Israeli series exposes raw wounds from ethnic Jewish divide

This photo made available by David Deri, director of the documentary, shows Masud Deri, left, and Masud Deritaken the day they immigrated to Israel in March 1963. AP
Updated 18 April 2018
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Israeli series exposes raw wounds from ethnic Jewish divide

  • Jews of Mizrahi descent have risen to the highest echelons of the government, military, judiciary and entertainment business
  • There has never been a Mizrahi prime minister

JERUSALEM: An electrifying new documentary series on the problematic integration of Middle Eastern Jews by Israel’s European founders in the 1950s has reopened old wounds of an ethnic divide within Judaism ahead of the country’s 70th anniversary festivities.
While Israel is marking the anniversary by highlighting its prosperity and successes, the country is still wrestling with divisions — and not only between Jews and Arabs. For Zionists who view the Jews as a people no less than a religion, the intra-Jewish rift is especially painful.
“The Ancestral Sin” has ignited outrage and disbelief by arguing that the immigrants were systematically marginalized by seemingly bigoted bureaucrats. The controversy has exposed just how raw sentiments are about the history of relations between Mizrahi Jews, from the Middle East and North Africa, and those from Europe, known as Ashkenazim.
“This was a state that directed their fate without including them at all, while deceiving them and imposing its policies on them,” said David Deri, the director. “To this day, society hasn’t really dealt very deeply with these people and places.”
Arriving from Arabic-speaking countries in the Middle East and North Africa after Israel’s establishment in 1948, many Mizrahi immigrants were sent to shantytown transit camps and largely sidelined by the country’s European leaders. They have long complained of discrimination by the European-descended elite that traditionally dominated the government, military and economy.
They eventually found their political savior in the Likud Party’s Menachem Begin — even though he was of Polish Jewish descent.
The longtime opposition leader cultivated an outsiders’ alliance that appealed to their sense of deprivation, and with massive Mizrahi backing he swept to power in 1977 to shatter nearly 30 years of Labor rule. The community’s loyalty to Likud has remained steadfast.
Tensions have diminished over time. Marriages between Mizrahi and Ashkenazi Jews are common, and Jews of Mizrahi descent have risen to the highest echelons of the government, military, judiciary and entertainment business.
But gaps remain. There has never been a Mizrahi prime minister, for example. Mizrahim far outnumber Ashkenazim in prison, and are far outnumbered in academia. Ashkenazi men earn more than Mizrahim, according to the Adva Center, a think tank, although less so than in the past.
The series has ramped up an internal Mizrahi debate over how to address past grievances. While many Mizrahim feel their narrative has been shut out, others willingly distanced themselves from their Middle Eastern roots upon arrival. Those efforts often morphed into anti-Arab sentiment and support for the Likud’s hard-line toward the Palestinians.
“The Ancestral Sin” begins in Yeruham, a working-class town in Israel’s periphery where Deri’s family and thousands of others were sent when it was little more than an expanse of sand dotted with caravans. Deri’s aging parents, who came from Morocco, tearfully explain how their pleas to immigration officials to be settled near Israel’s main cities fell on deaf ears. New immigrants were dispatched to remote towns to help secure Israel’s borders in the volatile years after the state’s creation, but the film contends that it was mainly Mizrahim who bore the burden.
The series leans on transcripts from meetings of the Jewish Agency — the country’s main immigration facilitator — as well as officials’ correspondence and personal diaries. It includes interviews with academics, North African immigrants and a bureaucrat from the time.
Drawing on obscure documents tucked away in Jerusalem’s Central Zionist Archives, the series presents facts that are mostly known to scholars but which Deri said are absent from the public discourse and history textbooks.
The documents show that those who put up a fight were threatened, either with being denied food or having their children taken away. European immigrants, in contrast, appear to have been treated more leniently and often ended up in or near Israeli cities.
“I was shocked,” Margalit Tzan’ani, an Israeli singer of Yemeni descent, told Army Radio. “We were taught about the titans of Zionism, people who have streets named after them who are, forgive me, racists.”
The documents, read aloud by veteran broadcaster Yaron London, an Ashkenazi, are peppered with inflammatory language that the series’ creators say points to racist tendencies among Israel’s founding elite.
“How can the future of a nation be built on such human ruins?” Chaim Sheba, a senior health official who would later have a major hospital named after him, is quoted as saying. Other officials discuss the “primitive” new immigrants and question their intelligence level.
Since it aired, the series has been a frequent topic on TV and radio talk shows, and has been shown at special screenings for officials and military brass. Even Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has chimed in, promising to expand access to the documents brought to light in the series.


European diplomats call on Israel to reopen Palestinian community center in Jerusalem

Updated 4 sec ago
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European diplomats call on Israel to reopen Palestinian community center in Jerusalem

  • Israeli authorities have closed Burj Al-Luqluq for 6 months, a community association that provides youth activities in the Old City
  • European diplomatic missions in Jerusalem, Ramallah urge Israeli authorities to ensure access to essential services in East Jerusalem

LONDON: European diplomats expressed concern on Thursday over the Israeli authorities’ decision to close the Burj Al-Luqluq community center in the walled city of East Jerusalem.

A statement read: “For decades, the center has provided vital educational, cultural and sports programs, particularly for children and youth. This decision risks undermining the indispensable work of independent Palestinian civil society organizations in East Jerusalem.”

European diplomatic missions in Jerusalem and Ramallah have urged Israeli authorities to protect civic space, ensure access to essential services in East Jerusalem, and allow Burj Al-Luqluq to resume activities without delay.

The missions making the appeal were from Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the UK, according to the Palestine News Agency.

Israeli authorities on Thursday closed Burj Al-Luqluq for six months. It is one of the few community associations that provides youth activities in the Old City.

The center is strategically situated next to the northern and eastern walls of the Old City. It is the second-largest open area within the city’s walls, after the Al-Aqsa compound.

Founded in 1991, it offers sports, cultural, and social programs, along with women’s empowerment initiatives. It also provides a kindergarten, a computer lab and life skills training, and benefits between 300 and 500 people daily.

Israeli forces sealed the building’s doors by welding them shut and prevented access after delivering a closure order, according to the Jerusalem Governorate.

The governorate called the move a serious escalation in actions targeting Palestinian institutions in Jerusalem, which undermined residents’ rights to dignified living and safe community spaces for children and youngsters, the WAFA added.