home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=92TT0765>
- <title>
- Apr. 13, 1992: Middle East:The Enemy Within
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 13, 1992 Campus of the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 39
- MIDDLE EAST
- The Enemy Within
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Israel's Arab citizens, inspired by the intifadeh and Islamic
- fundamentalism, join the violence against Jews
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer/Umm El-Fahm--With reporting by Jamil Hamad/
- Umm el-Fahm
- </p>
- <p> Even by the brutal standards of the Middle East, it was
- a savage assault. As midnight approached, four Arab men stole
- into an Israeli army camp and, using a huge ax and several
- knives, hacked three soldiers to death. Assuming the killers
- were Palestinians from the occupied territories, Jews at first
- saw the attack as yet another terrorist engagement that fell
- within the unwritten rules of the region's slow-burn war. But
- then came the stunner: the alleged assailants, apprehended last
- month, were not aggrieved residents of the territories but
- citizens of Israel--Arab citizens, "our Arabs," as Jewish
- Israelis think of this normally pacific minority. Suddenly, it
- looked to the country's Jewish majority as if the enemy was now
- truly in their midst.
- </p>
- <p> Israeli authorities have long feared that the intifadeh,
- the Palestinian uprising in the territories, would spread to
- the country's 710,000 Arab citizens, who make up 14% of the
- population. Now they are wondering if the February murders, near
- the northern kibbutz of Galed, were just an opening act. Leaders
- of the Arab community are at pains to stress that the attack was
- an aberration, that their people remain loyal citizens of the
- state. But no amount of oath swearing can dispel the truth that
- the Arabs of Israel have become increasingly radicalized, both
- by the spirit of the intifadeh and the attractions of Islamic
- extremism.
- </p>
- <p> Nationalistic fervor, once quiescent among Israeli Arabs,
- has grown steadily since Israel captured the West Bank and Gaza
- Strip in the 1967 war. That put the Arabs in direct contact with
- their Palestinian brethren in the territories. With the start
- of the intifadeh in 1987, Israeli Arabs, in limited numbers,
- began to throw stones and Molotov cocktails at Jews, to fly the
- banned Palestinian flag and to paint radical slogans on town
- walls.
- </p>
- <p> The February hackings near Galed underscored a potentially
- more disruptive development: the rise among Israeli Arabs of
- Islamic fervor, complete with a fanatic streak. The four Arabs
- charged with the killings were all followers of the Islamic
- Movement, a fundamentalist organization that is legal in Israel.
- Police say they were also members of Islamic Jihad, the outlawed
- militant group that is Mideast-wide.
- </p>
- <p> Leaders of the Islamic Movement, who officially eschew
- violence, were quick to deplore the killings. But authorities
- are worried that when they speak and write of the need for a
- spiritual Jihad, ostensibly a struggle for the soul of the
- individual believer, their devotees hear in that call a
- traditional summons for a holy war against non-Muslims,
- especially the Jews of Israel. "The killings near Galed didn't
- come out of a vacuum," says Elie Rekhess, an expert on Israeli
- Arabs at Tel Aviv University.
- </p>
- <p> Officially, the Islamic Movement's main mission is to
- revitalize religion among the Muslims of Israel, who constitute
- 86% of the Arab population; the rest are Christian. But it also
- supports the establishment of a Palestinian state in the
- occupied territories, a view held by the vast majority of
- Israeli Arabs--who simultaneously say they would not live
- there. Beyond that, the Islamic Movement, like its counterparts
- elsewhere, supports the idea of a Muslim regime eventually
- ruling the entire Middle East--including Israel and its Jewish
- majority. Says Abdul-Rahman Hashem, deputy mayor of Umm el-Fahm,
- an Arab town in Israel's north: "As long as we are using legal
- means, why not?"
- </p>
- <p> Naturally, such comments make Jewish officials squirm. "To
- say the least, we don't like their ideology," says Alexander
- Bligh, the Prime Minister's adviser on Arab affairs. "We can
- live with it as long as it's not translated into violent acts."
- But the Galed attack has made the government more wary of the
- movement.
- </p>
- <p> That task is growing more difficult as the movement
- expands. In local elections in 1989, the group took 28.7% of the
- seats in the 12 purely Arab municipalities in which it ran,
- winning control of five town councils and later adding two more
- in subsequent contests. By all accounts, the organization's
- influence has increased since those elections. The movement has
- inherited some support from Israel's largely discredited
- Communist Party, previously the most successful vote getter
- among Israeli Arabs, and has bolstered its standing by providing
- relatively clean and efficient administrations.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, the blatant discrimination Arabs suffer
- in Israeli society makes the community fertile ground for
- radicalism. For every shekel the central government spends on
- an Arab citizen, it spends 2.5 on a Jewish one. While 11% of
- Israel's Jews live below the poverty line, 52% of its Arabs do.
- No Arab has ever been a full Cabinet minister, and even the
- Prime Minister's adviser on Arab affairs is and always has been
- a Jew.
- </p>
- <p> Israeli officials profess a commitment to closing the
- economic gap between the Arabs and Jews. Prime Minister Yitzhak
- Shamir's declared goal is to equalize government spending on
- citizens in four years. Even if that happens, growing numbers
- of Israel's Arab citizens will be in an anomalous position: as
- long as the Palestinian problem is unresolved, their own country
- will be at war with them. In this case, says Ibrahim Sarsur, the
- Islamicist mayor of Kfar Qasim, "the circle of bloodshed will
- not be broken." If more Arab Israelis take up the battle for
- Islamic supremacy even in the land of the Jews, the prospects
- are grimmer still.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-