Riots Shatter Veneer of Coexistence in Israel’s Mixed Towns
ACRE, Israel — Uri Jeremias, a celebrated Israeli chef, saw himself as a
benefactor. By bringing jobs, tourists and investment to the mainly Arab heart
of the coastal town of Acre, he believed he was seen as nurturing coexistence
between Jews and Arabs.
Until an Arab mob torched his Uri Buri restaurant in May and a Jewish
guest at his luxury hotel was asphyxiated in the worst inter-community riots in
decades.
“I was targeted as a Jew by radicalized thugs,” Mr. Jeremias, 76, said at
his airy house in Nahariya, a few miles north of Acre. “But many more Arabs
came to help me put out the fires than came to burn my places down. We cannot
allow a violent minority to win.”
Mr. Jeremias’ flowing Father Time beard and piercing blue eyes have
become a feature of high-end travel magazines, where he has been portrayed as
“cooking up coexistence” beside the glowing Ottoman walls of Acre’s Old City.
He vows to restore the restaurant soon. He wants to get his 62 employees, half
of them Arab, back to work, for the sake of “all the people of Acre and also
the state of Israel.”
It won’t be easy. Blending diverse people is tougher than blending
flavors.
The May riots, set off by provocative police interventions at the Aqsa
Mosque and the outbreak of the 11-day Israel-Hamas war, tore away a thin layer
of civility to expose seething resentments between Israel’s Jewish and
Palestinian citizens. Across almost all of Israel’s seven officially “mixed”
Arab-Jewish towns, gunfire, arson, stone-throwing and lynching left a trail of
destruction. Arab mobs burned Jewish stores to the ground. Rightist Jewish
vigilantes chanted “Death to Arabs.” Four people, two Jews and two Arabs, were
killed and hundreds, mostly Arabs, were later arrested.
In Acre, a city whose Crusader, Ottoman, Arab and Jewish history has
been one of uneasy mingling, a spark was enough to demonstrate that many
Palestinians, who account for 30 percent of the town’s population of 56,000,
saw Mr. Jeremias’s enterprise more as creeping exclusion and oppression than
opportunity.
A journey across several mixed Israeli towns and cities revealed the
extent of this mutual incomprehension. Seventy-three years after Israel’s birth
in the 1948 Independence War, in which hundreds of thousands of Arabs fled or
were driven out at gunpoint, Jews and Arabs in Israel live side by side but
largely blind to each others’ lives. Towns portrayed as models of peaceful
coexistence fester with resentments born of double standards.
While some 2.7 million Palestinians chafe under military occupation in
the West Bank, the nearly 2 million Palestinians in Israel are increasingly
demanding equal rights as Israeli citizens. The tensions in the mixed cities,
and the sense of inequality underlying them, pose the question of whether
Israel can ever be a Jewish and democratic state if democracy involves full
equality under the law for the 21 percent of the population that is Palestinian
The unrest in May, which Reuven Rivlin, then Israel’s president, likened
to “a civil war between us,” surprised many Israeli Jews. Israel was emerging
from a shared and largely successful fight against the coronavirus pandemic,
often involving Arab physicians and pharmacists, that bolstered feel-good
illusions of a Jewish-Arab coming-together.
“It came as a shock to me,” Tzachi Hanegbi, who was Israel’s minister of
community affairs during the turmoil, said.
For Palestinians, who have been living with a sense of growing
alienation, the riots felt like an inevitable explosion.
Aida Touma-Sliman, an Arab member of Parliament from Acre, put it this
way: “The dormant volcano erupted.”
They had seen their status and their language downgraded by the
nation-state law of 2018 that said the right to self-determination was “unique
to the Jewish people.” The bill stated in plain language what discrimination in
land regulations, education and other areas of life had felt like for decades.
“We are second-class,” said Ashraf Amer, a Palestinian social worker and
activist in Acre. “When the Jews can see us at all.”
As Israel moved under former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu toward
more strident Jewish nationalism, Palestinians were buffeted in several
directions.
Always a hybrid community — Israeli by citizenship, Palestinian by
heritage, Muslim or Christian or Druze in religion, bilingual in Arabic and
Hebrew, viewed with suspicion by some diaspora Palestinians, scarred by the
trauma of their compatriots’ expulsion — they developed a sharper sense of
Palestinian identity even as their demands for full rights as Israeli citizens
grew.
Palestinian flags, rarely seen in Israel, appeared several times during
the clashes. A May 18 general strike involved Palestinians in the West Bank,
Gaza and Israel, the first such joint labor protest in Israel and the occupied
territories in decades. The people most Israelis have long referred to as
“Israeli Arabs” — or colloquially by the demeaning “Arab sector” — now often
self-identify as Palestinians, a term many Israeli Jews resent, viewing it as a
rejection of Israel.
For Arabs who stayed on after the Independence War — what Palestinians
call the “Nakba,” or catastrophe of 1948 — a timorous quest for assimilation in
a new Jewish state has morphed into a direct challenge to that state to change.
“Israel calls itself a Jewish and democratic state,” said Ahmad Tibi, an
Arab lawmaker in the Knesset, or Parliament. “In reality, it is a democratic
state for Jews and a Jewish state for Arabs. There is a double standard.”
A Jewish-Owned Restaurant Burns in Acre
The Old City of Acre, behind its golden walls, is a beautiful decaying
labyrinth of white buildings with wrought-iron balconies and blue shutters.
Narrow alleys snake under arches. The green-tipped minaret of a 200-year-old
mosque pierces the sky. Doves perch on air-conditioning units. Signs advertise
rooms for rent, an indication of the tourism Mr. Jeremias helped attract to
this overwhelmingly Palestinian part of town.
Here, in a room at Mr. Jeremias’s lovingly restored Efendi hotel, Aby
Har-Even, 84, a former director of the Israeli Space Agency, struggled for
breath on May 11 as smoke billowed into his room.
The previous day, Moussa Hassouna, a 32-year-old Arab protester, was
shot dead in the city of Lod by Jewish men who said they acted in self-defense
and were promptly released on bail. He was the first fatality of days of
mayhem. Nobody has been charged.
A Jewish man, Yigal Yehoshua, was killed when Arabs threw a heavy rock
at him in Lod. An investigation is “still ongoing,” the police said in an
email. In Umm al Fahm, an Arab town south of Acre, Muhammad Kiwan, a
17-year-old Palestinian, was fatally shot
on May 12. The police acknowledge they opened fire on a vehicle they say
threatened them, but they insist they do not know if Mr. Kiwan was in it, as
his family asserts.
Worried about the mounting tension, Mr. Jeremias had gone to his
seafront restaurant when he got a call saying the hotel was on fire. Grabbing a
fire extinguisher, he rushed to the hotel, where all 12 rooms were full, 24
guests in all.
“The hotel was dark, no electricity, and there was heavy, heavy smoke,”
he recalled. “We gathered all the guests downstairs. One of them was hurt with
burns and choked by smoke. He was taken to hospital.”
That guest, Mr. Har-Even, never regained
consciousness. He was pronounced dead on June 6.
From the hotel, Mr. Jeremias ran back to his
restaurant, five minutes away, to find it burning from Molotov cocktails hurled
by an angry Arab mob. He struggled for 90 minutes with the help of sympathetic
Arab neighbors, trying to contain the blaze.
By the time the fire was out, Uri Buri, named
one of the world’s top 25 restaurants by Tripadvisor, was a blackened shell,
and a Jewish entrepreneur’s 25-year attempt to revive Acre had been reduced to
ashes.
“Jews didn’t buy properties or start business in
the Arab Old City in 1996,” Mr. Jeremias said. “All my friends said I was
stupid.”
He rejects the charge of exclusionary
gentrification, and the suggestion that the Old City functioned as little more
than a quaint slice of Arab folklore for his wealthy clientele.
“If I give work and hope and an education and a
future to Arab families in the Old City, is that bad?” he asked. “When I
started, the electric system, the sewage system, everything was broken.
Suddenly you had tourists interested to stay in the city. Acre was blooming,
with a lot of places owned by Arabs doing Airbnb.”
His gaze was defiant. “If you don’t do anything
to bring them forward,” he said, “they say this is a kind of apartheid. If you
do take care, then it is gentrification. So, what is better? Which side do you
prefer? What is the problem?”
Palestinians say the problem is both —
segregation and gentrification. The Israeli housing authority now imposes
expensive renovation standards in Old Acre, making it unaffordable for
Palestinians who are consistently denied mortgages.
“The Nakba is a continuous thing, it’s not over,”
said Mr. Amer, the activist. “You see it in Sheikh Jarrah” — a reference to a
Jerusalem neighborhood where 300 Palestinian residents face possible eviction
to make way for Jewish settlers — “and you see it here in the economic
problems, job issues, neglect, lack of access to loans that drives Palestinian
citizens out.”
Precariousness, a sense that their homes could always be taken, is a
perennial condition of the Palestinian citizens of Israel. Aside from seven
Bedouin towns established in the Negev desert, no new Arab towns or villages
have been built since 1948. Education remains intricately segregated: Arabs
overwhelmingly attend Arab schools and Jews Jewish schools, themselves split
into secular and religious categories.
Arab municipalities, occupying less than 3 percent of Israeli territory,
are unable to expand because of land regulations and have found themselves
hemmed in by more than 900 new Jewish villages and towns.
The lack of access to land has led to helter-skelter unlicensed Arab
construction in mixed towns like Nazareth. New floors are piled on top of each
other; unfinished homes point rebar at the sky.
Such building is often penalized by Israeli authorities with fines and
demolition orders, another source of the anger that overflowed in May.
I asked Mr. Amer if Mr. Jeremias should rebuild.
“Yes, he should reopen,” Mr. Amer said. “I don’t want to face problems if
I want to open a business in a Jewish area. Anyone who adds to prosperity is
welcome, but not when you are narrowing the space of the local people.”
In the Old City, youths in black T-shirts hung around idly, leaning
against crumbling walls. Nearly half the Palestinians in Acre live in poverty.
Drug use and crime are high. Both tend to be met with police indifference, many
Palestinians say.
The Israeli police denied complaints of negligence, saying in an email
that they used “many and various tools” to “crack down on crime and drug
offenses while carrying out various overt and covert operations to expose the
perpetrators.”
At the bustling market, a single shop was charred. It was targeted
during the May riots because it belongs to Shimon Malka, the only Jew working
there. His parents came from Morocco in 1954.
“I am surprised they burned my business down,” he said. “I love everyone
here. Everyone here loves me.”
A Palestinian Woman Is Beaten in Haifa
Haifa, a mixed city like Acre, is sometimes called the “Arab Tel Aviv.”
To a greater extent than elsewhere in Israel, Jews and Palestinians mingle.
Relative affluence attenuates ethnic fracture. There is a vibrant Jewish-Arab
arts and party scene. At Technion, Israel’s pre-eminent high-tech university,
more than 20 percent of students are Palestinian.
If there is a symbol of generational Palestinian evolution in Israel, it
is perhaps this handsome city that cascades down from Jewish Carmel to the
mainly Arab German Colony district. The first post-1948 Arab generation wanted
to keep a low profile and assimilate. The second understood they needed to
educate themselves, make money.
The third, said Ms. Touma-Sliman, the Arab lawmaker, “see that they and
their parents are still facing racism, and start looking back for their real
identity, and building it up. They are well educated, they know how to defend
their rights. We are in the third wave.”
“Here there is the lowest level of inter-community hatred, and that is
the best you can hope for,” said Wadie Abunassar, a Palestinian Christian
businessman who serves as Spain’s honorary consul-general in Haifa.
Yet on May 12, the day after Uri Buri was torched, Mr. Abunassar’s
daughter Sama, 22, was attacked outside the family home in the German Colony
district by a mob of Jewish vigilantes. She was returning from her job at an
eyewear store, she said, when she saw
the group of about 30 young Jews waving Israeli flags and accompanied by a
police officer.
They yelled vile insults and hurled stones at her when they heard her
speak Arabic to a neighbor, she said. One threw a rock that smashed the
windshield of her car. She screamed. Her sister, Nardine, 20, rushed out and
was hit by a stone that cut her leg open.
“I ran to the police officer, asking for assistance,” Ms. Abunassar said,
struggling to contain sobs. “He looked at me and said, ‘Get lost.’”
Her father was at a hotel in Tiberias when he got the call: “Papa, we
are under attack and there’s nobody to help us.” He called the police. A
half-hour later he called them again. The police did not come. The two young
women spent seven hours in the hospital.
The Israeli police said in an email that an investigation, started
immediately, “is still ongoing in an equitable, professional and thorough
manner,” even if “suspects in the act have not yet been identified.
Across the country, 35 Jews have been indicted for their roles in the
violence, said Jafar Farah, the director of the Mossawa Advocacy Center for
Arab Citizens in Israel. “And 450 Arabs.”
“We are law-abiding citizens,” Ms. Abunassar said. “We pay our taxes, but
the state does not protect us when we need it. They don’t invest resources in
us.”
The new government of Prime Minister Naftali Bennett says it will try.
Prodded by its Arab coalition member Raam, the first independent Arab party to
join an Israeli government, it has earmarked some $16.3 billion for development
of Arab society. Plans include a massive economic stimulus, fighting crime and
fixing crumbling infrastructure.
But the tension between democracy and Israel being a Jewish state that
grants priority status to Jews, as the nation-state law underscored, remains
problematic.
“If you are democratic, that says equal treatment,” Mr. Tibi, the
lawmaker, said. “If you are Jewish, you are telling Moshe that he’s superior to
Hamid.”
At the most basic level, rights diverge. Any Jew can automatically
become an Israeli citizen, so there is unequal access to citizenship. Jewish
land claims, however murky their origin in Ottoman times or earlier, are
generally upheld; Palestinian claims are rebuffed. Palestinians who fled in
1948 were quickly deemed “absentees” by law with no claim to the land they
left. “After 1948 Israelis said, it does not matter what led you to leave, it’s
ours now,” said Camil Odeh, a Palestinian lawyer.
The violent standoff over Sheikh Jarrah, where Jewish settler claims are
based on a 19th century land deed, reflects this discrepancy.
“What we need now,” argued Yuval Shany, a former dean of the Hebrew
University law school, “is to enact a specific right to individual equality as
a new basic law.” It had been a mistake
in recent years, he said, “to over-define the Jewish nature of the state.”
Whether a parliamentary majority for such a law can be forged is
unclear. Mr. Abunassar said: “You know, if there is dignity everything comes.”
The Ice Cream Initiative in Ma’alot Tarshiha
Ma’alot Tarshiha, with a population of about 25,000, is one of the rare
mixed municipalities that were spared the May violence. Situated in the
northern Galilee region of mountains and orchards, it is divided between
fast-expanding, mainly Jewish Ma’alot, where many residents came from the
former Soviet Union, and the much smaller old Arab village of Tarshiha.
In Ma’alot, roads are spacious and public spaces manicured. Below it, across
Route 89 in Tarshiha, it’s a different story, one of grime and long frustration
at delays in building a new elementary school. All around it, new Jewish towns
sprout, making natural growth impossible.
Arkady Pomerantz, the Jewish mayor of Ma’alot Tarshiha, who came to
Israel from Azerbaijan in 1990, said that when the violence erupted, he brought
local religious leaders together to appeal for calm.
Here it is more middle-class than in Lod or Acre, which helps,” he said.
“Many of the teachers, doctors and lawyers are Arab. I go to an Arab doctor.
There is good hummus in Tarshiha, and people from Ma’alot go to the Arab market
there.”
Over in Tarshiha, in an ancient carpentry shop belonging to the
Palestinian deputy mayor, Nakhli Tannous, frustration ran high. Maurice
Ebileeni, a lecturer in English literature at Haifa University, lambasted what
he called “hummus coexistence.”
“One half, the privileged half in Ma’alot, talks about coexistence, which
means drinking our coffee and eating our hummus and going home to plan their
children’s future,” he said. “We go home and worry about our children’s future.”
One Israeli Jew and one Palestinian from Ma’alot Tarshiha decided to
join forces in an attempt to improve that future.
Adam Ziv, who grew up on a Galilee kibbutz, learned how to make gelato
on a hitchhiking trip across Italy. An idea came to him: He would build a
bridge between Jews and Arabs by starting an ice cream business.
Upon returning to Israel in 2011, Mr. Ziv wandered through Arab villages
asking if anyone wanted to work with him on an ice cream business. He got used
to people looking at him like he was insane.
Then, near Ma’alot Tarshiha, he met Alaa Sweetat, a Palestinian
restaurateur.
“It took me two days to say yes,” Mr. Sweetat said. “He wanted a village
atmosphere, no malls, Italian quality.”
A year later, in 2012, the first branch of Buza (Arabic for ice cream)
opened in Ma’alot Tarshiha. There are now five Buza stores, including one in
Tel Aviv.
A photograph of Mr. Ziv, 36, and Mr. Sweetat, 38, with the caption
“Coexistence served up in a cone,” now adorns Ben-Gurion International Airport.
Seated outside the first outlet, at a busy crossroads on the Arab side
of town, Mr. Sweetat evinced little of the idealism of his Jewish partner.
“This is only a business for me,” he said. “I am not here to make peace.
I wanted to work, and by chance we happen to be an Arab and a Jew. And if we
can do something to bring change along the way, then great.”
The May violence, he continued, had been hard for him as a Palestinian.
Seeing the destruction of Uri Buri on TV, he put himself in the shoes of Mr.
Jeremias. Mr. Sweetat, too, has a restaurant, and some local Palestinians
resent it for serving expensive food to a mainly Jewish clientele.
“OK, Uri’s rich, but I have no problem with that,” he said. “He brought
more tourism to Acre, businesses around him had more work.”
Mr. Sweetat is prepared to make compromises in a land where few are
ready to do so. He believes cooperation in pursuit of shared prosperity,
however difficult, is the only way forward. “If we don’t like it,” he said, “we
can pack our bags and go to Switzerland.”
I asked him if he felt like an equal citizen in Israel.
“Of course, I don’t feel equal,” he said, “but I can achieve everything I
want.”
Still, he said, “I don’t see new Arab villages being built. I don’t have
enough space in my own village. I wanted to buy a piece of land near Tarshiha,
but I couldn’t. I want my son, who is 2, to grow up here. Ask the country why I
can’t find land here.”
“So, you can’t achieve everything you want?” I asked.
“There are things you can’t change, but we can improve them. The change
can start from people.”
Overcoming Mutual Incomprehension
When Tal Becker, the legal adviser to the Israeli Foreign Ministry,
drafted the preamble to the normalization treaty between Israel and the United
Arab Emirates last year, he expected pushback on this clause:
“Recognizing that the Arab and Jewish peoples are descendants of a common
ancestor, Abraham, and inspired, in that spirit, to foster in the Middle East a
reality in which Muslims, Jews, Christians and peoples of all faiths,
denominations, beliefs and nationalities live in, and are committed to, a spirit
of coexistence.”
There was no dissent, despite the fact that the wording made clear that
both Jews and Arabs belong in the Middle East.
A widespread view among Palestinians and throughout the Arab world has
long been, on the contrary, that Israel and its Jewish population represent an
illicit colonial projection into the Middle East that will one day end.
The four agreements Israel signed last year with Arab countries, known
as the Abraham Accords, formalized a fundamental shift. More Arabs across the
Middle East accept Israel, and for some the Palestinian cause burns with less
intensity.
What, Mr. Becker has wondered, would an internal Abraham Accord look
like? The devastating riots have made the need for a new inter-community
compact clear.
Not all the signs are negative. The new government is beholden in a new
way to the Arab community because Arabs are represented in the coalition. There
has been some discussion since 2018 of repealing or amending the nation-state
law. Israel’s Arab minority could help it integrate in the region. Improving
education and housing for Arabs has become a subject of vigorous debate.
Tammy Hoffman, an expert on education in Israel, said: “Arabs learn
Hebrew from third grade. Jews need to learn Arabic from third grade, too. If we
don’t know the language, how do we get past the stereotypes?”
She continued: “You have to give Arab students a place in school to talk
about the Nakba, because if you don’t do that in schools, there is a vacuum,
and someone will go in there and be more extreme.”
No internal Abraham accord will have much chance, however, as long as
the West Bank occupation continues and without addressing the sources of
Palestinians’ sense of injustice, beginning with property laws.
At root, the violence of May was born of mutual incomprehension. For
Jews it carried deep memories of pogroms, for Palestinians equally traumatic
memories of mass expulsion. Past trauma is the conflict’s kindling.
Many Israeli Jews say Palestinians do just fine by the abject standards
of minorities in the Middle East. They can vote. They are in the Knesset, on
the Supreme Court. That may be so, but equality for all citizens was a founding
principle of Israel’s democracy.
People on both sides are awakening to the need to address Israel’s
failed coexistence. Because in the end there is no realistic alternative to
living together.
“I am not busy with hatred, revenge, pettiness or anything,” Mr. Jeremias
said. “I have a target to bring the restaurant back to normal as soon as
possible, and bring sanity, and whatever will lead to a better future for my
children and grandchildren.”
To be stable, that Israeli future will have to include Palestinian
children and grandchildren.
Sama Abunassar, the young Palestinian woman attacked by a Jewish mob in
Haifa, said: “I always heard talk about discrimination and racism in this
country, and I always heard the reference to us as second-class citizens, but I
never felt it, perhaps because I live in Haifa. But now I know that I will
never be treated like a Jewish girl in this country. If a Jewish girl went through
what I went through, she would be protected. I know now for a fact that I will
never be protected.”
For a democratic Israel to come close to the ideals of its 1948 founding
charter — that the nascent state would
“ensure complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants
irrespective of religion, race or sex” — Ms. Abunassar must one day be
convinced otherwise.