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Ethnic tensions between Israeli Jews fuel Netanyahu victory
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ROSH HA'AYIN, Israel (AP) -- Israel's visceral election
campaign has exposed a rift that many here thought had long subsided -
the deep-seated schism between Jews of European and Middle Eastern
descent.
Mizrahi, or Middle Eastern, Jews
heavily backed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud Party, while
Ashkenazi, or European, Jews mostly identified with the opposition
Zionist Union.
That dynamic has been going on
for a while but passions have run particularly high this time, with
jarring results. Since Netanyahu's win, the sides have been exchanging
insults that have not been heard in public in a generation - with the
Mizrahi voters accused of being primitive and Ashkenazi voters viewed as
elitist.
The dispute goes back to Israel's
earliest days of independence. 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 European leaders of the founding Labor Party.
They
found their political savior in Likud's Menachem Begin - even though he
was himself of Polish Jewish descent. With consummate skill 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 break nearly 30 years of Labor
rule.
The exact population breakdown is hard
to calculate because intermarriage is now quite common. But Mizrahi or
part-Mizrahi Jews make up roughly half of Israel's Jewish population.
They
have long complained of discrimination by the European-descended elite
that traditionally dominated government, military and business
institutions.
The complaints have diminished,
as has some of the domination, 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.
They
also account for many more poor people - and yet the poorest towns,
where they predominate, tend to support Likud and forgive it the
capitalist policies than have often not served their economic interests.
"Our
parents and grandparents have voted only Likud since the upheaval" of
1977, said Malkiram Bashari, who traces his roots to Yemen.
The prospect of voting for Labor? "It's too hard. There is just too much baggage there," said Bashari, 52.
Such
sentiments are nothing less than mind-boggling for affluent Ashkenazi
voters - who cannot grasp why Mizrahim would support Likud in an
election when the country's high cost of living was supposedly a central
issue.
They also often argue that Netanyahu's
hard-line policies toward the Palestinians prevent a peace agreement
that would bring on an economic boom that would benefit Mizrahim.
Yet
voting patterns from this month's election indicate that Netanyahu
largely owes his re-election to the last-minute mobilization of Likud's
Mizrahi supporters.
Many had pledged to turn
their back on Likud to protest its economic policies or because of
disdain for Netanyahu's lengthy rule and perceived decadent lifestyle.
But
when the moment of truth arrived - and after Netanyahu sparked turnout
by warning of Arab voters coming out in "droves" - poorer, heavily
Mizrahi "development towns" voted en masse once more for Likud over the
Zionist Union, Labor's modern-day incarnation.
In
Sderot, for example, a border town with Gaza that has been battered by
both rockets and unemployment and has long complained of government
neglect, Likud earned 43 percent of the vote, to the Zionist Union's 7
percent.
"The politics of identity are
stronger than any economic interest," said Gideon Rahat of Jerusalem's
Hebrew University and the Israel Democracy Institute.
He
said the ethnic vote goes both ways and helps explain why even the
wealthiest Ashkenazim continue to vote Labor - which favors high taxes
on the rich - rather than the more capitalist Likud.
For
years, as Mizrahi Jews made inroads throughout Israeli society, the
rift with the Ashkenazim took a back seat to the conflicts between Arabs
and Jews, and between secular and religious Jews.
But
the ethnic genie was let out of the bottle at a pre-election left-wing
rally in Tel Aviv, where Ashkenazi artist Yair Garbuz complained about a
"handful of amulet kissers that have taken over the country." Other
condescending remarks, including a Facebook post by leftist writer Alona
Kimhi that referred to right-wing voters as "Neanderthals" and
suggested they "drink cyanide," sparked further outrage.
The
Shas party, which caters to religious Mizrahi Jews, tapped into the
controversial comments and launched a campaign provocatively titled: "A
Mizrahi votes for a Mizrahi."
The bitterness
continued after the vote. The nadir came during a TV morning show, when a
radical professor known for his online tirades against Mizrahi
immigration lashed out at a fellow panelist that "nothing bad would have
happened had your parents been left to rot in Morocco."
Nehemia
Shtrasler, a columnist for the liberal Haaretz daily newspaper and an
Ashkenazi Jew, said the left's historic discrimination of Mizrahim had
come back to bite it.
"It wasn't the
diplomatic-security issue that won the election," he wrote. "It was all
about ethnicity, and revenge was served up cold at the ballot box."
Netanyahu,
whose hard-line rhetoric taps into Mizrahi disdain for the Arabs who
mistreated them in their countries of origin, "speaks not only fluent
English, but also fluent Mizrahi," wrote Avi Issacharoff in the Times of
Israel website.
In Rosh Ha'ayin, a former dusty town now on the outskirts of the greater Tel Aviv metropolis, these sentiments ring true.
"Bibi
knows our mess. He is good for us," said 32-year-old Shalom Tairy, who
runs a hummus restaurant in the Yemenite neighborhood of Shabazi,
referring to Netanyahu by his nickname.
"He knows how to talk. He knows how to make every `fool' not feel like a `fool' and raise his morale," Tairy added.
Sitting
next door, drinking Turkish coffee and smoking cigarettes at a local
convenience store, the neighborhood elders say Shabazi has always been a
Likud stronghold and that is how it will remain.
They
angrily recalled how Mizrahim were denied good jobs, passed over for
promotions in the military and police, beaten in school and prevented a
good education. They insisted that Israel's founding father David
Ben-Gurion didn't even want them to come.
"We
should be regarded like Holocaust survivors," said Uri Barzilai, 60. "We
were treated like third-rate citizens and we still feel damaged."
----
Follow Aron Heller on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/aronhellerap
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Sample Text
Categories
- 10 good food
- A Syrian family's journey
- Alps plane crash 'intentional'
- Battle for Mosul
- Bedouin turned businessman
- Bin Laden dossier
- Birthright
- Bulgarian
- currency
- Documenting America's white nationalists
- Dozens of refugees die
- Dozens of refugees found dead
- economic
- Ethnic tensions between Israeli Jews fuel Netanyahu victory
- Europe's immigration story
- everyone will turn away from you
- Fighting intensifies in the streets of Yemen's Aden
- Five deadly diet
- From today's featured article
- FTC takes
- girl with a rare ageing disease
- Halloween Candy
- history of a dream
- How a shipwrecked truck driver sailed
- Iraq violence
- Iraqi forces
- Israel Attacked America
- Israel elections
- Kazakhstan
- life's mission
- Malaysia
- Mexican-food
- Migrants or refugees
- murdering arrested
- news
- Nut rage
- owner of the Internet
- people
- Pope Francis
- Powdered Alcohol Meets
- Race in the US: Know your history
- Record number of refugees
- Richest
- Riviera
- Robbers steal
- Russian roots
- Sarah Brady
- Saudi-led forces bomb
- Search operations restart
- sex change
- Sofia Bulgaria
- Streams of refugees
- suicide bomb
- Syrians into poverty
- The children taken from home
- War Babies
- Western Jihadis
- Why Al Jazeera will not say Mediterranean 'migrants
- Yemen needs hope not bombs
- Zimbabwe: Stealing Lives
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Ethnic tensions between Israeli Jews fuel Netanyahu victory
Ethnic tensions between Israeli Jews fuel Netanyahu victory
Saturday, April 4, 2015
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