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{{Short description|Israeli attempts to transform Jerusalem to enhance its Jewish character}} | |||
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'''Judaization of Jerusalem''' ({{langx|ar|تهويد القدس|tahwīd al-Quds}}; {{langx|he|יהוד ירושלים|yehud Yerushalayim}}) is the view that ] has sought to transform the physical and demographic landscape of ] to enhance its ] character at the expense of its ] and ] ones. | |||
The city's Jewish character first emerged as the capital of the ] during the ], which saw the construction of the ] as a symbolic center of ]. Jerusalem was destroyed by the ] in 586 BCE, and many of its elites exiled, only to ] decades later following the ] by ] of the ], who allowed the building of the ].<ref name=":6" /> Jerusalem was once again placed at the center of Jewish religious and national life ], which lasted between 516 BCE and 70 CE.<ref name=":6" /> The city retained its Jewish character up until its destruction by the Romans at the height of the ], and remained central in Jewish religion and identity ever since. | |||
The question of whether there is an Israeli government policy for the Judaization of Jerusalem is a matter of debate. Some scholars like ], Moshe Ma'oz and Jeremy Salt write that it has been the policy of successive Israeli governments since 1967. Others, like ] and Dan Diker, have objected to the entire notion, writing that the lack of any significant change to the demographic balance of the city undermines suggestions that it is government policy and renders any such discussions moot. | |||
The "Judaization of Jerusalem" claims often involve the increasing Jewish presence in Jerusalem in the ], referring to the Jewish ] becoming increasingly dominant since the Ottoman era; this process continued until Jews became the largest ethnoreligious group in Jerusalem since the mid-19th century and until the 1948 War when East Jerusalem became under Jordanian control. | |||
The claim that Israel is promoting the "Judaization" of Jerusalem, and especially the ], has been promoted by Palestinian Islamist groups such as ] and ].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2024-06-15 |title=Hamas spox. Abu Obeida: Israel wreaking 'Judaization' on Temple Mount every day |url=https://www.jpost.com/breaking-news/article-806301 |access-date=2024-06-16 |website=The Jerusalem Post {{!}} JPost.com |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-12-07 |title=Hamas vows to ‘liberate’ Jerusalem on 35th birthday |url=https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/article-724300 |access-date=2024-06-16 |website=The Jerusalem Post {{!}} JPost.com |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Magid |first=Jacob |date=2023-05-07 |title=Hamas warns Israel ahead of nationalist Flag March through Old City’s Muslim Quarter |url=https://www.timesofisrael.com/hamas-warns-israel-ahead-of-nationalist-flag-march-through-old-citys-muslim-quarter/}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-03-16 |title=Hamas, Islamic Jihad call to step up attacks in West Bank, Jerusalem |url=https://www.jpost.com/arab-israeli-conflict/article-701471 |access-date=2024-06-16 |website=The Jerusalem Post {{!}} JPost.com |language=en}}</ref> | |||
==Background== | ==Background== | ||
{{ |
{{main|History of Jerusalem}} | ||
The demography of Jerusalem has undergone successive waves of ], ], ], ], ] and ] over the course of its history. The city's Jewish character first emerged as the capital of the ] during the ], which saw the construction of the ] as a symbolic center of ]. Jerusalem was destroyed by the ] in 586 BCE, and many of its elites exiled, only to ] decades later following the ] by ] of the ], who allowed the building of the ].<ref name=":6">{{Cite book |last=Levine |first=Lee I. |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/698161941 |title=Jerusalem: portrait of the city in the Second Temple period (538 BCE - 70 CE) |date=2002 |publisher=Jewish Publication Society, published in cooperation with the Jewish Theological Seminary of America |isbn=978-0-8276-0956-3 |edition=1st |location=Philadelphia |pages=13–20 |oclc=698161941 |quote=Jerusalem's enhanced stature in the Second Temple period was the result of both internal and external developments, and its international recognition as a temple-city from the Persian era onward accorded the city a distinguished position in Jewish and non-Jewish eyes alike. As the capital of an extensive kingdom under the Hasmoneans and Herod, Jerusalem became the seat of all major national institutions—political, social, and religious—as well as the home of important priestly and aristocratic families and a variety of religious sects. Jerusalem's renown spread throughout the Roman world as ever-increasing numbers of pilgrims visited the city.}}</ref> | |||
Jerusalem has a long history of settlement predating that of the three monotheistic faiths, ], ] and ], which hold the city in high esteem. Members of all three religions and others have made Jerusalem their home over the years. | |||
Jerusalem was once again placed at the center of Jewish religious and national life ], which lasted between 516 BCE and 70 CE.<ref name=":6" /> During this period the city was also influenced by Hellenistic elements under the ] and the ]<ref>{{cite journal |last=Gilbert |first=George Holley |date=1909 |title=The Hellenization of the Jews between 334 B. C. and 70 A. D. |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/3155063 |journal=The American Journal of Theology |volume=13 |issue=4 |pages=520–40 |doi=10.1086/478870 |jstor=3155063}}</ref> as well as ] under first the ] and then ];<ref>{{cite journal |last=Regev |first=Eyal |date=2010 |title=Herod's Jewish Ideology Facing Romanization: On Intermarriage, Ritual Baths, and Speeches |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/20750700 |journal=The Jewish Quarterly Review |volume=100 |issue=2 |pages=197–222 |doi=10.1353/jqr.0.0084 |jstor=20750700|s2cid=159674500}}</ref> nevertheless, it retained its Jewish character and identity.<ref name=":6" /> During the second and first centuries BCE, Jerusalem briefly served as the capital of a Jewish kingdom under the ]. During this period, the city's size and population peaked at an estimated 200,000 people.<ref name="erp-places">{{cite encyclopedia |title=Palestine: History |encyclopedia=The On-line Encyclopedia of the Roman Provinces |publisher=The University of South Dakota |url=http://www.usd.edu/erp/Palestine/history.htm |access-date=18 April 2007 |last=Lehmann |first=Clayton Miles |date=22 February 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080310053428/http://www.usd.edu/erp/Palestine/history.htm |archive-date=10 March 2008}}</ref><ref name="HarEl68">{{Cite book |last=Har-El |first=Menashe |title=This Is Jerusalem |publisher=Canaan Publishing House |year=1977 |isbn=0-86628-002-2 |pages=}}</ref> | |||
Although the city came under Muslim rule in 638, it retained its Christian appearance for centuries afterward. During the ] (1099–1291), many new Christian sites, including 60 churches, were constructed, and a number of Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem, like ] and the ], were transformed into churches or palaces for the Crusader kings.<ref name=Petersen>Petersen, 2002, p. 231.</ref> After the ]s liberated the city from the Crusaders in 1187, active measures were undertaken to restore Islamic sites and Islamise the city, a project motivated by the spirit of the counter-crusades which no longer viewed Christian sites as innocuous since they had made their way into sacred Muslim places.<ref name=Necipoglup87>Necipoğlu, 1998, p. 87.</ref><ref name=Odedp65/> This project was completed by the ]s who wished to make Jerusalem look like a sacred Islamic domain, erecting dozens of religious buildings which altered the appearance of the city yet again, with many of the buildings appropriating Christian sites.<ref name=Odedp65>Peri, Oded. ''Christianity under Islam in Jerusalem'', BRILL 2001, Pg 65. ISBN 9004120424</ref> | |||
In 70 CE, the city was besieged and destroyed by the Romans at the height of the ].<ref name=":6" /> The destruction of Jerusalem and the Second Temple marked a major turning point in ].<ref>{{Citation |last=Neusner |first=Jacob |editor-first1=John |editor-last1=Hinnells |title=Judaism in a Time of Crisis: Four Responses to the Destruction of the Second Temple |date=2017-11-28 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351152761-20 |work=Neusner on Judaism |pages=399–413 |publisher=Routledge |doi=10.4324/9781351152761-20 |isbn=9781351152761 |access-date=2022-05-22}}</ref><ref name=":5">{{Cite book |last=Karesh |first=Sara E. |url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/1162305378 |title=Encyclopedia of Judaism |year=2006 |isbn=1-78785-171-0 |oclc=1162305378 |quote=Until the modern period, the destruction of the Temple was the most cataclysmic moment in the history of the Jewish people. Without the Temple, the Sadducees no longer had any claim to authority, and they faded away. With permission from Rome, the sage Yochanan ben Zakkai set up the outpost of Yavneh to continue to develop Pharisaic, or rabbinic, Judaism.}}</ref> In 130 CE, following the ], Hadrian re-founded the city as a ] named ] and Jews were banned from entering the city.<ref name="Schäfer2003">{{cite book |author=Peter Schäfer |url={{Google books |id=1TA-Fg4wBnUC |page=36 |plainurl=yes}} |title=The Bar Kokhba war reconsidered: new perspectives on the second Jewish revolt against Rome |publisher=Mohr Siebeck |year=2003 |isbn=978-3-16-148076-8 |pages=36– |access-date=4 December 2011}}</ref><ref name="erp-places"/><ref>{{Cite book |last=Cohen |first=Shaye J. D. |title=Christianity and Rabbinic Judaism: A Parallel History of their Origins and Early Development |publisher=Biblical Archaeology Society |year=1996 |editor=Hershel Shanks |location=Washington DC |page=196 |chapter=Judaism to Mishnah: 135–220 AD}}</ref> During early Middle Ages, the demography of Jerusalem underwent successive waves of ] under the ] and ] and ] following the ], before Christianization again under the rule of ] following the ], followed by further Islamization process under the ] and ]. By the early 16th century, Jerusalem was largely Muslim but gradually gained Jewish and Christian populations—giving rise to the still-existing division of the ] into Christian, Armenian, Jewish and Muslim Quarters. Since the mid-19th century, Jews had become the largest group in Jerusalem, which continued into the British Mandate period and until the 1948 war. | |||
In modern times, Jerusalem was ruled by the ], who ruled over much of ] from the 16th century until the end of ]. Under their rule Jerusalem was home to Jews, Christians and Muslims. The Jewish community was the smallest of these three in the early 19th century, numbering some 2,000 out of a total population of 8,744 in 1806.<ref name=Karkp28/> At the time, Ashkenasic Jews were forbidden from residing in the city, having been banished by the Ottoman authorities shorty after 1720.<ref>Rossoff, Dovid. ''Where Heaven Touches Earth'', Guardian Press, 1998. ISBN 0-87306-879-3. pg. 119.</ref> Jerusalem became an important administrative capital in the 19th century after the Ottomans established a new Jerusalem district.<ref name=Dumperp209>Dumper et al., 2006, p. 209.</ref> Jewish immigration to the city was motivated by a number of factors, a main factor among them being the centrality of Jerusalem for ].<ref name=Rejwanp40>Rejwan, 1998, p. 40.</ref> Political factors also played a role; for example, one result of growing intervention by the ] in the affairs of the Ottoman Empire at this time was that increased Jewish immigration to Jerusalem received British protection.<ref name=Dumperp209/> | |||
After the ], Jordan controlled the Eastern part of Jerusalem while Israel controlled the Western part, resulting in a division of the city. On 2 August 1948, by the declaration of the ], Israel applied its laws to the areas of Jerusalem under its control.<ref>{{cite web|author=Ministry of Foreign Affairs|url=http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/ForeignPolicy/MFADocuments/Yearbook1/Pages/2%20Jerusalem%20Declared%20Israel-Occupied%20City-%20Governm.aspx|title=2 Jerusalem Declared Israel-Occupied City- Government Proclamation|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160418171243/http://mfa.gov.il/MFA/ForeignPolicy/MFADocuments/Yearbook1/Pages/2%20Jerusalem%20Declared%20Israel-Occupied%20City-%20Governm.aspx|archive-date=April 18, 2016}}</ref> Displaced peoples, both Arabs and Jews, were not allowed to cross the armistice lines to return to vacated homes. Jewish Israelis took possession of many of the vacant homes in Western Jerusalem<ref name=FRUS_711-712>{{cite web|url=http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/FRUS/FRUS-idx?type=goto&id=FRUS.FRUS1949v06&isize=M&submit=Go+to+page&page=711|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190209124053/http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/FRUS/FRUS-idx?type=goto&id=FRUS.FRUS1949v06&isize=M&submit=Go+to+page&page=711|archive-date=Feb 9, 2019|title=Telegram from UK chargé to US Secretary of State|date=29 January 1949|author=United States Department of State, FRUS|pages=711–712|quote= | |||
By the end of the period of the Ottoman ] reforms, Jews had grown to represent the single largest religious community in Jerusalem.<ref name=Karkp28>Kark and Oren-Nordheim, 2001, pp. 28–31.</ref> ] writes that from the 1880s onward, all sources acknowledge that Jews constituted the majority within the city.<ref>Weiner, Justus Reid. , Jewish Political Studies Review 15:1–2 (Spring 2003), citing Schmelz, U.O. "Modern Jerusalem's Demographic Evolution," Jewish Population Studies 20 (1987):9</ref> Jewish building societies were established by the 1870s, and the ] was constructed northwest of the Old City walls.<ref name=Dumperp209/> Other building projects followed, and by the 1890s, leading Jerusalem Muslim families were protesting against Jewish immigration and land acquisitions.<ref name=Dumperp209/> | |||
Admitted Arab quarters in Jerusalem held by Jews completely settled by new immigrants and becoming thoroughly Jewish. Asserted would have great difficulty forcing people to move from homes now consider theirs ... According to Dayan, new immigrants now occupying Arab property throughout Israel and homes no longer exist to which Arab refugees could return}}</ref> and Palestinian refugees populated the Jewish quarter until they were evicted in the 1960s and 1970s.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Dumper|first1=Michael|title=The politics of Jerusalem since 1967|date=1997|publisher=Columbia University Press|location=New York|isbn=9780585388717|page=175 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Os3pePtpyUwC&pg=PA175}}</ref> | |||
In 1967, during the ], Israel captured ], which had been under ] since 1948-49. Via the ], Israel united the city and expanded the city limits to include adjacent parts of the West Bank. Israeli law was applied to the areas and the inhabitants of the lands annexed by Israel.<ref>MFA, </ref> This action was immediately condemned in a ]. Palestinian refugees were disallowed return by both Jordan and Israel, and Jewish Israelis occupied many of the homes left by the refugees.{{clarify|date=September 2015|reason=I don't understand it and no source to explain}} Palestinians who had remained in East Jerusalem until then were offered full Israeli citizenship. Those who declined citizenship were given permanent residency status.<ref>{{cite news|title=Who Are East Jerusalem's Permanent Residents'?|url=http://www.haaretz.com/news/israel/.premium-1.630605|work=Haaretz|date=December 9, 2014}}</ref> | |||
After the ], Jerusalem was placed under the control of the ]. According to the ], Jerusalem was to form an international ''corpus separatum''. After the ], however, Jerusalem was divided, with ] taking control over ] and ] taking control over ].<ref name=perry_164>Perry, 2004, p. 164.</ref> Israel occupied East Jerusalem during the ] in 1967.<ref name=perry_164 /><ref>Roberts, 1990, p. 60.</ref> | |||
==Defining Judaization== | |||
Today, ] ]s in East Jerusalem number some 250,000, comprising 30% of the total population of Jerusalem.<ref name=IDMC/> Since the Six Day War and Israel's ] of East Jerusalem, Israeli actions seeking to change the legal status of East Jerusalem have been condemned by the ].<ref name=IDMC/> Moshe Ma'oz describes the policy of Israeli governments since 1967 as aimed at "maintain a unified Jerusalem; to Judaize or Israelize it, demographically and politically."<ref name=Maozp2>Moshe Ma'oz in Ma'oz and Nusseibeh, 2000, p. 2.</ref> According to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC), "]i and Palestinian organisations have criticised Israeli policies that have sought to judaise East Jerusalem, expand the municipality of Jerusalem, and maintain a Jewish majority in Jerusalem at the expense of the Palestinian community, in violation of ] and ] (], 12 July 1995; ], March 2007; ], July 2006)."<ref name=IDMC>{{Citation|title=Occupied Palestinian Territory:Forced displacement continues|publisher=Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC)|accessdate=2009-03-24|url=http://www.internal-displacement.org/8025708F004CE90B/(httpCountrySummaries)/893F40683A0EF21EC12574BB002F8EF3?OpenDocument&count=10000}}</ref> | |||
{{Further|Cultural assimilation|Nation-building}} | |||
] can be defined as either the conversion of persons to the Jewish religion and the acquisition of Jewish cultural and religious beliefs and values or the transformation of an area to give it a predominant Jewish character, primarily by creating the largest possible Jewish majority. The creation of a Jewish majority in Jerusalem has always been a high priority of the Israeli government, after 1947 in West Jerusalem and after 1967 in East Jerusalem.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Cheshin, Amir.|title=Separate and unequal: the inside story of Israeli rule in East Jerusalem|date=1999|publisher=Harvard University Press|others=Hutman, Bill., Melamed, Avi.|isbn=978-0-674-02952-1|location=Cambridge, MA|oclc=70769277}}</ref> The rejection of the ] is motivated in part by the intention to maintain a Jewish majority, in Israel as well as in Jerusalem.{{Citation needed|date=September 2015}} | |||
Judaization in territorial terms is characterized by ] as a form of "ethnicization," which he argues is ''"the main force in shaping ethnocratic regimes"''. Yiftachel identifies Judaization as a state strategy and project in Israel, not confined to Jerusalem alone.{{snf|Yiftachel|2006|pp=6–7, 66}} He also characterizes the goals of those pursuing a "]" or "Greater Palestine" as being driven by "ethnicization," in this case by "Judaization" and "]" respectively.<ref>Oren Yiftachel, in {{harvnb|Grenfell|James|2008|p=157}}</ref> | |||
==Defining Judaization: Means and effects in Jerusalem== | |||
"]" in territorial terms is characterized by ] as a form of "ethnicization", which he argues is "the main force in shaping ethnocratic regimes". Yiftachel identifies Judaization as a state strategy and project in Israel, not confined to Jerusalem alone.<ref name=Yiftachelp6766>Yiftachel, 2006, pp. 6–7, 66.</ref> He also characterizes the goals of those pursuing a "]" or "]" as being driven by "ethnicization", in this case by "Judaization" and "]" respectively.<ref name=Yiftachelp157>Oren Yiftachel, in Grenfell and James, 2008, p. 157.</ref> | |||
Speaking before the ] in 2011, Israeli Prime Minister ] said, "I often hear them accuse Israel of Judaizing Jerusalem. That's like accusing America of Americanizing Washington or the British of Anglicizing London. Do you know why we're called "Jews"? Because we come from Judea."<ref>{{Cite web|last=Netanyahu|first=Benjamin|date=2011-09-23|title=Remarks by PM Benjamin Netanyahu to the U.N. General Assembly|url=https://mfa.gov.il/mfa/pressroom/2011/pages/remarks_pm_netanyahu_un_general%20_assembly_23-sep-2011.aspx|work=Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs|accessdate=2021-05-14}}</ref> | |||
Valerie Zink writes that much was accomplished towards the Judaization of Jerusalem with the expulsion of ] residents in ] and ], noting that the process has also relied in "peacetime" on "the strategic extension of Jerusalem's municipal boundaries, bureaucratic and legal restrictions on Palestinian land use, ] of Jerusalem residents, the expansion of ] in 'Greater Jerusalem', and the construction of the ]."<ref name=Zink/> The attempts to Judaize Jerusalem, in the words of Jeremy Salt, "to obliterate its Palestinian identity" and thicken 'Greater Jerusalem' to encompass much of the ], have continued under successive Israeli governments.<ref name=Salt>Jeremy Salt in White and Logan, 1997, p. 290.</ref><ref name=Hassassianp294>Manuel Hassassian in Ginat et al., 2002, p. 294.</ref> | |||
===Judaization versus Israelization=== | |||
] writes that since 1967, Israel has employed processes of "Judaization and Israelization so as to transform Jerusalem into a Jewish metropolis," while simultaneously pursuing "a program of de-Arabization" so as to facilitate "its objective of permanent, unified, sovereign control over the city."<ref name=Rubenbergp194>Rubenberg, 2003, p. 194.</ref> These policies, which aim to change Jerusalem demographically, socially, culturally and politically, are said by Rubenberg to have intensified after the initiation of the ] in 1993.<ref name=Rubenbergp194/> | |||
While the term Judaization is used to denote the conversion from non-Jewish to Jewish, the term Israelization is sometimes used to refer to the adaption of non-Israelis to Israeli law and culture, for example, by the application for an Israeli ID card/Israeli citizenship to acquire more rights, or the use of Israeli education.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.haaretz.com/weekend/magazine/a-surprising-process-of-israelization-is-taking-place-among-palestinians-in-east-jerusalem.premium-1.490367|title=A surprising process of 'Israelization' is taking place among Palestinians in East Jerusalem|first=Nir|last=Hasson|publisher=Haaretz|date=29 December 2012|quote= | |||
, far-reaching changes are taking place among the local Palestinians. These processes can be described as "Israelization," "normalization," or just plain adaptation. The most advanced phase of the Israelization process appears in the requests for an Israeli ID card.}}</ref> | |||
==Alleged Judaization under Israeli occupation and annexation== | |||
Drawing on the scholarship of ], Cecilia Alban writes of how the Israeli government has succeeded in establishing "new powerful, concepts, images, and icons" to explain and legitimise its policies in Jerusalem. The government's use of the term "reunification" to describe its occupation of East Jerusalem in 1967 is cited as one such example, which in Alban's view, falsely implies that this area belonged to Israel in the past. Noting the reality of the fear among ]is that Jerusalem would become redivided under dual sovereignty or ] proposals, Alban's writes that such fears were "exploited politically to justify the forced retention and Judaization of East Jerusalem."<ref name=Albanp91>Cecilia Alban in Dupont, p. 91.</ref> Steve Niva writes that Israeli policies calling for the Judaization of Jerusalem and the rest of historic ] in the 1970s, augmented Muslim fears that Israel was an extension of ] ] in the region.<ref name=Nivap168>Steve Niva in Weldes, 1999, pp. 168–169.</ref> | |||
===Changing the demographics=== | |||
{{See also|Palestinian displacement in East Jerusalem}} | |||
The Israeli government is attempting to Judaise East Jerusalem and maintain a Jewish majority against the demographic threat of a higher Palestinian birth rate.<ref name=Frykberg>. Mel Frykberg, IPS, 9 September 2008</ref> | |||
Despite the rapid growth of the Jewish population since 1967, its relative size has decreased due to a higher growth rate among the Arab population. The Jewish population dropped from 74% in 1967 to 66% in 2005. Researchers at the Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies called this "a contradiction between the reality in Jerusalem and the declared government policy of maintaining the Jewish majority in Jerusalem since the city's reunification." To reverse this trend, they suggested expanding Jerusalem's border to the west (meaning the addition of Jewish population centres) or removing Arab neighbourhoods from the city's municipal area.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3397174,00.html|title=Arab population in Jerusalem growing, study says|first=Lilach|last=Shoval|publisher=Ynetnews|date=8 May 2007}}</ref> | |||
===Settlements and house demolitions=== | |||
Over roughly three decades, from 1967 to 1995, of 76,151 housing units built in Jerusalem, 64,867 (88%) were allocated for Jewish residents with 59% of these units built in East Jerusalem as new Jewish neighbourhoods.<ref>Tovi Fenster, ''The global city and the holy city: narratives on planning, knowledge, and diversity,'' Pearson Education, 2004 p.103, citing a B'tselem report 1997.</ref> | |||
====Revocation or denying of residency rights==== | |||
Yiftachel writes that by 2001, Judaization in Jerusalem had entailed the incorporation of {{convert|170|km2|sqmi|sp=us}} of surrounding land into the city's boundaries and the construction of 8 settlements in East Jerusalem housing a total of 206,000 Jewish settlers.<ref name=Yiftachelp66>Yiftachel, 2006, p. 66.</ref> In an essay he co-authored with Haim Yaacobi, they write that, "Israel would like the Palestinian residents of Jerusalem to see Judaization as 'inevitable', a fact to be accepted passively as part of the modern development of the metropolis."<ref name=Yiftachelp174>] and Haim Yaacobi in Misselwits and Rieniets, 2006, p. 174.</ref> | |||
Some of how the Israeli government is "Judaizing Jerusalem," according to Leilani Farha, are via the revocation of residency rights, ], and tax policies.<ref name=Farhap254>Farha in Merali and Oosterveld, 2001, p. 254, note #6.</ref> Palestinians residing outside Jerusalem for seven or more years can lose their Jerusalem residency status. According to UN figures, in 2006, at least 1,360 Palestinians had their ID cards revoked.<ref name=Frykberg /> | |||
Since 1982, the ] has not permitted the registration of Palestinian children as Jerusalem residents if the child's father does not hold a Jerusalem ID card, even if the mother is a Jerusalem ID cardholder. In 2003, the Citizenship and Entry into Israel law was enacted, which denies spouses from the occupied Palestinian territories who are married to Israeli citizens or permanent residents (Jerusalem ID card holders) the right to acquire citizenship or residency status, and thus the opportunity to live with their partners in Israel and Jerusalem. In Israel, foreign spouses who are Jewish are automatically granted citizenship under Israel's Law of Return.<ref name=Frykberg /> | |||
Plans are underway to construct a new ] in the last piece of open land linking Arab East Jerusalem to the West Bank that will house about 45,000 residents on a land area larger than ], the second-largest Israeli city.<ref>, ], 4 April 2009</ref> According to ], a ]ian newspaper, the Israeli government elected in 2009 is soliciting tenders for the biggest settlement plans in ].<ref name=alghad>, ], accessdate=19 April 2009</ref> These plans have been described by the Palestinian Information Minister ] as, "an announcement against peace and against the Palestinian state and it means the Israeli government is not a partner for peace." This settlement is considered to by Palestinians as one method by which to Judaize the city.<ref name=islamonline>, Islamonline, 13 May 2007</ref> | |||
===Changing Arab into Jewish zones=== | |||
In 1981, the ] ruled that non-Jews could not buy property in the ] in Jerusalem so as to "preserve the homogeneity" of the Jewish Quarter. On the other hand, no law prohibits Jews from buying property or living in East Jerusalem.<ref>Robert I. Friedman: ''Zealots for Zion. Inside Israel's West Bank Settlement Movement." Random House, New York, 1992. ISBN 0394580532. P. 99.</ref> ], citing the ruling, wrote that: "only Jews have a right to permanent residence in Jerusalem as a ''natural'' right. The state of Israel does not recognize the right of an Arab or another non-Jew to live in Jerusalem even if he was born there."<ref>], 'Discrimination Based on the Law,' in ''Israeli League for Human and Civil Rights'', 10, Jerusalem, 1986 p.1, cited in Paul J. White, William Stewart Logan, '' Remaking the Middle East,'' Berg Publishers, 1997 p.291.</ref> The efforts of fundamentalist Jewish groups who enjoyed government backing in attempts to take over Palestinian homes in the ] and ] Quarters of the ] between 1993 and 2000 are cited by Rubenberg as one example of the Judaization of Jerusalem. ] writes that these groups succeeding in taking over several buildings, "but only after receiving massive assistance from the government to, among other things, finance an extensive system of armed guards to protect them day and night, and hire armed guards for their children anytime they go out into the streets."<ref name=Benvenistip198>Benvenisti, 1996, p. 198.</ref> | |||
Urban planning has been an instrument to change the demographics of Jerusalem. By allotting zones for Jewish purposes and subsidizing Jewish projects, an increase in the Jewish population is promoted while withholding building permits for Palestinians curtails the development of Palestinian areas.<ref name=Frykberg/><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.549586|title=Recording reveals East Jerusalem park is about politics, not environment|first=Nir|last=Hasson|publisher=Haaretz|date=30 September 2013}}</ref> Three days after the end of the Six-Day War, the ] in the Old City was demolished by the Israeli army to improve access to the Western Wall.<ref>{{cite web|first=Joost R.|last=Hiltermann|url=http://www.merip.org/joost.htm |title=Teddy Kollek and the Native Question |access-date=2013-03-26 |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/19981201090448/http://www.merip.org/joost.htm |archive-date=December 1, 1998 }}</ref> | |||
===Building Jewish settlements=== | |||
Rubenberg also cites settlement construction as an example of the Judaization of Jerusalem, citing in particular the construction of bypass roads that connect ]s in East Jerusalem with those in the West Bank so as to create a newly expanded Jerusalem metropolis integrally linked with Israel proper.<ref name=Rubenbergp194/> ], an ] and director of the ] (ICAHD), describes the Judaization of the city as one of the effects of settlement growth and ] in ], describing it as being aimed at "eliminat the idea that there is an East Jerusalem, to create one unified, Jewish Jerusalem."<ref name=Guardian03>{{Citation|title='You don't have a house any more': One Palestinian family's encounter with Israel's bulldozers in East Jerusalem|author=Rory McCarthy|publisher=]|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/mar/07/eat-jerusalem-houses-bulldozed|date=7 March 2009|accessdate=2009-03-24}}</ref> In March 2009, defending its planned demolitions against Palestinian houses in the Bustan area of Silwan that would leave 1,500 people homeless, Jerusalem authorities said the houses were built illegally, without zoning and construction permits. Palestinians and ] organisations countered that "Israel makes it almost impossible for Palestinians to get the requisite permits, as a part of the policy to Judaise the eastern part of the city."<ref name=IPS>{{Citation|title=MIDEAST: Home Demolitions Threaten Peace Talks|author=Mel Frykberg|publisher=]|url=http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=46046|date=10 March 2009|accessdate=2009-03-24}}</ref> | |||
The Israeli government has sought to increase the Jewish population by establishing Jewish neighbourhoods, viewed by the International Community and Left-Wing Parties and NGOs within Israel as illegal ], in and around Jerusalem. Redrawing Jerusalem's municipal boundaries has incorporated such neighbourhoods.<ref name=Frykberg /> In peace negotiations, Israel has consistently demanded their legalization and proposed Israeli annexation of settlements outside Jerusalem to include them in the municipality. In a speech on 8 November 2000, Prime Minister ] said: | |||
<blockquote>"Maintaining our sovereignty over Jerusalem and boosting its Jewish majority has been our chief aims, and toward this end, Israel constructed large Jewish neighbourhoods in the eastern part of the city, which house 180,000 residents, and large settlements on the periphery of Jerusalem, like the city of Ma'ale Adumim and Giv'at Ze'ev. The principle that guided me in the negotiations at ] was to preserve the unity of Jerusalem and to strengthen its Jewish majority for generations to come."<ref>{{cite web|author=Ministry of Foreign Affairs|url=http://mfa.gov.il/MFA/PressRoom/2000/Pages/Address%20by%20PM%20Barak%20on%20the%20Fifth%20Anniversary%20of%20th.aspx|title=Address by PM Barak on the Fifth Anniversary of the Assassination of Yitzhak Rabin|date=2000-11-08}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
Over roughly three decades, from 1967 to 1995, of 76,151 housing units built in Jerusalem, 64,867 (88%) were allocated for Jewish residents, with 59% of these units built in East Jerusalem as new Jewish settlements.<ref>Tovi Fenster, ''The Global City and the Holy City: Narratives on Planning, Knowledge, and Diversity'', Pearson Education, 2004 p.103, citing a B'tselem report 1997.</ref><ref name=FTSET>{{cite news|url=http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/f3787098-60df-11e4-894b-00144feabdc0.html|title=Israeli finance minister vetoed spending on Jewish settlements|work=]|date=31 October 2014}}</ref> | |||
The ] which includes the demolishing of some Palestinian homes and the building of a new Israeli settlement is described by the ] (PCHR) as another method by which the Judaization of Jerusalem is being implemented.<ref>, ], access date 6 May 2009</ref><ref>, ], access date 6 May 2009</ref><ref>, ], access date 6 May 2009</ref> | |||
Yiftachel writes that by 2001, Judaization in Jerusalem had entailed the incorporation of {{convert|170|km2|sqmi|sp=us}} of surrounding land into the city's boundaries and the construction of 8 settlements in East Jerusalem housing a total of 206,000 Jewish settlers.{{sfn|Yiftachel|2006|p=66}} In an essay he coauthored with Haim Yaacobi, they write that "Israel would like the Palestinian residents of Jerusalem to see Judaization as 'inevitable,' a fact to be accepted passively as part of the modern development of the metropolis."<ref>] and Haim Yaacobi in {{harvnb|Misselwitz|Rieniets|2006|p=174}}</ref> | |||
===Residency rights=== | |||
Other means by which the Israeli government is "Judaizing Jerusalem", according to Leilani Farha, are via the revocation of residency rights, ], and discriminatory taxation policies.<ref name=Farhap254>Farha in Merali and Oosterveld, 2001, p. 254, note #6.</ref> Since 1982 the ] has not permitted the registration of Palestinian children as Jerusalem residents if the child's father does not hold a Jerusalem ID card, even if the mother is a Jerusalem ID cardholder.<ref name=IsraelMoves>, IPS News, accessdate=26 March 2009</ref> In 2003, the Citizenship and Entry into Israel law was enacted, which denies spouses from the occupied Palestinian territories, who are married to Israeli citizens or permanent residents (Jerusalem ID card holders), the right to acquire citizenship or residency status, and thus the opportunity to live with their partners in Israel and Jerusalem. In Israel, foreign spouses who are Jewish are automatically granted citizenship under Israel's Law of Return.<ref name="IsraelMoves" /> | |||
Plans are underway to construct a new Israeli settlement in the last piece of open land linking East Jerusalem to the West Bank that will house about 45,000 residents on a land area larger than ], the second-largest Israeli city.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6031894.ece|archive-url=https://archive.today/20090508081418/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6031894.ece|url-status=dead|archive-date=May 8, 2009|title=New town may be death blow to hopes for Israel peace]|work=The Times|date=4 April 2009}}</ref> According to '']'', a ]ian newspaper, the Israeli government elected in 2009 is soliciting tenders for the biggest settlement plans in ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.alghad.jo/?news=411763|title=Occupation solicit tenders for the most dangerous settlement plans in West Bank and Jerusalem|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090625141142/http://www.alghad.jo/?news=411763|archive-date=2009-06-25|publisher=]|accessdate=19 April 2009}}</ref> These plans have been described by the Palestinian Information Minister ] as "an announcement against peace and against the Palestinian state and it means the Israeli government is not a partner for peace." This settlement is considered by Palestinians as one method by which to Judaize the city.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.islamonline.net/servlet/Satellite?c=Article_C&cid=1178724097770&pagename=Zone-English-News%2FNWELayout|title=1.5 billion to Judaize Al-Quds|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110219134127/http://www.islamonline.net/servlet/Satellite?c=Article_C&cid=1178724097770&pagename=Zone-English-News%2FNWELayout|archive-date=2011-02-19|publisher=Islam online|date=13 May 2007}}</ref> | |||
Rubenberg also cites settlement construction as an example of the Judaization of Jerusalem, citing in particular the construction of bypass roads that connect ]s in East Jerusalem with those in the West Bank to create a newly expanded Jerusalem metropolis integrally linked with Israel proper.<ref name=Rubenbergp194>{{harvnb|Rubenberg|2003|p=194}}</ref> | |||
===West Bank barrier=== | |||
] from Jerusalem.]] | |||
Surrounding Arab villages, who traditionally have close cultural and economic connections with Jerusalem, are cut off from the city by the ].<ref name=Frykberg/> At the same time, the wall tightens major Jewish population centres to Jerusalem, like ], ] and ], who are currently not included in the Jerusalem municipality but located on the Jerusalem side of the Wall. | |||
===Purchase of Arab homes by Jews=== | |||
In 1981, the ] ruled that non-Jews could not buy property in the ] in Jerusalem to "preserve the homogeneity" of the Jewish Quarter. On the other hand, no law prohibits Jews from buying property or living in East Jerusalem.<ref>{{cite book|first=Robert|last=Friedman|title=Zealots for Zion. Inside Israel's West Bank Settlement Movement|publisher=Random House|location=New York|date=1992|isbn=0-394-58053-2|page=99}}</ref>{{unreliable source?|date=September 2012}} The efforts of fundamentalist Jewish groups who enjoyed government backing in attempts to take over Palestinian homes in the ] and ] Quarters of the ] between 1993 and 2000 are cited by Rubenberg as one example of the Judaization of Jerusalem. ] writes that these groups succeeded in taking over several buildings, "but only after receiving massive assistance from the government to, among other things, finance an extensive system of armed guards to protect them day and night, and hire armed guards for their children anytime they go out into the streets."{{sfn|Benvenisti|1998|p=198}} | |||
Not only the homes of Palestinian residents are targeted, but also those of absent refugees. Alterations of the ] to enable the confiscation of 'enemy' property while hindering Palestinian reclamation of property in West Jerusalem and reserving as much territory as possible for Jewish use while obstructing Palestinian construction, in addition to punitive demolition of residences, have all played a role in the Judaization of Jerusalem. It is calculated that about 35% of East Jerusalem is used by Israelis, while 80% of the land is denied use by Palestinians as a result of restrictive zoning measures.<ref>{{cite book|first=Michael|last=Dumper|chapter=Jerusalem|editor1-first=David|editor1-last=Newman|editor2-first=Joel|editor2-last=Peters|title=Routledge Handbook on the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict|publisher=Routledge|date=2013|pages=121–134, 127}}</ref> | |||
===Demolition of Palestinian homes=== | |||
], an ] and director of the ] (ICAHD), describes the Judaization of the city as one of the effects of settlement growth and ] in ], describing it as being aimed at "eliminat the idea that there is an East Jerusalem, to create one unified, Jewish Jerusalem."<ref name=Guardian03>{{Citation|title='You don't have a house anymore': One Palestinian family's encounter with Israel's bulldozers in East Jerusalem|author=Rory McCarthy|work=]|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2009/mar/07/eat-jerusalem-houses-bulldozed|date=7 March 2009|access-date=2009-03-24}}</ref> In March 2009, defending its planned demolitions against Palestinian houses in the Bustan area of Silwan that would leave 1,500 people homeless, Jerusalem authorities said the houses were built illegally, without zoning and construction permits. Palestinians and ] organizations countered that "Israel makes it almost impossible for Palestinians to get the requisite permits, as a part of the policy to Judaise the eastern part of the city."<ref name=IPS>{{Citation|title=MIDEAST: Home Demolitions Threaten Peace Talks|author=Mel Frykberg|publisher=]|url=http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=46046|date=10 March 2009|access-date=2009-03-24|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090316051928/http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=46046|archive-date=16 March 2009}}</ref> | |||
===Replacing Arabic place names with Hebrew names=== | ===Replacing Arabic place names with Hebrew names=== | ||
{{main| Hebraization of Palestinian place names}} | |||
Another major aspect of Israel's effort to Judaize Jerusalem was to replace the ] ] of streets, quarters and historical sites with ] names.<ref name=Nevop92/> The ]ian newspaper, ''al-Ra'i'', published a list of such names and accused the Israeli government of changing the Arab names systematically to erase Arab heritage in Jerusalem and prevent the reassertion of Arab sovereignty over the city.{{Citation needed|date=August 2011}} The newspaper also claimed the new names had nothing to do with the old names and sometimes attributed a Jewish patrimony when in fact there was no such relation. One example it cited was the site named ] by the Israeli government, which the newspaper claimed was not built in ]'s time, but at the time of the ] ].<ref name=Nevop92>Nevo, 2006, pp. 92–93.</ref> ] were named as such by crusaders, who built the stables, because they were adjacent to the location of Solomon's temple. This name was used by the Israeli government. | |||
Another major aspect of Israel's effort to Judaize Jerusalem was to replace the ] ] of streets, quarters and historical sites with ] names.<ref name=Nevop92>{{harvnb|Nevo|2006|pp=92–93}}</ref> The ]ian newspaper ] published a list of such names and accused the Israeli government of changing the Arab names systematically to erase Arab heritage in Jerusalem and prevent the reassertion of Arab sovereignty over the city.{{Citation needed|date=August 2011}} The newspaper also claimed the new names had nothing to do with the old names and sometimes attributed a Jewish patrimony when in fact there was no such relation. One example it cited was the site named ] by the Israeli government, which the newspaper claimed was not built in ]'s time but at the time of the ] ].<ref name=Nevop92/> Solomon's Stables was named as such by the Crusaders, who built the stables because they were adjacent to the location of Solomon's temple, and The Israeli government used this name. | |||
In 2005, the Jerusalem Municipality approved a law that all store owners in Jerusalem, including Arabs, must include at least 50% of their signs in Hebrew.<ref>{{cite news|first=Melanie|last=Lidman|url=http://www.jpost.com/National-News/Law-requires-e-Jlem-businesses-to-have-signs-in-Hebrew|title=Law requires e. J'lem businesses to have signs in Hebrew|publisher=]|date=Dec 17, 2010}}</ref> | |||
==Discussing Israeli government policy== | |||
The allegation of following a policy for the Judaization of Jerusalem by the Government of Israel is the subject of debate. According to Valerie Zink, Israel has sought to transform the physical and demographic landscape of Jerusalem to correspond with the Zionist vision of a united and fundamentally Jewish Jerusalem under Israeli sovereignty since 1948.{{efn|This definition is drawn from Valerie Zink's and is supported, among others, by that of Hassassian in Ginat et al., who defines the Judaization of Jerusalem as "impos a Jewish landscape both physically and demographically."<ref name=Zink>{{Citation|title=A quiet transfer: the Judaization of Jerusalem|author=Valerie Zink|journal=Contemporary Arab Affairs|volume= 2| issue = 1|date=January 2009|pages=122–133|doi=10.1080/17550910802576148}}</ref>}} Zink writes that much was accomplished towards the Judaization of Jerusalem with the expulsion of ] residents in ] and ], noting that the process has also relied in "peacetime" on "the strategic extension of Jerusalem's municipal boundaries, bureaucratic and legal restrictions on Palestinian land use, ] of Jerusalem residents, the expansion of ] in 'Greater Jerusalem', and the construction of the ]."<ref name=Zink/> The attempts to Judaize Jerusalem, in the words of Jeremy Salt, "to obliterate its Palestinian identity" and thicken 'Greater Jerusalem' to encompass much of the ], have continued under successive Israeli governments.<ref>Jeremy Salt in {{harvnb|White|Logan|1997|p=290}}</ref><ref>Manuel Hassassian in {{harvnb|Ginat|Perkins|Corr|2002|p=294}}</ref> | |||
Some scholars like ], Moshe Ma'oz and Jeremy Salt write that it has been the policy of successive Israeli governments since 1967. Others, like ] and Dan Diker, have objected to the entire notion, writing that the lack of any significant change to the demographic balance of the city undermines suggestions that it is government policy and renders any such discussions moot. Marc H. Ellis argues that while politicians from Simon Peres and Yitzhak Rabin to Benjamin Netanyahu stress a unified Jerusalem under Israel's sovereignty is open to all, the 'Judaization of Jerusalem' and its corollary, the loss of Palestinian population and culture, which he argues is being politically implemented, is never touched on.<ref>{{cite book|first=Marc H.|last=Ellis|title=O, Jerusalem!: The Contested Future of the Jewish Covenant|publisher=]|date=1999|page=64}}</ref> | |||
] writes that since 1967, Israel has employed processes of "Judaization and Israelization to transform Jerusalem into a Jewish metropolis" while simultaneously pursuing "a program of ]" to facilitate "its objective of permanent, unified, sovereign control over the city."<ref name=Rubenbergp194/> These policies, which aim to change Jerusalem demographically, socially, culturally and politically, are said by Rubenberg to have intensified after the initiation of the ] in 1993.<ref name=Rubenbergp194/> | |||
Moshe Ma'oz describes the policy of Israeli governments since 1967 as aimed at "maintain a unified Jerusalem; to Judaize or Israelize it, demographically and politically."{{sfn|Ma'oz|Nusseibeh|2000|p=2}} | |||
Drawing on the scholarship of ], Cecilia Alban writes of how the Israeli government has succeeded in establishing "new powerful concepts, images, and icons" to explain and legitimize its policies in Jerusalem. The government's use of the term "reunification" to describe its occupation of East Jerusalem in 1967 is cited as one such example, which, in Alban's view, falsely implies that this area belonged to Israel in the past. Noting the reality of the fear among ]is that Jerusalem would become redivided under dual sovereignty or ] proposals, Alban writes that such fears were "exploited politically to justify the forced retention and Judaization of East Jerusalem."<ref>Cecilia Alban in {{harvnb|Dupont|2007|p=91}}</ref> Steve Niva writes that Israeli policies calling for the Judaization of Jerusalem and the rest of historic ] in the 1970s augmented Muslim fears that Israel was an extension of ] ] in the region.<ref>Steve Niva in {{harvnb|Weldes|1999|pp=168–169}}</ref> | |||
Scott Bollens, a University of California professor of urban planning, has compared Israel's policies in Jerusalem to apartheid-era South Africa's racial policies in Johannesburg. According to Bollens, long-term planning was employed in both cases to pursue political objectives. Bollens says that although on the rhetorical level, South Africa employed racial rhetoric more blatantly than Israel does, the outcomes are "very, very similar" in that Israeli-controlled Jerusalem is just as unequal as apartheid-era Johannesburg.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2006/feb/06/southafrica.israel|title=Worlds apart (The Guardian, Feb. 6th, 2006)|author=Chris McGreal|work=the Guardian|date=6 February 2006|access-date=28 October 2014}}</ref> | |||
===Demographic debate=== | ===Demographic debate=== | ||
Benvenisti writes that complete data on the demographics of Jerusalem are not collected by |
Benvenisti writes that complete data on the demographics of Jerusalem are not collected by anyone official source. As a result, data are interpreted and used selectively and inconsistently by both Palestinian and Israeli sources. Figures pointed to by Palestinians as evidence of their success in preserving the Arab character of Jerusalem are also sometimes used as "proof of the Judaization of Jerusalem." Benvenisti writes that despite immense Israeli effort, "the demographic balance in the city has hardly changed at all."{{sfn|Benvenisti|1998|p=176}} | ||
Critiquing international news reporting on Jerusalem for |
Critiquing international news reporting on Jerusalem for centring on Arab and Palestinian claims regarding the Judaization of Jerusalem, ] writes that the underlying assumption of such reporting is that "eastern Jerusalem" has always been an Arab city, ignoring "the fact that Jerusalem has had an overwhelmingly Jewish majority as far back as the mid-nineteenth century, well before the arrival of the ]."<ref name=JCPA>{{Citation|title=Does the International News Media Overlook Israel's Legal Rights in the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict?|publisher=]|date=1 April 2003|access-date=2009-03-25|author=Dan Diker|url=http://www.jcpa.org/jl/vp495.htm}}</ref> Drawing on a study of urban planning and demographic growth in Jerusalem conducted by ], Diker writes that between 1967 and 2000, "Jerusalem's Arab population ''increased'' from 26.6 percent to 31.7 percent of the city's total populace, while the city's Jewish population ''decreased'' accordingly."<ref name=JCPA/> He also writes that Arab housing construction heavily outpaced Jewish buildings during the same period, attributing this in part to "the direct sponsorship of illegal construction by the ]."<ref name=JCPA/> | ||
In "Is Jerusalem being "Judaized"?, Weiner reviews demographic figures from the mid-19th century through to the present and concludes that the "demographic evidence does not support the allegations that Israel is 'Judaizing' the city."<ref name=JPSR>{{Citation|title=Is Jerusalem Being "Judaized"?|author= |
In "Is Jerusalem being "Judaized"?, Weiner reviews demographic figures from the mid-19th century through to the present and concludes that the "demographic evidence does not support the allegations that Israel is 'Judaizing' the city."<ref name=JPSR>{{Citation|title=Is Jerusalem Being "Judaized"?|author=Justus Reid Weiner|date=March 2003|journal=Jewish Political Studies Review|volume=15:1–2|url=http://www.jcpa.org/JCPA/Templates/ShowPage.asp?DRIT=5&DBID=1&LNGID=1&TMID=111&FID=625&PID=0&IID=1804&TTL=Is_Jerusalem_Being_|author-link=Justus Weiner|access-date=2009-03-25|archive-date=2012-03-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120314103811/http://www.jcpa.org/JCPA/Templates/ShowPage.asp?DRIT=5&DBID=1&LNGID=1&TMID=111&FID=625&PID=0&IID=1804&TTL=Is_Jerusalem_Being_|url-status=dead}}</ref> His view is that speculation as to whether or not a policy of Judaization exists is rather pointless when there is no "effective implementation of tangible measures to implement such a program."<ref name=JPSR/> | ||
==Support for Judaization efforts== | ==Support for alleged Judaization efforts== | ||
Jerusalem mayor ] led efforts to settle East Jerusalem with Jewish families. In 1970, he coauthored a plan which contains the principles Israel's East Jerusalem housing plans are based on. The principles include expropriation of Arab-owned land, development of Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem and limitations on the development of Arab neighbourhoods.<ref name=FTSET /><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RO0tafb62oEC&pg=PA41 |title=Separate and Unequal: The Inside Story of Israeli Rule in East Jerusalem |page=38 |access-date=28 October 2014|isbn=9780674029521|last1=Cheshin|first1=Amir|last2=Hutman|first2=Bill|last3=Melamed|first3=Avi|date=2009-06-30|publisher=Harvard University Press }}</ref> | |||
According to ], the International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem (ICEJ), established in 1980 in the former home of ], supports "exclusive Israeli sovereignty over the city and the Judaisation of Arab East Jerusalem."<ref name=Masalhap130>Masalha, 2007, p. 130.</ref> The ICEJ website notes that its embassy was founded "as an act of comfort and solidarity with Israel and the Jewish people in their claim to Jerusalem" It also notes that the ICEJ administers several aid projects, engages in advocacy for Israel, and assists "] to the Jewish homeland."<ref name=ICEJ>{{Citation|url=http://www.icejusa.org/site/PageServer?pagename=about_main|publisher=International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem (ICEJ)|title=About us|accessdate=2009-03-25}}</ref> | |||
According to ], the ] (ICEJ), established in 1980 in the former home of ], supports "exclusive Israeli sovereignty over the city and the Judaisation of Arab East Jerusalem."{{sfn|Masalha|2007|p=130}} The ICEJ website notes that its embassy was founded "as an act of comfort and solidarity with Israel and the Jewish people in their claim to Jerusalem." It also notes that the ICEJ administers several aid projects, engages in advocacy for Israel, and assists "] to the Jewish homeland."<ref name=ICEJ>{{Citation|url=http://www.icejusa.org/site/PageServer?pagename=about_main|publisher=International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem (ICEJ)|title=About us|access-date=2009-03-25|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090311090825/http://www.icejusa.org/site/PageServer?pagename=about_main|archive-date=2009-03-11}}</ref> | |||
The Elad Association promotes the Judaization of East Jerusalem. Operating in the city for some 20 years to acquire properties belonging to Palestinians in ], Palestinians say it has "taken over" substantial sections of the village.<ref name=Haaretz0212>{{Citation|title=Group 'Judaizing' East Jerusalem accused of withholding donor information|author=Meron Rapoport|date=February 12, 2008|accessdate=2009-03-23|publisher=]|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/926546.html}}</ref> Elad also funds the digs being conducted near the ]. In 2008, ] reported that at least 100 skeletons dating to the Islamic era (c. 8th-9th centuries AD) found a few hundred meters from ] were removed and packed into crates before they could be examined by archaeological experts.<ref name=Rapoport>{{Citation|title=Islamic-era skeletons 'disappeared' from Elad-sponsored dig|author=Meron Rapoport|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/988803.html|date=November 15, 2008|accessdate=2009-03-23|publisher=]}}</ref> The ] are described in Arab media in the context of Israeli efforts to Judaise Jerusalem.<ref>{{Citation |url=http://www.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/8107C742-F440-4713-985A-B9B802C0438C.htm |title=Israel prepares to dig tunnels underneath the Aqsa Mosque |publisher=] |language=Arabic |date=4 March 2009 |accessdate=18 March 2009}}</ref> | |||
The ], also known as the Elad Association, promotes the Judaization of East Jerusalem.<ref>{{cite news |author=Joel Greenberg |title=Settler move into four homes in East Jerusalem |newspaper=New York Times |date=Jun 9, 1998 |page=A3 |quote="Our aim is to Judaize East Jerusalem," declared Yigal Kaufman, a spokesman for Elad ... "The City of David is the most ancient core of Jerusalem, and we want it to become a Jewish neighbourhood."}}</ref> Operating in the city for some 20 years to acquire properties belonging to Palestinians in ], Palestinians say it has "taken over" substantial sections of the village.<ref name=Haaretz0212>{{Citation |title= Group 'Judaizing' East Jerusalem accused of withholding donor information |author= Meron Rapoport |date= February 12, 2008 |work=] |url= http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/926546.html |access-date= 2009-03-23}}</ref> Elad also funds the digs being conducted near the ]. In 2008, '']'' reported that at least 100 skeletons dating to c. 8th–9th centuries AD, in the Early Islamic period, found a few hundred meters from ], were removed and packed into crates before they could be examined by archaeological experts.<ref name=Rapoport>{{Citation |title= Islamic-era skeletons 'disappeared' from Elad-sponsored dig |author= Meron Rapoport |date= November 15, 2008 |work= Haaretz |url= http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/988803.html |access-date=2009-03-23}}</ref> The ]{{dubious|No such thing exists. Go to the talk page.|date= December 2023}} are described in Arab media in the context of Israeli efforts to Judaise Jerusalem.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/8107C742-F440-4713-985A-B9B802C0438C.htm |title=Israel prepares to dig tunnels underneath the Aqsa Mosque |publisher=] |language=ar |date=4 March 2009 |access-date=18 March 2009}}</ref> | |||
==Criticism of Judaization efforts== | |||
According to ], ], as an advisor to Prime Minister ] in 1996, opposed any compromise with Palestinians on their claim to a capital in Jerusalem and advised a unilateral Judaization of the whole area.<ref>{{cite journal|author=]|url=http://www.mepc.org/journal_vol5/9701_lustick.asp|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070610193118/http://www.mepc.org/journal_vol5/9701_lustick.asp|archive-date=Jun 10, 2007|title=Has Israel Annexed East Jerusalem?|journal=]|volume=V|date=January 1997|issue=1|quote=In a study of the Jerusalem question published shortly before the 1996 election, top Netanyahu foreign-policy adviser Dore Gold argued that even if a compromise might be possible, involving a Palestinian capital in Abu-Dis and additional neighbourhoods of East Jerusalem, Israel should do everything it can to prevent such an outcome, relying on unilateral actions of Judaization and American diplomatic support to consolidate permanent Israeli control, not only of expanded East Jerusalem, but of a large Jerusalem metropolitan region and a strip of land connecting the Jerusalem metropolitan region to the northern edge of the dead sea}}</ref> An explicit call for the 'Judaization of Jerusalem' forms one of the slogans employed by ] in his 2013 election campaign to become mayor of the city.<ref>{{cite news|first=Ilene|last=Prusher|author-link=Ilene Prusher|url=http://www.haaretz.com/blogs/jerusalem-vivendi/.premium-1.551494|title='Judaizing Jerusalem': The Man Behind the Plan|publisher=]|date=10 October 2013}}</ref> | |||
The ] has criticised Israel's efforts to change the demographic makeup of Jerusalem in several resolutions. All legislative and administrative measures taken by Israel, which have altered or aimed to alter the character, legal status and demographic composition of Jerusalem, are described by the UN as "null and void" and having "no validity whatsoever".<ref></ref> | |||
==Criticism of alleged Judaization efforts== | |||
According to David G. Singer, the magazine '']'' published four articles between 1969 and 1972 that "censured Israel for its policy of Judaizing Jerusalem: moving Jews into the former Jewish section of the Old City, building new housing projects around the Holy City, and permitting — even encouraging - ] to migrate from Israel."<ref name=Singerp727>David G. Singer in Gurock, 1997, p. 727.</ref> | |||
According to those who hold this view, while much of this has been accomplished through the violent expulsion of Arab residents during the wars of 1948 and 1967, the Judaization of Jerusalem has relied equally on measures taken during times of peace. These include the strategic extension of Jerusalem's municipal boundaries, bureaucratic and legal restrictions on Palestinian land use, disenfranchisement of Jerusalem residents, the expansion of settlements in ‘Greater Jerusalem’, and the construction of the separation wall.<ref name="Zink"/> | |||
The ] has criticized Israel's efforts to change the demographic makeup of Jerusalem in several resolutions. All legislative and administrative measures taken by Israel which have altered or aimed to alter the character, legal status and demographic composition of Jerusalem are described by the UN as "null and void" and having "no validity whatsoever."<ref>{{cite book|url=https://www.un.org/depts/dpi/palestine/|chapter-url=https://www.un.org/depts/dpi/palestine/ch12.pdf |chapter=The Status of Jerusalem|title=The Question of Palestine & the United Nations |publisher=United Nations Department of Public Information|date=March 2003|id=DPI/2276}}</ref> | |||
In a six-point document drafted as a result of discussion between the leaders of ], ], and ], among other Palestinian groups in March 2005, three issues were listed as "liable to explode the calm" between Israeli and Palestinians, one of these being "the Judaization of East Jerusalem."<ref name=Reinhartp86>Reinhart, 2006, p. 86.</ref> | |||
According to David G. Singer, the magazine '']'' published four articles between 1969 and 1972 that "censured Israel for its policy of Judaizing Jerusalem: moving Jews into the former Jewish section of the Old City, building new housing projects around the Holy City, and permitting—even encouraging—] to migrate from Israel."<ref>David G. Singer in {{harvnb|Gurock|1997|p=727}}</ref> | |||
In a 2008 report, ], independent investigator for the ], cites the Judaization of Jerusalem among many examples of Israeli policies "of ], ] or ]", that create a context in which ] is "an inevitable consequence".<ref name=IHT>{{Citation|title=UN expert calls Palestinian terrorism 'inevitable consequence' of Israeli occupation|author=The Associated Press|publisher=]|date=26 February 2008|url=http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/02/26/news/UN-GEN-UN-Israel.php}}</ref> | |||
In a six-point document drafted as a result of discussion between the leaders of ], ], and ], among other Palestinian groups in March 2005, three issues were listed as "liable to explode the calm" between Israeli and Palestinians, one of these being "the Judaization of East Jerusalem."{{sfn|Reinhart|2006|p=86}} | |||
In a joint communiqué issued by ] of ] and ] of ] in March 2009, both leaders stressed their determination "to continue defending Jerusalem and to protect it from attempts to Judaise the city and erase its Arab and ] identity."<ref name=JT>{{Citation|title='No excuse to delay peace talks'|publisher=]|date=17 March 2009|accessdate=2009-03-24|url=http://www.jordantimes.com/?news=15095}}</ref> And in February 2010, Syrian Foreign Minister ] was quoted in Israeli Media as saying "halting the ongoing Judaization of Jerusalem” would be a significant topic at an upcoming ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=167851|title='Israel sows seeds of war in ME'|date=February 4, 2010|accessdate=2010-09-16|publisher=]|author=JPost.com Staff}}</ref> | |||
In a 2008 report, ], an independent investigator for the ], cites the Judaization of Jerusalem among many examples of Israeli policies "of ], ] or ]," that create a context in which ] is "an inevitable consequence."<ref name=IHT>{{Citation|title=UN expert calls Palestinian terrorism 'inevitable consequence' of Israeli occupation|agency=The Associated Press|newspaper=Ynetnews |date=26 February 2008|url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3511695,00.html}}</ref> | |||
In 2011, EU envoys in the Middle East reported to Brussels that various Israeli policies amounted to "systematically undermining the Palestinian presence" in Jerusalem.<ref></ref> | |||
In a joint communiqué issued by ] of ] and ] of ] in March 2009, both leaders stressed their determination "to continue defending Jerusalem and to protect it from attempts to Judaise the city and erase its Arab and ] identity."<ref name=JT>{{Citation|title=No excuse to delay peace talks|work=]|date=17 March 2009|access-date=2009-03-24|url=http://www.jordantimes.com/?news=15095}}</ref> And in February 2010, Syrian Foreign Minister ] was quoted in Israeli Media as saying "halting the ongoing Judaization of Jerusalem" would be a significant topic at an upcoming ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=167851|title=Israel sows seeds of war in ME|date=February 4, 2010|access-date=2010-09-16|work=]|author=JPost.com Staff}}</ref> | |||
], Special Rapporteur for the UN on the occupied Palestinian territories, said that "the continued pattern of settlement expansion in East Jerusalem combined with forcible eviction of long residing Palestinians are creating an intolerable situation that can only be described, in its cumulative impact, as a form of ]". Falk said that Israel's actions reveal systematic discrimination against Palestinian residents of the city, and recommended that the ] assess allegations that Israel's occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem possesses elements of apartheid and ethnic cleansing.<ref name=falkUN></ref> | |||
], Special Rapporteur for the UN on the occupied Palestinian territories, said in 2011 that "the continued pattern of settlement expansion in East Jerusalem combined with forcible eviction of long residing Palestinians are creating an intolerable situation that can only be described, in its cumulative impact, as a form of ]." Falk said that Israel's actions reveal systematic discrimination against Palestinian residents of the city and recommended that the ] assess allegations that Israel's occupation of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, possesses elements of apartheid and ethnic cleansing.<ref name=falkUN>{{cite web|url=https://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=37840|title=UN expert highlights worsening human rights situation in East Jerusalem (UN News Centre, March 21, 2011)|date=21 March 2011|agency=UN News Service Section|access-date=28 October 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.jpost.com/Diplomacy-and-Politics/UN-rights-investigator-accuses-Israel-of-ethnic-cleansing-o-346132|title=UN rights investigator accuses Israel of 'ethnic cleansing' |work=Jerusalem Post |date=March 21, 2014 |access-date=28 October 2014}}</ref> | |||
The Higher Arab Monitoring Committee, an unbrella organization for Israeli Arab groups, characterized Israel's policy in East Jerusalem as ethnic cleansing in 2009. <ref></ref> | |||
The Higher Arab Monitoring Committee, an umbrella organization for Israeli Arab groups, characterized Israel's policy in East Jerusalem as ethnic cleansing in 2009.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/news/israeli-arabs-accuse-israel-of-ethnic-cleansing-in-jerusalem-1.5057|title=Israeli Arabs accuse Israel of 'ethnic cleansing' in Jerusalem (Haaretz, Oct. 31st, 2009)|date=31 October 2009|work=Haaretz|access-date=28 October 2014}}</ref> Also ], the Palestinian president, has accused Israel of ethnically cleansing East Jerusalem.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4126571,00.html|title=Abbas accuses Israel of ethnic cleansing (YnetNews, Sept. 23rd, 2011)|work=ynet|date=23 September 2011|access-date=28 October 2014}}</ref> | |||
The ] considers that Israel is "actively pursuing the illegal annexation" of East Jerusalem. According to the EU, Israeli actions increase Jewish Israeli presence in East Jerusalem and weaken the Palestinian community in the city. The EU has raised its concerns over Israeli house demolitions in East Jerusalem using diplomatic channels. According to the EU, demolitions are "illegal under international law, serve no obvious purpose, have severe humanitarian effects, and fuel bitterness and extremism." The EU says that the ] prevents an occupying power from extending its jurisdiction to occupied territory, such as East Jerusalem, which the Palestinians claim as the capital of their future state.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2009/mar/07/israel-palestine-eu-report-jerusalem|title=Israel annexing East Jerusalem, says EU (The Guardian, 7 March 2009)|author=Rory McCarthy|work=The Guardian|date=7 March 2009 |access-date=28 October 2014}}</ref> In 2011, EU envoys in the Middle East reported to Brussels that various Israeli policies amounted to "systematically undermining the Palestinian presence" in Jerusalem.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-12150792|title=EU envoys: Treat East Jerusalem as Palestinian capital |agency=BBC News|date=10 January 2011 |access-date=28 October 2014}}</ref> According to the United Kingdom, "attempts by Israel to alter the character or demography of East Jerusalem are unacceptable and extremely provocative."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ukinjerusalem.fco.gov.uk/en/about-us/working-with-jerusalem/uk-position-jerusalem|title=UK position on Jerusalem |publisher=British Consulate-General, Jerusalem |access-date=28 October 2014}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
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==Notes== | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
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==Bibliography== | ==Bibliography== | ||
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{{refend}} | {{refend}} | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*, by Alice Rothchild | *, by Alice Rothchild | ||
*, by ] | *, by ] | ||
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Israeli attempts to transform Jerusalem to enhance its Jewish character
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Judaization of Jerusalem (Arabic: تهويد القدس, romanized: tahwīd al-Quds; Hebrew: יהוד ירושלים, romanized: yehud Yerushalayim) is the view that Israel has sought to transform the physical and demographic landscape of Jerusalem to enhance its Jewish character at the expense of its Muslim and Christian ones.
The city's Jewish character first emerged as the capital of the Kingdom of Judah during the Iron Age, which saw the construction of the First Temple as a symbolic center of Jewish worship. Jerusalem was destroyed by the Neo-Babylonian Empire in 586 BCE, and many of its elites exiled, only to return decades later following the conquest of Babylon by Cyrus the Great of the Achaemenid Empire, who allowed the building of the Second Temple. Jerusalem was once again placed at the center of Jewish religious and national life during the Second Temple period, which lasted between 516 BCE and 70 CE. The city retained its Jewish character up until its destruction by the Romans at the height of the First Jewish–Roman War, and remained central in Jewish religion and identity ever since.
The "Judaization of Jerusalem" claims often involve the increasing Jewish presence in Jerusalem in the modern era, referring to the Jewish Old Yishuv becoming increasingly dominant since the Ottoman era; this process continued until Jews became the largest ethnoreligious group in Jerusalem since the mid-19th century and until the 1948 War when East Jerusalem became under Jordanian control.
The claim that Israel is promoting the "Judaization" of Jerusalem, and especially the Temple Mount, has been promoted by Palestinian Islamist groups such as Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.
Background
Main article: History of JerusalemThe demography of Jerusalem has undergone successive waves of Judaization, Hellenization, Romanization, Christianization, Arabization and Islamization over the course of its history. The city's Jewish character first emerged as the capital of the Kingdom of Judah during the Iron Age, which saw the construction of the First Temple as a symbolic center of Jewish worship. Jerusalem was destroyed by the Neo-Babylonian Empire in 586 BCE, and many of its elites exiled, only to return decades later following the conquest of Babylon by Cyrus the Great of the Achaemenid Empire, who allowed the building of the Second Temple.
Jerusalem was once again placed at the center of Jewish religious and national life during the Second Temple period, which lasted between 516 BCE and 70 CE. During this period the city was also influenced by Hellenistic elements under the Ptolemies and the Seleucids as well as Roman culture under first the Roman Republic and then Roman Empire; nevertheless, it retained its Jewish character and identity. During the second and first centuries BCE, Jerusalem briefly served as the capital of a Jewish kingdom under the Hasmonean dynasty. During this period, the city's size and population peaked at an estimated 200,000 people.
In 70 CE, the city was besieged and destroyed by the Romans at the height of the First Jewish-Roman War. The destruction of Jerusalem and the Second Temple marked a major turning point in Jewish history. In 130 CE, following the Bar Kokhba revolt, Hadrian re-founded the city as a Roman colony named Aelia Capitolina and Jews were banned from entering the city. During early Middle Ages, the demography of Jerusalem underwent successive waves of Christianization under the Byzantine Empire and Arabization and Islamization following the Muslim conquest of the Levant, before Christianization again under the rule of Crusader states following the First Crusade, followed by further Islamization process under the Ayyubid dynasty and Mamluk Sultanate. By the early 16th century, Jerusalem was largely Muslim but gradually gained Jewish and Christian populations—giving rise to the still-existing division of the Old City of Jerusalem into Christian, Armenian, Jewish and Muslim Quarters. Since the mid-19th century, Jews had become the largest group in Jerusalem, which continued into the British Mandate period and until the 1948 war.
After the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, Jordan controlled the Eastern part of Jerusalem while Israel controlled the Western part, resulting in a division of the city. On 2 August 1948, by the declaration of the Minister of Defence, Israel applied its laws to the areas of Jerusalem under its control. Displaced peoples, both Arabs and Jews, were not allowed to cross the armistice lines to return to vacated homes. Jewish Israelis took possession of many of the vacant homes in Western Jerusalem and Palestinian refugees populated the Jewish quarter until they were evicted in the 1960s and 1970s.
In 1967, during the Six-Day War, Israel captured East Jerusalem, which had been under Jordanian administration since 1948-49. Via the Jerusalem Law, Israel united the city and expanded the city limits to include adjacent parts of the West Bank. Israeli law was applied to the areas and the inhabitants of the lands annexed by Israel. This action was immediately condemned in a Security Council Resolution. Palestinian refugees were disallowed return by both Jordan and Israel, and Jewish Israelis occupied many of the homes left by the refugees. Palestinians who had remained in East Jerusalem until then were offered full Israeli citizenship. Those who declined citizenship were given permanent residency status.
Defining Judaization
Further information: Cultural assimilation and Nation-buildingJudaization can be defined as either the conversion of persons to the Jewish religion and the acquisition of Jewish cultural and religious beliefs and values or the transformation of an area to give it a predominant Jewish character, primarily by creating the largest possible Jewish majority. The creation of a Jewish majority in Jerusalem has always been a high priority of the Israeli government, after 1947 in West Jerusalem and after 1967 in East Jerusalem. The rejection of the Palestinian right of return is motivated in part by the intention to maintain a Jewish majority, in Israel as well as in Jerusalem.
Judaization in territorial terms is characterized by Oren Yiftachel as a form of "ethnicization," which he argues is "the main force in shaping ethnocratic regimes". Yiftachel identifies Judaization as a state strategy and project in Israel, not confined to Jerusalem alone. He also characterizes the goals of those pursuing a "Greater Israel" or "Greater Palestine" as being driven by "ethnicization," in this case by "Judaization" and "Arabization" respectively.
Speaking before the United Nations General Assembly in 2011, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, "I often hear them accuse Israel of Judaizing Jerusalem. That's like accusing America of Americanizing Washington or the British of Anglicizing London. Do you know why we're called "Jews"? Because we come from Judea."
Judaization versus Israelization
While the term Judaization is used to denote the conversion from non-Jewish to Jewish, the term Israelization is sometimes used to refer to the adaption of non-Israelis to Israeli law and culture, for example, by the application for an Israeli ID card/Israeli citizenship to acquire more rights, or the use of Israeli education.
Alleged Judaization under Israeli occupation and annexation
Changing the demographics
See also: Palestinian displacement in East JerusalemThe Israeli government is attempting to Judaise East Jerusalem and maintain a Jewish majority against the demographic threat of a higher Palestinian birth rate.
Despite the rapid growth of the Jewish population since 1967, its relative size has decreased due to a higher growth rate among the Arab population. The Jewish population dropped from 74% in 1967 to 66% in 2005. Researchers at the Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies called this "a contradiction between the reality in Jerusalem and the declared government policy of maintaining the Jewish majority in Jerusalem since the city's reunification." To reverse this trend, they suggested expanding Jerusalem's border to the west (meaning the addition of Jewish population centres) or removing Arab neighbourhoods from the city's municipal area.
Revocation or denying of residency rights
Some of how the Israeli government is "Judaizing Jerusalem," according to Leilani Farha, are via the revocation of residency rights, absentee property laws, and tax policies. Palestinians residing outside Jerusalem for seven or more years can lose their Jerusalem residency status. According to UN figures, in 2006, at least 1,360 Palestinians had their ID cards revoked.
Since 1982, the Israeli Interior Ministry has not permitted the registration of Palestinian children as Jerusalem residents if the child's father does not hold a Jerusalem ID card, even if the mother is a Jerusalem ID cardholder. In 2003, the Citizenship and Entry into Israel law was enacted, which denies spouses from the occupied Palestinian territories who are married to Israeli citizens or permanent residents (Jerusalem ID card holders) the right to acquire citizenship or residency status, and thus the opportunity to live with their partners in Israel and Jerusalem. In Israel, foreign spouses who are Jewish are automatically granted citizenship under Israel's Law of Return.
Changing Arab into Jewish zones
Urban planning has been an instrument to change the demographics of Jerusalem. By allotting zones for Jewish purposes and subsidizing Jewish projects, an increase in the Jewish population is promoted while withholding building permits for Palestinians curtails the development of Palestinian areas. Three days after the end of the Six-Day War, the Moroccan Quarter in the Old City was demolished by the Israeli army to improve access to the Western Wall.
Building Jewish settlements
The Israeli government has sought to increase the Jewish population by establishing Jewish neighbourhoods, viewed by the International Community and Left-Wing Parties and NGOs within Israel as illegal Israeli settlements, in and around Jerusalem. Redrawing Jerusalem's municipal boundaries has incorporated such neighbourhoods. In peace negotiations, Israel has consistently demanded their legalization and proposed Israeli annexation of settlements outside Jerusalem to include them in the municipality. In a speech on 8 November 2000, Prime Minister Ehud Barak said:
"Maintaining our sovereignty over Jerusalem and boosting its Jewish majority has been our chief aims, and toward this end, Israel constructed large Jewish neighbourhoods in the eastern part of the city, which house 180,000 residents, and large settlements on the periphery of Jerusalem, like the city of Ma'ale Adumim and Giv'at Ze'ev. The principle that guided me in the negotiations at Camp David was to preserve the unity of Jerusalem and to strengthen its Jewish majority for generations to come."
Over roughly three decades, from 1967 to 1995, of 76,151 housing units built in Jerusalem, 64,867 (88%) were allocated for Jewish residents, with 59% of these units built in East Jerusalem as new Jewish settlements.
Yiftachel writes that by 2001, Judaization in Jerusalem had entailed the incorporation of 170 square kilometers (66 sq mi) of surrounding land into the city's boundaries and the construction of 8 settlements in East Jerusalem housing a total of 206,000 Jewish settlers. In an essay he coauthored with Haim Yaacobi, they write that "Israel would like the Palestinian residents of Jerusalem to see Judaization as 'inevitable,' a fact to be accepted passively as part of the modern development of the metropolis."
Plans are underway to construct a new Israeli settlement in the last piece of open land linking East Jerusalem to the West Bank that will house about 45,000 residents on a land area larger than Tel Aviv, the second-largest Israeli city. According to Al Ghad, a Jordanian newspaper, the Israeli government elected in 2009 is soliciting tenders for the biggest settlement plans in West Bank. These plans have been described by the Palestinian Information Minister Mustafa Barghouti as "an announcement against peace and against the Palestinian state and it means the Israeli government is not a partner for peace." This settlement is considered by Palestinians as one method by which to Judaize the city.
Rubenberg also cites settlement construction as an example of the Judaization of Jerusalem, citing in particular the construction of bypass roads that connect Israeli settlements in East Jerusalem with those in the West Bank to create a newly expanded Jerusalem metropolis integrally linked with Israel proper.
West Bank barrier
Surrounding Arab villages, who traditionally have close cultural and economic connections with Jerusalem, are cut off from the city by the Israeli West Bank barrier. At the same time, the wall tightens major Jewish population centres to Jerusalem, like Giv'at Ze'ev, Ma'ale Adumim and Gush Etzion, who are currently not included in the Jerusalem municipality but located on the Jerusalem side of the Wall.
Purchase of Arab homes by Jews
In 1981, the Supreme Court of Israel ruled that non-Jews could not buy property in the Jewish Quarter in Jerusalem to "preserve the homogeneity" of the Jewish Quarter. On the other hand, no law prohibits Jews from buying property or living in East Jerusalem. The efforts of fundamentalist Jewish groups who enjoyed government backing in attempts to take over Palestinian homes in the Muslim and Christian Quarters of the Old City between 1993 and 2000 are cited by Rubenberg as one example of the Judaization of Jerusalem. Meron Benvenisti writes that these groups succeeded in taking over several buildings, "but only after receiving massive assistance from the government to, among other things, finance an extensive system of armed guards to protect them day and night, and hire armed guards for their children anytime they go out into the streets."
Not only the homes of Palestinian residents are targeted, but also those of absent refugees. Alterations of the Absentee Property Law to enable the confiscation of 'enemy' property while hindering Palestinian reclamation of property in West Jerusalem and reserving as much territory as possible for Jewish use while obstructing Palestinian construction, in addition to punitive demolition of residences, have all played a role in the Judaization of Jerusalem. It is calculated that about 35% of East Jerusalem is used by Israelis, while 80% of the land is denied use by Palestinians as a result of restrictive zoning measures.
Demolition of Palestinian homes
Jeff Halper, an anthropologist and director of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD), describes the Judaization of the city as one of the effects of settlement growth and house demolitions in East Jerusalem, describing it as being aimed at "eliminat the idea that there is an East Jerusalem, to create one unified, Jewish Jerusalem." In March 2009, defending its planned demolitions against Palestinian houses in the Bustan area of Silwan that would leave 1,500 people homeless, Jerusalem authorities said the houses were built illegally, without zoning and construction permits. Palestinians and human rights organizations countered that "Israel makes it almost impossible for Palestinians to get the requisite permits, as a part of the policy to Judaise the eastern part of the city."
Replacing Arabic place names with Hebrew names
Main article: Hebraization of Palestinian place namesAnother major aspect of Israel's effort to Judaize Jerusalem was to replace the Arabic names of streets, quarters and historical sites with Hebrew names. The Jordanian newspaper al-Ra'i published a list of such names and accused the Israeli government of changing the Arab names systematically to erase Arab heritage in Jerusalem and prevent the reassertion of Arab sovereignty over the city. The newspaper also claimed the new names had nothing to do with the old names and sometimes attributed a Jewish patrimony when in fact there was no such relation. One example it cited was the site named Solomon's Stables by the Israeli government, which the newspaper claimed was not built in Solomon's time but at the time of the Roman emperor Hadrian. Solomon's Stables was named as such by the Crusaders, who built the stables because they were adjacent to the location of Solomon's temple, and The Israeli government used this name.
In 2005, the Jerusalem Municipality approved a law that all store owners in Jerusalem, including Arabs, must include at least 50% of their signs in Hebrew.
Discussing Israeli government policy
The allegation of following a policy for the Judaization of Jerusalem by the Government of Israel is the subject of debate. According to Valerie Zink, Israel has sought to transform the physical and demographic landscape of Jerusalem to correspond with the Zionist vision of a united and fundamentally Jewish Jerusalem under Israeli sovereignty since 1948. Zink writes that much was accomplished towards the Judaization of Jerusalem with the expulsion of Arab residents in 1948 and 1967, noting that the process has also relied in "peacetime" on "the strategic extension of Jerusalem's municipal boundaries, bureaucratic and legal restrictions on Palestinian land use, disenfranchisement of Jerusalem residents, the expansion of settlements in 'Greater Jerusalem', and the construction of the separation wall." The attempts to Judaize Jerusalem, in the words of Jeremy Salt, "to obliterate its Palestinian identity" and thicken 'Greater Jerusalem' to encompass much of the West Bank, have continued under successive Israeli governments.
Some scholars like Oren Yiftachel, Moshe Ma'oz and Jeremy Salt write that it has been the policy of successive Israeli governments since 1967. Others, like Justus Weiner and Dan Diker, have objected to the entire notion, writing that the lack of any significant change to the demographic balance of the city undermines suggestions that it is government policy and renders any such discussions moot. Marc H. Ellis argues that while politicians from Simon Peres and Yitzhak Rabin to Benjamin Netanyahu stress a unified Jerusalem under Israel's sovereignty is open to all, the 'Judaization of Jerusalem' and its corollary, the loss of Palestinian population and culture, which he argues is being politically implemented, is never touched on.
Cheryl Rubenberg writes that since 1967, Israel has employed processes of "Judaization and Israelization to transform Jerusalem into a Jewish metropolis" while simultaneously pursuing "a program of de-Arabization" to facilitate "its objective of permanent, unified, sovereign control over the city." These policies, which aim to change Jerusalem demographically, socially, culturally and politically, are said by Rubenberg to have intensified after the initiation of the Oslo peace process in 1993.
Moshe Ma'oz describes the policy of Israeli governments since 1967 as aimed at "maintain a unified Jerusalem; to Judaize or Israelize it, demographically and politically."
Drawing on the scholarship of Ian Lustick, Cecilia Alban writes of how the Israeli government has succeeded in establishing "new powerful concepts, images, and icons" to explain and legitimize its policies in Jerusalem. The government's use of the term "reunification" to describe its occupation of East Jerusalem in 1967 is cited as one such example, which, in Alban's view, falsely implies that this area belonged to Israel in the past. Noting the reality of the fear among Israelis that Jerusalem would become redivided under dual sovereignty or internationalization proposals, Alban writes that such fears were "exploited politically to justify the forced retention and Judaization of East Jerusalem." Steve Niva writes that Israeli policies calling for the Judaization of Jerusalem and the rest of historic Palestine in the 1970s augmented Muslim fears that Israel was an extension of Western imperialism in the region.
Scott Bollens, a University of California professor of urban planning, has compared Israel's policies in Jerusalem to apartheid-era South Africa's racial policies in Johannesburg. According to Bollens, long-term planning was employed in both cases to pursue political objectives. Bollens says that although on the rhetorical level, South Africa employed racial rhetoric more blatantly than Israel does, the outcomes are "very, very similar" in that Israeli-controlled Jerusalem is just as unequal as apartheid-era Johannesburg.
Demographic debate
Benvenisti writes that complete data on the demographics of Jerusalem are not collected by anyone official source. As a result, data are interpreted and used selectively and inconsistently by both Palestinian and Israeli sources. Figures pointed to by Palestinians as evidence of their success in preserving the Arab character of Jerusalem are also sometimes used as "proof of the Judaization of Jerusalem." Benvenisti writes that despite immense Israeli effort, "the demographic balance in the city has hardly changed at all."
Critiquing international news reporting on Jerusalem for centring on Arab and Palestinian claims regarding the Judaization of Jerusalem, Dan Diker writes that the underlying assumption of such reporting is that "eastern Jerusalem" has always been an Arab city, ignoring "the fact that Jerusalem has had an overwhelmingly Jewish majority as far back as the mid-nineteenth century, well before the arrival of the British." Drawing on a study of urban planning and demographic growth in Jerusalem conducted by Justus Reid Weiner, Diker writes that between 1967 and 2000, "Jerusalem's Arab population increased from 26.6 percent to 31.7 percent of the city's total populace, while the city's Jewish population decreased accordingly." He also writes that Arab housing construction heavily outpaced Jewish buildings during the same period, attributing this in part to "the direct sponsorship of illegal construction by the Palestinian Authority."
In "Is Jerusalem being "Judaized"?, Weiner reviews demographic figures from the mid-19th century through to the present and concludes that the "demographic evidence does not support the allegations that Israel is 'Judaizing' the city." His view is that speculation as to whether or not a policy of Judaization exists is rather pointless when there is no "effective implementation of tangible measures to implement such a program."
Support for alleged Judaization efforts
Jerusalem mayor Teddy Kollek led efforts to settle East Jerusalem with Jewish families. In 1970, he coauthored a plan which contains the principles Israel's East Jerusalem housing plans are based on. The principles include expropriation of Arab-owned land, development of Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem and limitations on the development of Arab neighbourhoods.
According to Nur Masalha, the International Christian Embassy in Jerusalem (ICEJ), established in 1980 in the former home of Edward Said, supports "exclusive Israeli sovereignty over the city and the Judaisation of Arab East Jerusalem." The ICEJ website notes that its embassy was founded "as an act of comfort and solidarity with Israel and the Jewish people in their claim to Jerusalem." It also notes that the ICEJ administers several aid projects, engages in advocacy for Israel, and assists "aliyah to the Jewish homeland."
The Ir David Foundation, also known as the Elad Association, promotes the Judaization of East Jerusalem. Operating in the city for some 20 years to acquire properties belonging to Palestinians in Silwan, Palestinians say it has "taken over" substantial sections of the village. Elad also funds the digs being conducted near the Temple Mount. In 2008, Haaretz reported that at least 100 skeletons dating to c. 8th–9th centuries AD, in the Early Islamic period, found a few hundred meters from Al-Aqsa mosque, were removed and packed into crates before they could be examined by archaeological experts. The excavations at Al-Aqsa are described in Arab media in the context of Israeli efforts to Judaise Jerusalem.
According to Ian Lustick, Dore Gold, as an advisor to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in 1996, opposed any compromise with Palestinians on their claim to a capital in Jerusalem and advised a unilateral Judaization of the whole area. An explicit call for the 'Judaization of Jerusalem' forms one of the slogans employed by Aryeh King in his 2013 election campaign to become mayor of the city.
Criticism of alleged Judaization efforts
According to those who hold this view, while much of this has been accomplished through the violent expulsion of Arab residents during the wars of 1948 and 1967, the Judaization of Jerusalem has relied equally on measures taken during times of peace. These include the strategic extension of Jerusalem's municipal boundaries, bureaucratic and legal restrictions on Palestinian land use, disenfranchisement of Jerusalem residents, the expansion of settlements in ‘Greater Jerusalem’, and the construction of the separation wall.
The United Nations has criticized Israel's efforts to change the demographic makeup of Jerusalem in several resolutions. All legislative and administrative measures taken by Israel which have altered or aimed to alter the character, legal status and demographic composition of Jerusalem are described by the UN as "null and void" and having "no validity whatsoever."
According to David G. Singer, the magazine America published four articles between 1969 and 1972 that "censured Israel for its policy of Judaizing Jerusalem: moving Jews into the former Jewish section of the Old City, building new housing projects around the Holy City, and permitting—even encouraging—Christian Arabs to migrate from Israel."
In a six-point document drafted as a result of discussion between the leaders of Fatah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad, among other Palestinian groups in March 2005, three issues were listed as "liable to explode the calm" between Israeli and Palestinians, one of these being "the Judaization of East Jerusalem."
In a 2008 report, John Dugard, an independent investigator for the United Nations Human Rights Council, cites the Judaization of Jerusalem among many examples of Israeli policies "of colonialism, apartheid or occupation," that create a context in which Palestinian terrorism is "an inevitable consequence."
In a joint communiqué issued by King Abdullah of Jordan and King Mohammed VI of Morocco in March 2009, both leaders stressed their determination "to continue defending Jerusalem and to protect it from attempts to Judaise the city and erase its Arab and Islamic identity." And in February 2010, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem was quoted in Israeli Media as saying "halting the ongoing Judaization of Jerusalem" would be a significant topic at an upcoming Arab League Summit.
Richard Falk, Special Rapporteur for the UN on the occupied Palestinian territories, said in 2011 that "the continued pattern of settlement expansion in East Jerusalem combined with forcible eviction of long residing Palestinians are creating an intolerable situation that can only be described, in its cumulative impact, as a form of ethnic cleansing." Falk said that Israel's actions reveal systematic discrimination against Palestinian residents of the city and recommended that the International Court of Justice assess allegations that Israel's occupation of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, possesses elements of apartheid and ethnic cleansing.
The Higher Arab Monitoring Committee, an umbrella organization for Israeli Arab groups, characterized Israel's policy in East Jerusalem as ethnic cleansing in 2009. Also Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, has accused Israel of ethnically cleansing East Jerusalem.
The European Union considers that Israel is "actively pursuing the illegal annexation" of East Jerusalem. According to the EU, Israeli actions increase Jewish Israeli presence in East Jerusalem and weaken the Palestinian community in the city. The EU has raised its concerns over Israeli house demolitions in East Jerusalem using diplomatic channels. According to the EU, demolitions are "illegal under international law, serve no obvious purpose, have severe humanitarian effects, and fuel bitterness and extremism." The EU says that the fourth Geneva convention prevents an occupying power from extending its jurisdiction to occupied territory, such as East Jerusalem, which the Palestinians claim as the capital of their future state. In 2011, EU envoys in the Middle East reported to Brussels that various Israeli policies amounted to "systematically undermining the Palestinian presence" in Jerusalem. According to the United Kingdom, "attempts by Israel to alter the character or demography of East Jerusalem are unacceptable and extremely provocative."
See also
- Demographic history of Jerusalem
- Islamization of Jerusalem
- Islamization of the Temple Mount
- Judaization of the Galilee
- Islamization of Palestine
- Religious significance of Jerusalem
Notes
- This definition is drawn from Valerie Zink's and is supported, among others, by that of Hassassian in Ginat et al., who defines the Judaization of Jerusalem as "impos a Jewish landscape both physically and demographically."
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External links
- The Judaization of East Jerusalem, by Alice Rothchild
- 'Judaizing Jerusalem', by A.M. Rosenthal
- Is the Campaign Against “Judaization” Anti-Semitic?
- Mapping Out the Rapid Judaization of East Jerusalem