Israel’s (very democratic) plans to extradite asylum seekers

In his article published in Sudan Tribune last Sunday Toby Collins analyses the reasons behind the plans of the Israeli Interior Minister to extradite 15,000 Sudanese asylum seekers from the Jewish state next week.

The case of Sudanese surviving in Israel as asylum seekers is specially harsh. As Collins notes, Israel has no agreement on the matter with Sudan, a country labelled as “hostile” for it is Muslim and has given support to Iran. This means that Israel cannot send the Sudanese back to their country of origin unless they agree to do so.

Despite different ways for Israel to ensure they do agree (perhaps not very much in line with  human rights), what has happened in many occasions is that Israel has changed the nationality of the arrived Sudanese to South Sudanese. South Sudan gained its independence from Sudan in July 2011 and is home mainly to Christians that opposed being diluted into the pro-Islamic state structure of Sudan. Israel quickly recognised South Sudan after its independence and signed several agreements with it.

Israel’s move after South Sudan’s independence was to send many South Sudanese back to the newly independent country on the grounds the conflict that made them fly their country was over.

But what has been happening in many occasions is that Israel changed the nationality of many Muslim Sudanese to that of South Sudan in order to get them out of the Jewish state, something that is contrary to the Geneva Conventions. Muslim Sudanese who suffered this fate were denied entry, thus being placed in limbo.

We will see what ends up happening with the Israeli Interior Minister plans. Whatever it is, surely it will be in perfect accordance of the principles of the only Jewish state in the world and the only democracy of the Middle East. Amen.

And the Oscar goes to… ISLAMOPHOBIA!

‘And the Oscar goes to ISLAMOPHOBIA’ by Carlos Latuff on Sep 15, 2012

You know what’s this about, but in case you still don’t, just check out the 14 minutes trailer of Innocence of Muslims by a Christian from the USA so-called Sam Bacile, the video that has angered Muslims around the world. For sure if it ever wins any Oscar it will be the Oscar on Islamophobia, as Carlos Latuff tells us in his cartoon.

The trailer of what was supposed to be a 2 hours long film was first published online in July 2012, but started generating attention when it was translated to Arabic. The film, which is very poorly made, criticises and insults Prophet Muhammad and Islam, and it has become another infamous example of Islamophobia.

The clashes that have erupted in many Muslim countries coinciding with September 11 have costed the lives of 4 staff members of the USA consulate in Libya, the consul among them. At the moment of writing this post, the protests in many Muslim countries have escalated, but is the reaction to the anti-Islam film justified? Check Inside Story in Al Jazeera to know more.

Theocratic Jews’ views of Israel: living in paranoia

Carlo Strenger is an Israeli liberal that opposes Israel turning into a theocracy. He’s often engaged into talks with Israeli national-Religious Rabbi Uri Sherki. He says he does so because he understands there’s “desperate need for dialogue between Israel’s liberals and the national-religious.” He says “We have come to the point where we live in universes so different that it is becoming questionable how these groups can ever cooperate fruitfully for a common future.”

I post this into my blog so you can see what’s the level of paranoia of messianic Jews in Israel. While you read it, you should keep in mind that this is the discourse driving many Israelis (thankfully not all), especially those 500,000 living in settlements in West Bank, called by Israel ‘Judea and Samaria’ to avoid acknowledging the existence of Palestine. All settlements are illegal under international law.

Israel has long given national-religious leaders like Sherki and their followers a blank cheque. The level of radicalisation Israel is leaving today, not only with the Palestinians but among the Israelis themselves, has been carefully created by several governments that have done nothing but flirtate with their radical ideas and practices, in Israel and in the illegal settlements in the West Bank.

As a result, a polarised society that battles between secularism and an ethnically driven theocracy. One that is not that far away of the always criticised Iran, even if theocratic Israelis will always deny it. And a government complicit with the radicalism of Zionist ultra-orthodox Jews in order to maintain an occupation that the world looks at in silence.

National-religious messianism is endangering Israel

It is time for the majority of Israelis, secular or religious, who think otherwise to take action before it is too late.

Sherki is adamant that the West Bank is part of Israel on theological grounds, and he does not believe that the Palestinians living there should have political rights. He always insists that Jewish law has a solution for this: the category of Ger Toshav, a resident alien, makes sure, he says, that they will have full human rights, but no political rights.

(···) I have, time and again, told him that his long-term vision for the greater land of Israel is an elegant way of describing an apartheid system. His general reaction is that I am stereotyping him. If I tell him that the idea of an ethnic group that does not have political rights is pretty much the definition of apartheid, I generally receive no answer. This is particularly frightening because Rabbi Sherki is mild-mannered and cultivated; in addition to his Rabbinical training, he has a wide secular knowledge, so there is no way of attributing his position to ignorance or lack of culture.

Rabbi Sherki also has an utterly unrealistic view on Israel’s relation to the West: he argues that the West criticizes Israel because it does not take its role of being humanity’s moral beacon seriously. When I ask him what this means, he answers that Zionism has only fully come into its own after what he calls the liberation of Judea and Samaria; and that we need to stop apologizing for this, because the Jewish people will be able to fulfill its historic function: From Zion the teaching shall spread!

When I tell Rabbi Sherki that I happen to speak quite a bit to European politicians, diplomats, journalists and academics; that they in no way feel that Israel should have some special role in the world, but have a much more modest demand: that it adhere to international law, respect Palestinian rights and end the occupation, he tells me that I simply don’t understand the Christian unconscious. No facts will confuse his mind.

Sherki is by no means among the more extreme rabbis of the national-religious camp. And yet there are moments in which he expresses visceral hatred for Arabs, and a degree of disdain for secular Israelis that is breathtaking: a few months ago he said that women working in offices in secular Israel are required to dress like whores.

(···) Beyond the outrage and the disbelief, Sherki’s views profoundly worry me. He has a large followership; many attend his courses throughout the country, and he plays a leading role in one of Jerusalem’s major Yeshivas. Men like him raise a generation of students to believe that the Jewish people indeed has the right to trample the rights of others; who think that the rest of the world should simply bow to the precepts of the Torah as they see it. They are also deeply convinced that their interpretation of Judaism has a monopoly

(···) People like Rabbi Sherki must be taken deeply seriously: The national religious vision has decisively shaped Israel’s history. Their project of settling in the West Bank with the goal of annexing it to Israel has decisively shaped Israel’s history for more than forty years. Their unrelenting ideological and religious conviction that the Jewish people has an eternal right to the West Bank has made them utterly blind to the moral and political disaster that the occupation has become.

(···) since 1974 almost no Israeli politician has risked open conflict with the national religious movement that is doing everything to undermine this democracy. Yitzhak Rabin did so by initiating the Oslo process; he paid with his life for it – and polls have shown that more than sixty percent of national-religious Jews in Israel are in favor of pardoning Rabin’s murderer, Yigal Amir, whose brother was released from prison a month ago.

Now Israel’s democracy is facing possibly the greatest threat in its history: many leaders of the national-religious movement say explicitly that Israeli democracy is no longer necessary and that the country must become a theocracy. It is time for the majority of Israelis, secular or religious, who think otherwise to take action before it is too late.

April 2012 in pictures

Palestinian Prisoners’ Day is marked each year on 17 April. The political prisoners issue was at the forefront throughout April — Hana al-Shalabi ended her 43 days of hunger strike after she was released but forcibly transferred to Gaza. Khader Adnan, who was on hunger strike for more than two months, returned home from Israeli prison to Arrabe village in the northern West Bank. Both al-Shalabi and Adnan were held without charge or trial, a widely condemned practice called administrative detention. Meanwhile, Palestinian grassroots resistance leader Bassem Tamimi was released on bail late last month but is confined to Ramallah, away from his village, as he awaits further court proceedings.

Palestinian Christians celebrated Easter this month, in the face of Israeli restrictions on freedom of movement to holy places. Meanwhile, the Gaza Strip continued to buckle under the oppressive weight of Israel’s siege, Jewish colonial settlers destroyed and occupied Palestinian property, and Israel repressed Palestinian popular protests and actions in solidarity with the Palestinian people in Tel Aviv and the Welcome to Palestine 2012 fly-in at Ben Gurion airport.

The Month in Pictures is a monthly feature from The Electronic Intifada documenting Palestine, Palestinian life, politics and culture, and international solidarity with Palestine.

Palestinian children confront Israeli soldiers during the weekly protest against the occupation in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh, 20 April.
(Oren Ziv / ActiveStills)