Sayed Kashua ||
Israeli Arabs' only hope at the polls
Dear Salman,
First of all, I hope you’re in good health, and that we will be able to meet
again in Jerusalem. Forgive me for writing you in a newspaper and not in a
personal letter. But this time I felt it was my duty to publish a letter in
response to your recent opinion piece in these pages ("Why I’m voting Meretz and
not for the Arab ticket," March 12), in the hopes that you will once again
choose the path of Moshe Dayan and change your mind. Not necessarily about
voting Meretz, but rather in making your crude comparisons, which to me are
unrealistic, between Balad and Yisrael Beiteinu, and the Islamic Movement and
Habayit Hayehudi.
I’m sure you’re aware of my views on jingoism and nationality, as well as
my stance on religion and religious political parties. But when I read your
article, I felt you were doing a great injustice – not only to the new Joint
List of Arab parties, but particularly to this newspaper’s readership.
I wondered why you chose to compare the Islamic Movement to Habayit Hayehudi,
and not another religious movement like Shas. Of all the possibilities, why did
you compare Balad’s nationalism to Yisrael Beiteinu, and not to the nationalism
of Zionist Camp, or even that of Meretz?
Have the Islamic Movement and its representatives sought to rule over another
people? Do they champion occupation and force other peoples off their land
because of promises made in holy books?
Your description of Balad members as being in the vein of Yisrael Beiteinu was
misleading, and constitutes an act of throwing sand in the eyes of the reader.
It’s possible that some Balad supporters are guilty of jingoism, but comparing
that party and its platform to Avigdor Lieberman’s party is a great sin. How can
you compare a party that goes by the slogan “a state for all its citizens” to a
party that considers Arabs a demographic threat, a fifth column, and as being
representatives of terrorist organizations in the Knesset?
When have you heard a Balad MK call for the destruction of Israel, or for
deporting citizens? Sadly, your article contained incitement reminiscent of
Lieberman’s messages against Arabs.
May God forgive you, my friend, for prompting me to defend a religious party,
and even a nationalist one. Although, if you’re wondering, yes – I believe
concessions should be made when it comes to an oppressed minority on the issue
of nationalism.
“If only there were a Palestinian state already,” a good friend and Balad
supporter told me after I accused him of nationalism but not jingoism. “Just let
there be a state and I’ll be the first to burn the flag,” he said.
Yes, we deserve some concessions. When I was young and optimism still flowed in
my veins, I marched in protests against land appropriation, against the
occupation and discrimination, and I remember how I acted when I heard some
protesters shouting religious slogans, and others yelling jingoist ones.
How I had to bite my tongue, look for the group with the red flag under which
Jews and Arabs marched together, still at the same protest, and remind myself
that the overarching goal of the joint march – crying out together against
discrimination and disenfranchisement – needs to be front and center.
I’m the last person who would support a schism between Arab and Jewish parties;
I’ve always supported parties that feature a joint list. But I look at the Arab
towns and I see the danger, the want, the crowding and violence that will only
get worse without a fundamental change in the government’s policy toward its
Arab citizens. We need a strong defense, a defense that no other party can
currently offer Arabs.
It’s possible that I’m mistaken, Salman, my friend; it’s possible that there’s
no room for hope. But I must say that Joint List head Ayman Odeh managed to
instill some faith in me since last summer, full as it was of hatred, racism and
blood, during which I felt that there would never be a common future together.
I saw Odeh facing Lieberman, and for the first time in many years, Lieberman
didn’t scare me. He looked lackluster compared to the young politician who
wouldn’t play into his hands. I saw Odeh and understood for the first time in
many long months that there is still something to fight for, that a regime of
segregation and fearmongering can be beaten, that it’s still possible to
overthrow the government that silences the people, that it’s still possible to
prevent a descent into the abyss of apartheid.
Odeh is the only one that has succeeded to instill in me the hope that there is
still a chance of ending the occupation; that there is still a chance that we
will be accepted as full citizens, including having roles in decision making and
in land and resource allocation; that there is still a chance that we will stop
being accused of treason and ingratitude when we aren’t satisfied with the
crumbs and justifications we are fed by some of the decision makers; and that
there’s still a chance that one day we will be full citizens with all that
entails.
For that hope, for that faith, I am in Odeh’s debt, and because of that hope and
faith I’m sorry that I am unable to vote.
“But it 40 days haven't passed,” my mother answered on the phone this week when
I asked her to go out and vote.
“I know,” I answered my mother, busy mourning my father. “But, Mom, you have
to.”
“Okay,” she gave in. “For you, for your children.”
“For all our children,” I told her.
*
Published:
Haaretz, 17 Mar. 2015
***
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See:
Why I'm voting Meretz