
          underlined the level of threat to 
          Israel’s security which has never been so pronounced.  It seems as if 
          all the dark forces determined to undermine and overwhelm democracy 
          and pluralism have joined hands; Hezbollah has convinced the world 
          that Israel is not invincible; Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan and other 
          Muslim states have arguably proved their effectiveness in convincing 
          Washington that without validating Palestinian terrorism, it cannot 
          win its war on Islamist fascism; Iran is on its way to gain the second 
          Islamist nuclear bomb; and the international assaults on Israel’s 
          character are gaining in momentum. 
          
          
           
          
          The Islamists’ 
          demand to redefine the foundations of Israel is part of the same 
          campaign that has been working not so discreetly in the US to replace 
          the Jeffersonian civic religion by Islamist fascists.  It is in the US 
          interest to watch how Israeli Arabs’ move to dismantle the Jewish 
          state is shaping up.  Just like the manner in which Islamist 
          organizations in the US are taking advantage of our openness to 
          destroy our Judeo-Christian foundations, Israeli Arabs are also taking 
          advantage of a democratic constitution to subvert an open and 
          pluralistic way of life.
          
           
          
          Israeli Arabs’ 
          rejection of Israel as a Jewish state is an extension of their demand 
          for the return of refugees to Israel.  They have kept the refugee 
          issue alive for so many decades only because they knew that what they 
          cannot win in the battlefield, they can gain by using the Jewish 
          state’s commitment to remain a democracy.
          
           
It is an historical fact that fighting an internal enemy is much more difficult than defending against an external threat. Israel and the US both have fought off external enemies with success but now both are facing an enemy that has entrenched itself deep within their democracies. This onslaught on our freedoms from within has to be dealt with forthwith before it gets out of hand.
Tashbih Sayyed is the Editor in Chief of Pakistan Today and The Muslim World Today, President of Council for Democracy and Tolerance, an adjunct fellow of Hudson Institute, and a regular columnist for newspapers across the world. He is the author of eight books, including: History Of The World, Left Of The Center, Pakistan - An Unfinished Agenda, Mohammad - A secularist's View, Foreign Policy Of Pakistan, and Shadow Warriors - Afghanistan, Pakistan, Taliban.