About a year-and-a-half ago, I participated in a fact-finding mission to Israel sponsored by the Inter-Agency Task Force on Israeli Arabs (IATF).
This group was established in 2006 as a consortium of some of the major organizations in American Jewish life — including the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, Jewish Federations of North America, the Anti-Defamation League, and the American Jewish Committee.
It is committed to raising awareness of the circumstances of the 20 percent of Israel’s citizens who are Arab.
The issue was not new to me. A large part of my rabbinate has been devoted to advancing human and civil rights at home and abroad.
Because I love Israel deeply, I was long concerned that issues of human and civil rights were raised only by progressive organizations, both in Israel and abroad.
It was long overdue for the Jewish communal establishment to understand why the rights of Israeli Arabs should be a priority for anyone concerned with Israel’s future.
Upon my return from the mission, we established the first local affiliate of the IATF in the country in Washington, D.C.
The Greater Washington Forum on Israeli Arab Issues (GWFIA) was dedicated to educating the local Jewish community about Jewish-Arab relations in Israel, including the economic, educational and social challenges faced by Israel’s Arab citizens.
The test of any democracy is how it treats it minorities. It is all the more challenging in Israel because it was founded as a Jewish state. However, there have always been non-Jewish citizens living in Israel and the country’s Declaration of Independence guarantees them full equality.
Arabs today make up 20 percent of Israel’s population, yet they represent only 1 percent of the gross domestic product. There are vast inequalities between Jews and Arabs in Israel in the schools they attend, the municipal services they receive, and the employment opportunities available to them. Officials of Israel’s own government admit that they have a long way to go to create true parity for Israeli Arabs.
In forming the GWFIA, we were committed to having representation from the full range of our Jewish community. Our steering committee now includes the Israeli Embassy, the Washington Jewish Federation, and the Jewish Community Relations Council. At our first Community Education Day in January 2011, 300 people attended a four-hour program.
We succeeded in drawing many younger Jews who are thirsty for a conversation about Israel that is rigorous and honest but who, for the most part, have absented themselves from the conversation sponsored by Jewish communal groups.
Even more importantly, we were able to attract to our event those who would identify with the political right and the political left. Nonetheless, the conversation at our event last year was both civil and respectful.
I am well aware that some in the community would deem this effort misguided. They will offer reasons why Israel is still a country at risk. They are not wrong about that sad reality, but their disdain for efforts that might help Israeli Arabs enjoy full equality is shortsighted.
Dangerous trends in Israel today threaten the country’s democratic character. Racist attitudes are on the rise, and the Knesset is considering legislation that is overtly discriminatory. Israel is not immune from the religious extremism that has poisoned Islam in recent years.
Jews who care about Israel should pay as much heed to the Jewish state’s democratic character as they do about its security. Noam Katz, the Israeli Embassy’s minister for public diplomacy, eloquently framed this issue.
He said: “The Israeli-Arab and the Israeli-Palestinian conflicts are full of bitterness, bad blood and mistrust. The self-identity of Arabs in Israel is strongly linked and connected to the Arab nation and the Palestinian people. It makes the effort more difficult.
“However, it doesn’t exempt us, as a nation, as society and as a government, from trying to make it work … These relations are a test of our national vision and morals, and a vital issue to the survival of Israel as a Jewish state and democratic society.”
Democracy is not a right/left issue. At the core of democracy is respect for the value of every human being, a central premise of the Jewish teaching that every person is made “b’tzelem elohim,” “in the image of God.”
Israel can boast many great achievements. If it could successfully meet the aspirations of its Declaration of Independence and accord its Arab minority the same opportunities and rights enjoyed by its Jewish citizens, it will have accomplished something that few other countries in the world have done — and under the most challenging of circumstances.