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Written by Ali Abunimah, Palestine Center Fellow Ali Abunimah, Palestine Center Fellow
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Category: News News
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Published: 20 October 2008 20 October 2008
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Last Updated: 20 October 2008 20 October 2008
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Created: 20 October 2008 20 October 2008
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Hits: 6147 6147
What Happened?
The disturbances began after a Palestinian resident of Acre drove into
the eastern predominantly Jewish neighborhood around midnight on
Wednesday, 9 October 2008 during the observance of the Yom Kippur
Jewish holiday. This prompted a violent reaction from Jewish residents
and soon, the Israeli daily Haaretz reported, 'Police warded off
hundreds of Jewish rioters, chanting 'death to the Arabs,' and trying
to storm the city's main road.'1 As word spread of the attack on the
Arab driver, hundreds of Arab youths came to the scene.
Violent clashes between Jewish and Arab residents continued for several
nights as police intervened with riot control methods including water
cannons. According to Israeli police, many Arab families had to be
evacuated and about a dozen Arab homes were set on fire.2
Brutal scenes were alleged and witnessed over four days. For example,
an Israeli journalist witnessed Jewish youths armed with stones moving
around the city looking for Palestinian citizens to attack and
shouting, 'Death to the Arabs.' In one case, they mistakenly attacked a
Jew (most of Acre's Jewish residents are Mizrahi Jews who originally
came to Israel from Arab countries).3
When Arab residents, who were forced out of their homes by Jewish
attacks, attempted to return under police guard to retrieve belongings,
they were stoned by Jews who shouted racial epithets at them.4 Israel
army radio and Arab residents of the city claimed that dozens of
extremists affiliated with the West Bank settler movement had come in
to Acre to take part in the violence (see below).5 La'a Ramal, an Arab
resident whose home was attacked, said that her house had been torched
three times in recent years, and several families had already left the
area as a result of persistent intimidation.6
Jewish residents told reporters that Arabs armed with axes came into
their neighborhood, destroyed cars and shops and shouted, 'Death to the
Jews.' David Azoulay, an Israeli Jewish Knesset member from the
religious Shas party who lives in Acre, said, 'I myself heard them [the
Arabs] calling, 'Allahu Akbar! Kill the Jews!'' This was denied by
Palestinian Israeli Knesset member Abbas Zakour, who also lives in the
city.7 Other reports stated that rumors had spread through the Arab old
city that an Arab man had been killed, prompting Arab residents into
the streets.8
In the end, 54 people-Jews and Arabs-were arrested and about 100 cars
and several dozen shops were damaged. Several minor injuries were
reported. While Jews and Arabs took part in the violence, on 12 October
2008, on the third day of the disturbances, Major-General Shimon Koren,
commander of Israel's Northern District police, said the riots had been
instigated by Jews and 'the majority of rioters causing disturbances in
[Acre] are Jews.'9
How Did It Begin?
According to Acre resident Tawfiq Jamal's own account, he drove into a
predominantly Jewish area with his son and a friend at around 11 p.m.
in order to pick up his daughter from the home of relatives where she
had been helping prepare baked sweets for a wedding. When they arrived,
according to Jamal:
I asked my son to take the baking dishes out of the car and proceeded
to walk (toward the house) when (the Jews) suddenly began hurling
stones at us. The stones hit my son and the car. My son was lying down
because [he] was hit in the face, back and chest; I managed to grab him
and pull him into the building.
The three men went into the building and called the police and
emergency services, who arrived after a few minutes. However, Jamal
stated, 'Throughout the entire time, despite police presence, the
[Jewish] youngsters continued to throw rocks and chant 'death to the
Arabs,' while my son's face was bleeding and his friend almost passed
out.'10
Jamal recounted that he and the two youths were then evacuated by
police and told to take shelter in a squad car. When the car did not
start, the police fled and told Jamal and the two youths to do the
same. Jamal stated that they were saved only by a Jewish night watchman
who hid them in his guard booth, locked the door and turned off the
lights. Jamal compared his situation to that of two Israeli soldiers
wearing civilian clothes who were captured and brutally killed by a
Palestinian mob in Ramallah in December 2000 and feared that his
group's fate would be the same.
Jamal strenuously denied allegations he had been drinking and
deliberately started the incident by playing loud music. Israeli police
also alleged that an unnamed Arab youth had broken into a mosque and
used the loudspeaker system to alert Arab residents of the attack and
to call for help after receiving a phone call from Jamal's brother.
They stated the suspect had not been arrested because he had fled.11
Acre Police Commander Avraham Edri partially confirmed Jamal's account,
telling the Knesset's Internal Affairs Committee that:
When my officers arrived at the scene, they had to handle 300-400
people who had already lifted the driver's car in the air. Our first
mission was to prevent casualties. We released the driver from the mob
and helped him into an apartment nearby...My staff served as a barrier
between him and the excited mob; the policemen were hurt but not one
civilian was injured.12
Speaking before the Knesset committee on October 12, Jamal apologized
for driving into the Jewish area and said he had 'made a mistake.'
Despite this, Israeli police arrested Jamal for 'harming religious
sensitivities, speeding and reckless endangerment' and remanded him in
custody. There were no reports of arrests specifically for the
attempted lynching of Jamal and his companions.13
The Settler Connection
Palestinian citizens of Israel and Israeli Jews live in close proximity
in Acre, a U.N. World Heritage site, as they have done for generations.
But in recent years, extremist Jewish groups affiliated with West Bank
settlers have moved in with the stated aim of making the city more
Jewish.
Palestinians are concentrated in the central old city and near the
harbor while Jews are established in the eastern part and outer rings.
The vast majority of the Jewish residents of the city are
Mizrahim-working class Jews whose first generation came as immigrants
to Israel from Arab countries. Mizrahim, although Jews, also faced
severe discrimination by an Israeli state dominated by European
Ashkenazi Jewish elites. Both communities are disadvantaged in
different ways. Many Palestinians in the city are the survivors and
descendants of those who were forced to leave their homes when Israel
was established in 1948. All but 3,000 of the city's 13,000 Palestinian
citizens in 1948 were forced out. Today, Palestinians comprise about 27
percent of the city's population. Like all Palestinian citizens of
Israel, they have experienced systematic legal, social and economic
discrimination and political exclusion. Mizrahim were often pushed to
the edges of Israeli Jewish society and in many
cases were housed in the former homes of expelled Palestinians.14
Culturally marginalized and much poorer than Ashkenazi Jews, the
Mizrahim have become the base constituency for the right-wing Likud
party, Shas and other overtly racist anti-Arab parties.
Given the numbers of people involved in the troubles, long-time Jewish
residents were certainly among them. But some Arab residents blamed the
worsening tension not on long-time residents but on an influx of
militant youth affiliated with the national religious West Bank settler
movement. Indeed, Baruch Marzel, a settler leader from near Hebron in
the West Bank, visited Acre during the riots and vowed to help Jews in
the city to set up a 'defense organization.'15 Barzel was a leader of
the banned Kach party founded by the late Meir Kahane, which supports
the expulsion of all Palestinians, and he remains a prominent leader of
racist settler groups.
Yeshivat Hesder-Akko founded in 2001 is a pro-settler national
religious school in the midst of a now majority Arab neighborhood
called Wolfson. Over the years, many of the area's Jewish residents had
become more affluent and moved out, and poorer Arabs moved in. The
Yeshiva is run by Yossi Stern, a rabbi from the militant West Bank
settlement of Elon Moreh. Stern, who is also on the Acre city council,
told The Washington Post last year that he and his associates were
working on projects designed to 'attract Jews to Acre,' including a 350
unit housing complex designated for Jewish military families and
another yeshiva. Palestinian residents and leaders consider these
efforts to be part of a systematic assault on their presence in the
city using tactics long deployed against Palestinians in the West
Bank.16 Some accuse Acre's Likud mayor of supporting the efforts.
Yeshivat Hesder-Akko's own website states that '[f]rom a luxuriant
Jewish neighborhood it [Wolfson] has turned into a decrepit Arab
neighborhood.' The school, whose students are Israeli
military-religious trainees, is to 'to try to return and strengthen the
Jewish character of the city.' Although the city was 'almost lost' to
Jews, the site states that 'the long awaited salvation has begun.'
According to the website, the yeshiva was built with funds from a donor
in New York.17 Volunteers have also raised funds from synagogues in the
United States for the 'special aim of the yeshiva [which] is to attract
more young Jewish families by strengthening and maintaining the Zionist
Jewish character of this ancient Jewish city.'18
Two years ago, similar but much less serious disturbances occurred in
Acre during another Jewish holiday. Arab Knesset member Zakour had
previously written to Israel's public security minister appealing for
police protection for the Arab communities against harassment by Jewish
extremists, including the stoning of Arab cars during Jewish holidays.
An almost identical hesder-yeshiva (this term means a school for
Israeli men who combine religious study with service in Israeli army
units) was recently founded in the Arab Ajami neighborhood of Jaffa,
south of Tel-Aviv, also with the goal of increasing the Jewish
population of that city.19
The events in Acre coincide with an upsurge in violence by the radical
settler movement against Palestinians across the Israeli-occupied West
Bank including a pipe bomb attack against an Israeli left-wing
professor.20 While those actions have received more attention, the
activities of affiliated groups against Palestinian citizens of Israel
have been largely ignored.
Reactions in Israel
Arab leaders in Acre met with police officials and publicly called for
calm and reconciliation, and they also condemned Jamal's incursion into
the Jewish area regardless of how innocent. On October 12, Arab Knesset
member Abbas Zakour accompanied Jamal to Israel's parliament to make
his public apology in an attempt to appease the Jewish community and
restore calm. Yossi Beilin, leader of the Left-Zionist Meretz party,
blamed Israel's neglect of the Arab community, particularly since the
October 2000 shooting of 12 Palestinian citizens of Israel by the
police.21 One Palestinian member of the Knesset called the clashes 'a
pogrom perpetrated by Jews against Arab residents' and accused the
police of discrimination.
Israeli national leaders, including caretaker Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert, Prime Minister designate Tzipi Livni and President Shimon
Peres, called for calm and called on 'both sides' to refrain from
violence. They portrayed the events as being religious and communal in
origin and did not note the political context of efforts to judaize the
city. Peres visited Acre and convened a meeting of Arab and Jewish
civic and religious leaders aimed at restoring peace.22
Sheikh Ra'ed Salah, the head of Israel's Islamic movement, accused
Israeli political and religious leaders of facilitating the actions of
extremists over a long period of time with the goal of heightening
tensions so that Palestinians inside Israel could eventually be
expelled. He said Acre's Palestinian population was being targeted for
'cleansing' and that Arabs in other coastal cities including Haifa and
Jaffa could be next.23 The fears that events in Acre were evidence of a
concerted effort to expel them were widely echoed by Palestinians in
Israel.
Some of the Israeli politicians who have been most outspoken in calling
for the expulsion of Palestinians and supporting radical settlers did
their best to confirm such fears, engaging in the kind of incitement
that has been escalating in recent years.24 Knesset member, former
cabinet minister and settler Effie Eitam called the events 'an
anti-Semitic pogrom at the heart of Israel on the holiest days of the
Jewish people.' Another member called on the authorities to 'respond
harshly to the Arab pogrom on Yom Kippur.' Esterina Tartman, a Knesset
member of former Deputy Prime Minister Avigdor Lieberman's Yisrael
Beitenu Party, called for the removal of Palestinians citizens from
Israel on the grounds that 'the pogrom in [Acre] is yet another
confirmation that Arab Israelis are the real danger threatening the
state.'25
Some Jewish residents of the city circulated calls for Jews to boycott Arab businesses to punish the Palestinian population.26
Reactions among Other Palestinians
Palestinians in the 1967 Occupied Territories generally viewed the
events in Acre as a continuation of Israeli state violence of the kind
routinely directed against them. They also reasserted their
identification and solidarity with Palestinians inside Israel.
Hamas' Ismail Haniyeh, prime minister of the Palestinian Authority (PA)
elected in January 2006 and now confined to Gaza, said that his
'government was following with concern what was happening in Acre and
what the Arab Palestinian population was facing by way of vicious
attacks by Zionist settlers.' Haniyeh added that these attacks were
part of a strategy to force Palestinians out of their land and homes.'
A Hamas-affiliated website also condemned what it called the silence of
the Arab regimes and the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah.27
Hundreds of Palestinians in Gaza City took part in a 'popular
conference in solidarity with the people of Acre' at which leaders of
many political factions expressed unity with Palestinians in Israel.28
Thousands marched in a solidarity rally in Gaza's Jabalya refugee camp.
A handful of Palestinian resistance factions said they could take
'revenge' if actions targeting Palestinians in Acre continued.29 A
search for official reactions from the Ramallah-based Palestinian
Authority headed by President Mahmoud Abbas did not yield any results.
Analysis
Although Israel has officially recognized the systematic discrimination
faced by the country's Palestinian citizens and the fact that little
has ever been done to address it, Israeli leaders tended to view the
events in Acre as being about 'Arab-Jewish' community relations inside
the country. They typically respond to Arab-Jewish tensions with
promises of better funding for Arab communities, although such pledges
are almost never fulfilled.
The violent actions of settler groups against Palestinians in the
occupied West Bank have gone unchecked by the Israeli army. There is
now clear evidence of similar organized, planned violence being
directed at Palestinians inside Israel. There is no sign that the
Israeli state is prepared to confront it any more than it does in the
West Bank. Unless this changes, there is a strong likelihood that
violence may resume and spread notwithstanding the precariously
restored calm. This may destroy the remaining threads of coexistence
inside Israel. Jewish extremists would see that as a success if their
goal is to create the conditions for the removal of Palestinians from
Israel.
Palestinians across the political spectrum, inside and outside Israel,
saw the events as a manifestation of the wider Palestinian-Israeli
conflict rather than a local community-relations matter. For
Palestinian citizens of Israel, the events highlighted their own
precarious situation in the face of mounting racist incitement against
them by Israeli politicians and media. The arrest and detention of
Tawfiq Jamal, even after he publicly apologized at the Knesset and
barely escaped from a lynch mob according to official sources, is
likely to be seen as a further provocation and injustice by beleaguered
Palestinians in Israel.
Historically, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and the
Palestinian Authority have refused to represent the interests of
Palestinians inside Israel. Despite this, Palestinians at the
grassroots level throughout historic Palestine and the diaspora have
maintained their ties. They are expressing new forms of cross-border
solidarity and political action.
The international community has always treated Israel's violations of
the rights of the 1.5 million Palestinians inside Israel as an internal
matter. The events in Acre, and especially the role of the national
religious settler movement, provide early warning that this already
inadequate approach will be even more ill-equipped to cope with
spreading strife that will not respect lines on a map.
Ali Abunimah is a fellow at the Palestine Center in Washington, DC. He
is an expert on Palestine, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and is the
author of One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the Israeli-Palestinian
Impasse. Abunimah also co-founded The Electronic Intifada, an online
publication about Palestine and the Palestine-Israeli conflict,
Electronic Iraq and Electronic Lebanon.
The views expressed in this information brief are those of the author
and do not necessarily reflect those of The Jerusalem Fund.
1Jack Khoury, Nadav Shragai and Yoav Stern, 'Acre sees worst violence
in years as Jews and Arabs resume clashes,' Haaretz (website), 9
October 2008, Update of 21.29.
2Ammar Awwad, 'Israel's Acre suffers third night of violence,' Reuters,
11 October 2008,
(http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE49A21420081011),
Accessed 13 October 2008.
3Yaakov Lappin, 'Eyewitness: 'This is our city',' The Jerusalem Post,
12 October 2008,
(http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1222017509804&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull),
Accessed 13 October 2008.
4(In Arabic) Ra'id Dlasha, 'Akka: atfal wa nisaa' 'arabiyat
yata'aradoun li'itidaa' saafir; al-shurta tu'azziz quwwat biwahdat
khasa wa quwat musta'ariba,' Arabs 48, 13 October 2008,
(http://www.arabs48.com/display.x?cid=6&sid=5&id=57694), 13
October 2008.
5(In Arabic) 'Masadir israiliyya tu'akkid tadaffuq 'adad min nushataa'
al-haraka al-istitaniyya ila akka,' Arabs 48, 13 October
2008,(http://www.arabs48.com/display.x?cid=6&sid=5&id=57711),
Accessed 13 October 2008.
6Ahiya Raved, 'Akko: Displaced Arab families made eligible for public
housing,' Ynet, 13 October 2008,
(http://www.ynetnews.com/Ext/Comp/ArticleLayout/CdaArticlePrintPreview/1,2506,L-3608511,00.html),
Accessed 13 October 2008.
7'Acre driver apologizes for incident,' The Jerusalem Post, 12 October 2008.
8See Isabel Kershner, 'Israeli City Divided by Sectarian Violence,' The
New York Times, 12 October 2008,
(http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/13/world/middleeast/13mideast.html).
9Sharon Roffe-Ofir, 'Northern District police commander: Majority of
Akko riots are Jews,' Ynet, 12 October 2008,
(http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3607875,00.html), Accessed
13 October 2008; See also, Sharon Roffe-Ofir, 'Police official says
intigators of Akko riots Jewish,' Ynet, 12 October 2008,
(http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3607905,00.html), Accessed
13 October 2008.
10Sharon Roffe-Ophir, 'Arab motorist: I narrowly escaped lynch in
Akko,' Ynet, 9 October 2008
(http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3607142,00.html). Accessed
13 October 2008.
11Hagai Einav, 'Akko: 54 arrested in 4 days of riots,' Ynet,
(http://www.ynetnews.com/Ext/Comp/ArticleLayout/CdaArticlePrintPreview/1,2506,L-3607842,00.html),
Accessed 13 October 2008.
12'Acre driver apologizes for incident,' The Jerusalem Post, 12 October
2008,
(http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1222017519430),
Accessed 13 October 2008.
13Jack Khoury, 'Police arrest driver who sparked Acre riots for
'harming religious sensitivities',' Haaretz, 13 October, 2008
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1028249.html).
14See Joseph Massad, 'Zionism's internal others: Israel and the
Mizrahim,' in The Persistence of the Palestinian Question, (Routledge,
2006).
15See Sharon Roffe-Ofir, 'Peres visits Akko, urges side to exercise
tolerance,' Ynet, 13 October 2008
(http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3608389,00.html), Accessed
13 October 2008.
16See Scott Wilson, 'Israel's Arab Citizens, Isolation and Exclusion,' The Washington Post, 20 December 2007.
17See 'About Us' page on Yeshivat Hesder-Akko's website, (http://www.yakko.co.il/SafeCMS/?PageID=12), Accessed 13 October 2008.
18Abigail Klein Leichman, 'Back from Akko to help hesder yeshiva,' The
New Jersey Jewish Standard, 21 June 2006,
(http://www.jstandard.com/index.php/content/item/2302).
19Eli Senyor, 'Jaffa: Yeshiva to be built in heart of Arab
neighborhood,' Ynet, 24 September 2008,
(http://www.ynet.co.il/english/articles/0,7340,L-3601062,00.html).
20See Jonathan Cook, 'State's weak responses make Jewish extremism
stronger,' The National, 27 September 2008,
(http://www.thenational.ae/article/20080927/FOREIGN/481944506).
21Yoav Stern and Yuval Azoulay, 'Livni tells Acre residents: Don't take
law into your own hands,' Haaretz, 10 October 2008,
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1027728.html).
22Jack Khoury, 'Peres in Acre: We have many religions, but one set of
laws,' Haaretz, 13 October 2008
(http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1028604.html), Accessed 13 October
2008.
23(In Arabic) 'Ahdath akka ... samt murib li sultat ramallah wa ghiyab
lilnitham al-rasmi al-'arabi,' Palestinian Information Center, 13
October 2008 (http://tinyurl.com/3tg74a), Accessed 13 October 2008.
24See Ali Abunimah, 'Anti-Arab Racism and Incitement in Israel'
Palestine Center Information Brief No. 161, 25 March 2008,
(http://www.thejerusalemfund.org/images/informationbrief.php?ID=191).
25Amnon Meranda, 'MK Eitam slams 'anti-Semitic pogrom in heart of
Israel,' Ynet, 9 October 2008,
(http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3607097,00.html). Accessed
13 October 2008.
26Ahiya Raved, 'Akko: Jewish residents call for boycott on Arab
businesses,' Ynet, 11 October 2008,
(http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3607517,00.html).
27(In Arabic) 'Ahdath akka ... samt murib li sultat ramallah wa ghiyab
lilnitham al-rasmi al-'arabi,' Palestinian Information Center, 13
October 2008 (http://tinyurl.com/3tg74a), Accessed 13 October 2008.
28(in Arabic) 'Ghazza: al-mi'at sharaku fil mu'tamar al-sha'bi allathi
nathamhu markaz filastin lildirasat walbuhuth ma' ahali madinat 'akka,'
Arabs 48, 12 October 2008,
(http://www.arabs48.com/display.x?cid=6&sid=5&id=57698).
29'Gaza militants vow revenge for Acre violence,' Xinhua, 12 October
2008,
(http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-10/12/content_10183449.htm).