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Analysis: Rage over 'racist' law is misplaced

October 14, 2010 15:06
A policeman checks the ID of Israeli Arabs, who will not have to pledge their allegiance under the new legislation

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

2 min read

The newly amended Citizenship Law, approved by the cabinet on Sunday and requiring all foreign non-Jewish citizens wishing to become Israeli to pledge allegiance to Israel as a Jewish and democratic state, is polarising opinion in Israel and across the world.

The right claim it is a basic patriotic gesture that affirms what is already written in Israel's Declaration of Independence. The left cry that this is another sign of the erosion of democracy in Israel, basing their criticism on the very same declaration. The political leadership of the Israeli Arabs lambasts the amendment as "racist" and the Western media seems to agree.

Certainly, the legislation was driven to the fore by Yisrael Beiteinu's leader, Avigdor Lieberman, who campaigned in last year's poll under the slogan "No Loyalty - No Citizenship", targeting Israeli Arabs as a subversive element.

But the law will apply only to the handful of non-Jews who go through the gruelling process of becoming Israeli via the Citizenship Law. These are usually the partners of Israelis, guest workers who fit a list of stringent criteria and the Ethiopian Falashmura, who claim to be descended from Jews but have to undergo Orthodox conversion after arriving in Israel.

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