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Feeling sidelined, Israel's Druze protest ‎nation-state law

by  Yehuda Shlezinger , News Agencies and ILH Staff
Published on  08-05-2018 00:00
Last modified: 04-26-2021 13:30
|

Israelis from the Druze community participate in a rally protesting the nation-state law

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Tens of thousands of members of Israel's Druze ‎minority and their Jewish supporters, some chanting ‎‎"Equality for all," packed a central Tel Aviv square ‎Saturday night to rally against a contentious new ‎law that critics say sidelines Israel's non-Jewish ‎citizens.‎

It marked the first time in recent memory that the ‎Druze – followers of a secretive offshoot of Shiite ‎Islam who are considered loyal to the State of ‎Israel – staged a large public prowwww. ‎

Hundreds of brightly colored Druze flags, rarely ‎seen outside the community, fluttered in the square ‎along Israel's flag. Nearby City Hall was also lit ‎up in Druze colors.‎

Organizers estimated the turnout at 50,000. The rally marked the biggest backlash yet against ‎the recently passed law that enshrines Israel's ‎Jewish character and downgrades the standing of ‎Arabic from an official to a "special" language.‎

Rabin Square in Tel Aviv, Saturday AP

The law has outraged Israel's Arabic-speaking ‎minority, which includes the Druze and makes up ‎about 20% of the population. Critics say the law ‎undermines the country's democratic values.‎

The Druze serve in the military, unlike most of the ‎country's Arab citizens, who overwhelmingly follow ‎Sunni Islam and have close family ties with ‎Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Over ‎the years, members of the Druze community have risen ‎to prominence in the military and in politics.‎

On Saturday, Tel Aviv's Rabin Square was packed with ‎Druze protesters bused in from all over Israel, and ‎their Jewish backers, including former senior ‎members of the defense establishment. ‎

‎"No one can preach to us about loyalty and the ‎‎military cemeteries testify to this. Despite our ‎‎utter loyalty, the state does not see us as equal," ‎‎Druze spiritual leader Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif, ‎told ‎the demonstrators in a speech.‎

‎"Just as we fight for the existence and security of ‎‎the state, so are we determined to fight together for ‎‎the character and right to live in it in equality ‎‎and dignity," said Tarif.‎

Retired Brig. Gen. Amal Asad, who spearheaded the ‎‎Druze campaign against the legislation, said, ‎"We ‎came here to tell the entire Israeli nation, with ‎all of the Israeli people, that this country is for ‎all of us. ‎

‎"We were born here, we will die here, we love this ‎country, we have defended it, and we will continue ‎to live here together – Jews, Arabs, Druze, ‎Circassians, Bedouins, as equal brothers. We are all ‎Israelis," he said.‎

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other cabinet ‎ministers have met with Druze leaders to try and ‎allay their concerns. But recent meetings did not go ‎well.‎

Netanyahu abruptly ended a meeting with Asad and ‎other Druze officials this week after Asad warned ‎the new law would "lead to apartheid."‎

Lawmaker Avi Dichter, who co-sponsored of the law, was ‎heckled by Druze in attendance at another meeting.‎

Protester Rima Basis, 25, from the predominantly ‎Druze town of Daliyat al-Carmel, said the new law ‎has helped entrench a feeling of inequality that had ‎already existed to some degree.‎

‎"The bond that we've had until now has suffered a ‎very serious blow," she said. "Until now, we've ‎given without any price, without anything in return, ‎out of the belief that at the end of the day, we're ‎indeed brothers, people who can live together in ‎peace.‎

‎"If you now define me not as a citizen of the state, ‎how can I give any more or feel like I belong to ‎this country, or stand up and sing the national ‎anthem with pride?" she said. ‎

Netanyahu said over the weekend that "the feelings ‎of our Druze brothers and sisters touch my heart. I ‎want to tell them: There is nothing in this law that ‎infringes on your rights as equal citizens of the ‎state of Israel, and there is nothing in it that ‎harms the special status of the Druze community in ‎Israel.‎

‎"The people of Israel, and I among them, love and ‎appreciate you. We deeply appreciate our partnership ‎and the covenant between us," he said.‎

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