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Opinion

What are we really celebrating as Israel turns 70?

Student Nina Morris-Evans argues that love for Israel should not be unconditional

April 11, 2018 15:59
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2 min read

Israel’s turning 70 - and there is much to celebrate. This amazing country has come so much further than Theodor Herzl could have possibly imagined: it’s now the tech capital of the world, a nation of innovative start-ups with an exciting, progressive culture. Of all the countries in the Middle East, Israel is by far the most economically successful - and still the only democracy.

But, as a British Jew, I’m constantly reminded of the flipside. Right now, the headlines scream of the terrible number of Gazan casualties at the hands of the IDF. Meanwhile I’m pummelled with story after story about the antisemitism row in the Labour Party, often dismissed under a guise of "just being anti-Israel". It’s an upsetting shambles of mixed messages - and I don’t feel like throwing on my party shoes for any birthday celebrations. 

Should the less appealing traits of Israel be ignored, and the unprecedented success of the Jewish Homeland blithely celebrated? Surely the more difficult, and far braver response is to face up to the facts and become an agent for change.

And the facts are indisputable. Palestinians living in Israel have much lower life expectancy and much higher poverty levels than their Jewish fellow-citizens. And I have seen with my own eyes how much worse things are in the West Bank.