Become a Member
Nathan Jeffay

By

Nathan Jeffay,

Nathan Jeffay

Analysis

Immigration sparks class showdown

February 10, 2011 12:13
A Jewish - and legal - immigrant from Ethiopia arrives at Ben Gurion
1 min read

In Israel, concern about illegal immigration has mostly been driven by nationalism. "In the past 100 years, the Jewish people has built here a Jewish state. Within 10 years, infiltrators could cause this to go down the drain," declares Yaakov Katz, a politician with the right-wing National Union party and chairman of the Knesset's Committee on Foreign Workers.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu put it slightly more delicately last year when announcing steps to curb illegal immigration. "There is broad agreement that we need to protect the state of Israel and its future as a Jewish and democratic state," he said, referring to the fear that the growing presence of African immigrants poses a threat to the Jewish majority in Israel.

There is a strong lobby that opposes Mr Netanyahu and Mr Katz's logic, saying that as a state of many former refugees, Israel has a special responsibility to care for asylum-seekers.

But while both sides of the argument have focussed on the national picture and on political ideology, public discourse is now shifting towards the local and
revolving around social class.