BlackCommentator.com
- January 11, 2018 - Issue 724 Cover Story: What Israel is Doing to
African Refugees is a Moral Atrocity - Color of Law By David A. Love,
JD, BC Executive Editor
Est. April
5, 2002
January 11, 2018 - Issue 724
What Israel is Doing
to
African Refugees
is a
Moral Atrocity
"Officials in Israel are concerned that too many Black people
threaten the “Jewish and democratic character” of the nation.
Add to that a fear of being outnumbered and overrun by
Palestinian Arabs - some of whom are second-class Israeli
citizens, but many more of whom are subject to a military
occupation, without rights, dispossessed of their land
and living in the open."
There
are 38,000 African
refugees
and migrants who are living in Israel, mostly from Eritrea and the
Sudan. And the rightwing Israeli government has issued them an
ultimatum—leave Israel now or go to prison.
Israel–a
nation founded by Jewish refugees who fled genocide from the Nazis in
Europe–comes off as a shamefully racist, hostile and inhumane
place for Black people.
Calling
the African people “infiltrators”
- the
preferred derogatory name for the Black refugees - the government of
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has told the refugees they must
leave by April or face incarceration. They will reportedly receive
$3,500 and money for airfare to return home or a third country such
as Uganda or Rwanda.
Israel
will also close the Holot
detention center,
which is housing over 1,000 Eritrean and Sudanese refugees who are
subject to deportation.
“We
are here on a mission to give back south Tel Aviv to the Israeli
residents,” Netanyahu
said
last August in the neighborhood that some residents have called South
Sudan
due to the influx of African migrants. “We have a very clear
policy: We are dealing with illegal infiltrators – not with
refugees, illegal infiltrators – and the right of the State of
Israel to maintain its borders and to remove illegal infiltrators
from it.”
Netanyahu
added: “What I hear is pain and terrible distress. People are
afraid to leave the house… Together with the foreign, culture
and interior ministers, we will enforce a much stronger enforcement
vis-�-vis employers, the lawless infiltrators and everything
we need to do to increase enforcement.”
Officials
in Israel are concerned that too many Black people threaten the
“Jewish
and democratic character”
of the nation. Add to that a fear of being outnumbered and overrun by
Palestinian Arabs - some of whom are second-class Israeli citizens,
but many more of whom are subject to a military occupation, without
rights, dispossessed of their land and living in the open.
Since
2006, 60,000
refugees
have fled to Israel via Egypt, escaping persecution at home. Of the
nearly 40,000 asylum
seekers
who remain, 27,500 are from Eritrea, 7,900 from Sudan and 2,600 from
other African nations.
For
those who would claim Israel’s actions against these non-Jewish
African refugees have nothing to do with race, consider the plight of
Black Jews and Israelis of African descent. For example, the over
135,000 Ethiopian
Israelis
face racial
discrimination
and police violence, and were even forced to part ways with their
ancient traditions so they were in line with Ashkenazi (European)
Jewish standards.
“Israel
is one of the most racist countries in the world,” said Tahunia
Rubel,
an Ethiopian-born Israeli model and actress. “People in Israel
find it strange to see an Ethiopian woman who behaves like an
Israeli.”
Sephardi
and Mizrahi
Jews from Spain, Portugal, North Africa and the Mideast face
discrimination from Ashkenazi Jews in Israel. And Kenyan citizen and
Jewish convert Yehudah
Kimani
was deported recently, hours after he had arrived in Israel on a visa
to study at a yeshiva.
Detained
at the airport, he was not allowed to contact his Israeli sponsors.
“Do you want half of Africa coming here?” asked one visa
official, denying allegations of racial discrimination but defending
the deportation of the Black Jew.
Tamar
Manasseh, the founder and president of Mothers Against Senseless
Killings Chicago and a member of a predominantly-Black Chicago
synagogue, wrote in The
Forward
that Israel is not her promised land because all the stories she
heard growing up about people flourishing in Israel were of white
Jews.
According
to the blog Unruly–published
by the Jews of Color and Sephardi/Mizrahi Caucus and Jewish Voice for
Peace– rather than grant the Africans refugee status as
required by international law, Israel uses laws originally designed
to criminalize Palestinians wanting to return to detain
Africans and deny their claims.
While
other developed nations grant asylum to Eritreans and Sudanese at a
high rate, Israel maintains a policy of coercing them and making
their lives miserable, and regarding them a “cancer” and
“a threat to the social fabric of society,” according to
Human
Rights Watch.
Meanwhile,
these refugees face violence, persecution, slavery even death upon
deportation, as a consortium of human
rights agencies and NGOs
warned in a joint letter.
“Israel
says their crime is illegally crossing the border and that they are a
threat to the security of the state. However, their real “crime”
is that they are not Jewish and that they are Black,” according
to Unruly.
“As we work hand in hand with Palestinians and movements like
#BlackLivesMatter and #Not1More in the United States, we must also
act in solidarity with Black Lives threatened by Israel’s
racist regime.”
T’ruah:
The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights,
called the Israeli decision immoral, and said a country founded by
refugees, and one that led the way in enacting the 1951 International
Convention on the Status of Refugees in response to the Holocaust
should not turn its back on its responsibilities to refugees and
asylum seekers.
“The
Eritrean and Sudanese asylum seekers have fled to Israel to escape
violence, slavery, and other brutal conditions in their native lands.
As Jews, we know what happens when countries close their doors to
those running for their lives,” said Rabbi Jill Jacobs,
executive director of T’ruah, noting that sending asylum
seekers to a likely death violates Jewish law and international law.
“And
we also know that Jewish law demands that we accompany strangers
likely to be vulnerable to attack, and that we refrain from handing
people over to those likely to kill or enslave them,” she
added.
This
is why Israel is hostile territory for African refugees, and why tens
of thousands of Black people who sought refuge there will find
themselves deported or in jail.
This commentary was originally published by The Grio