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Aaron David Miller and Israeli inequality
Published in Bikya Masr on 17 - 08 - 2012

TEL AVIV: On May 15, the NY Times ran an editorial authored by Aaron David Miller under the title of “Preserving Israel's Uncertain Status Quo," in which he argues that the Israeli government's attempts to achieve a “more peaceful and prosperous future" must “count for something."
In his bizarrely discursive analysis of the contemporary political climate, Miller unfolds an unabridged list of threats to Israel: the Israeli social justice movement, the Syrian uprising, the Egyptian ousting of Hosni Mubarak, Iran, the security vacuum in the Sinai, ultra-Orthodox Jewish Israelis, and ‘Arab Israelis' (which is, of course, a crass euphemism intended to disavow the collective identity of Palestinian citizens of Israel).
Cataloging this exhaustive account of dangers, he resorts to a number of boorish clichés and Western media assumptions. Indeed, despite Israel's malicious enemies, he argues, “the Israelis will prosper and keep their state, but the Arabs and the Iranians will never let them fully enjoy it."
Miller's portrait of Israel as a struggling democratic state perpetually warding off external threats falls perfectly in tune with corporate media trends. In this campaign, the NYT has played conductor to the chorus, pumping out daily publications that seek to normalize the idea of a preemptive military strike against Iran's nuclear program, constructing a widespread image of the Gaza Strip as a nest of 1.5 million terrorists foaming at the mouth, and framing the quest for representative government embodied in the Arab uprisings of the last year and a half as an existential threat to the Jewish state.
Miller strengthens these tired stereotypes, while failing to acknowledge genuine threats to the prospect of peace: the bellicose Netanyahu coalition and its poisonous relationship with the most chauvinist elements of right-wing Israel; the state security apparatus's attacks on J14 demonstrators in Tel Aviv; the extreme push for privatization in traditionally regulated sectors of the economy; the increased theft of private Palestinian land; the continued expansion of the separation wall onto Palestinian lands; and the government's explicit endorsement of increasingly violent West Bank settlers.
A particularly toxic form of chauvinism is embedded in the notion that 1948 Palestinians, those living inside the Green Line and carrying Israeli citizenship, are a genuine threat to the state's existence. This frame of mind, which led Miller to conclude that there are “too many Israeli Arabs," suggests that Palestinian citizens of Israel are a fifth column who could “undermine Israel's future as a Jewish, democratic state."
Miller ostensibly adopts an image of Israel that the corporate media establishment, not least of which the NYT, has carefully cultivated for years: Israel is a cringing country teetering on annihilation and fighting to preserve both its democratic institutions and its very existence.
Putting aside all questions of the military occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, Israel's treatment of its own Palestinian citizens—Israeli citizens!—is enough to cast serious doubt on Israel's democratic credibility.
From its very inception, Israel's treatment of its Palestinian citizens has been characterized by inequality, segregation, and discrimination. For the first 18 years that followed the establishment of the state, its Palestinian citizens lived under a form of martial law remarkably similar to the present day military occupation of the West Bank. In order to travel from Haifa to Akko, for instance, it was necessary to apply for limited military permits. Most villages were surrounded by barbed wire fencing, and Israel Defense Force (IDF) checkpoints regulated all human traffic.
And many of these villages were in fact internal refugee camps that continue to survive today. After the 1948 war, over 25,000 Palestinians became internal refugees, living in shantytowns within the borders of Israel but unable to return to their villages of origin (most of which were appropriated to Jewish settlement). Judeideh and Al-Maker, to name just two villages in the Eastern Galilee, began as temporary camps for refugees of villages Al-Birweh, which was ethnically cleansed in 1948.
Israel's present day system of inequality and segregation is protean in form, sometimes blatant yet often subtle. Among the difficulties faced by Palestinian citizens of Israel are the limited career opportunities that stem from the fact that many companies are encouraged not to hire employees who did not serve in the military. While the practice does not overtly target Arabs, they are effectively the only demographic harmed by it.
Furthermore, Palestinian villages of Israel struggle to expand their land under the stress over a booming birthrate, but are rarely granted the proper permissions. Abu Toameh, a student activist at Tel Aviv University, echoed similar themes while explaining that he did not feel represented by the Israeli J14 movement.
“Arab conditions are simply not the same here. Due to class differences, our problems are much different than the Jewish population," he began. “We have trouble expanding our crowded villages or purchasing commercial land. The price of apartments in Tel Aviv, which has an extremely low Arab population, doesn't address our immediate concerns."
In June, Israel's Channel 10 reported that Police Commissioner Yohanan Danino issued orders to police intelligence to carefully document the “involvement of the Arab community in the protests."
If the limits of free speech are one of the greatest indicators of the democratic degree of a state, Israel's scoring much lower its staunchest supporters would argue. Last year, the Israeli Knesset passed the Nakba Law, which severely limited free expression by threatening to cancel funding to organs of civil society, state-funded or tax-exempt, that recognized Israel's Independence Day as one of mourning.
Nonetheless, student activists of Tel Aviv University commemorated destroyed Palestinian villages in a campus event that took place in May. A mosaic crowd of progressive and left-wing students—both Jews and Arabs—listened to activists announce the names of over 600 destroyed villages, recite the poetry of Mahmoud Darwish, and deliver speeches about the urgent need for reconciliation, equality, and social justice.
“Listen, we are not asking Jews to leave—there are Jews demonstrating here with us," one of the organizers of the commemoration told me. “We want to recognize the loss of our villages and the displacement of our families who came from there. We want a secular, democratic state for everyone, with equality for Jews, Christians, and Muslims."
Aaron David Miller suggests that these citizens, conducting a struggle for equality, are threats to the Israel's fragile democracy. It would be more accurate, however, to argue that Israel will never be a serious democracy until its minorities enjoy the exact same rights and privileges, duties and responsibilities as its Jewish majority.


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