Posted by Iranian on January 24, 2008, 9:15 pm, in reply to "With the possibility of a Palestinian state: Palestinians now want to become Israeli's"
66.209.102.5
Fact if you cant beat them, then join them. Best way to mass produce like the Mexicans in US and out number whit folks.
--Previous Message--
: JERUSALEM — Like hundreds of thousands
: of other Jerusalem residents, Salim
: Shabane considers himself a
: Palestinian. But his life and work
: are intertwined with Israel , where
: he runs an auto shop.
:
: So, despite his tacit support for a
: Palestinian state, Shabane is part
: of a new surge of Jerusalem Arabs
: applying for Israeli citizenship.
:
: "I live in Israel ," said
: Shabane, "why shouldn't I be an
: Israeli citizen?"
:
: Shabane has plenty of company. After
: decades of living under Israeli rule
: and years watching the Palestinian
: Authority struggling to govern, more
: Arabs in Jerusalem are casting their
: lot with Israel .
:
: Last year, as peace talks revived
: the possibility of handing over
: parts of Jerusalem to a new
: Palestinian nation, the number of
: Arab residents applying for Israeli
: citizenship more than doubled.
:
: In 2007, according to the Israeli
: Interior Ministry , Shabane and 500
: other residents of East Jerusalem
: requested Israeli passports, up from
: 200 in each of the previous three
: years.
:
: Shabane's decision to seek full
: Israeli citizenship reflects the
: awkward reality for Arabs in
: Jerusalem : Though many want to see
: an independent Palestinian state,
: they don't want to be part of it.
:
: "My work and my life are inside
: Israel ," Shabane said. "I
: am very proud to be an Arab and
: Palestinian, but for practical
: reasons I'm not able to be part of
: the Palestinian Authority."
:
: Though the number of Arabs seeking
: passports is relatively small,
: there's an uncomfortable
: acknowledgement, especially among
: the Arab middle class in Jerusalem ,
: that their lives could get
: substantially worse under
: Palestinian rule.
:
: Jerusalem Arabs have long held a
: unique position in Middle East
: politics.
:
: After Arab countries attacked the
: new Israeli nation in 1948,
: Jerusalem was cut in half. Residents
: in the western part of the city
: controlled by Israel became citizens
: of the new nation. Those living in
: the east were given passports by
: their new Jordanian rulers.
:
: When Israel gained full control of
: Jerusalem in the 1967 Six-Day War,
: the Arabs in East Jerusalem were
: given special identification cards
: and offered a chance to become full
: Israeli citizens. Most refused.
: Still, the blue IDs give Jerusalem
: Arabs substantially more freedom
: than West Bank residents.
:
: East Jerusalem Arabs receive Israeli
: social security and heath benefits.
: They're allowed to vote in local—
: but not national— elections. They
: have the freedom to travel
: throughout Israel without special
: permits.
:
: But since 1967, East Jerusalem has
: received far less support and money
: than West Jerusalem has.
:
: Jerusalem is at the center of a
: contentious demographic battle in
: which Israel is looking to solidify
: itself as a Jewish nation and
: persuade the rest of the world to
: accept Jerusalem as its capital.
:
: More than 250,000 Arabs and 481,000
: Jews live in greater Jerusalem,
: according to new figures released
: this week by the Jerusalem Institute
: for Israel Studies . But the number
: of Arab residents is growing faster
: than the number of Jewish ones.
:
: Arabs constitute about 20 percent of
: the Israeli population, but the
: nation's leaders worry that Israel
: eventually could lose its
: predominant Jewish identity.
:
: Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
: is now considering relinquishing
: control of at least some of the Arab
: neighborhoods that Israel annexed in
: 1967 so that they can be part of a
: peace deal with Palestinian leaders.
:
: That possibility has created renewed
: anxiety for Jerusalem Arabs such as
: Shabane, a 42-year-old father of
: three.
:
: Shabane grew up right outside the
: Old City walls of Jerusalem in the
: shadow of Al Aqsa Mosque, the third
: holiest site in Islam.
:
: For most of his adult life, he's
: worked as an auto mechanic and, with
: a Jewish partner, he owns a garage
: in a Jerusalem suburb.
:
: If the Arab neighborhoods of
: Jerusalem are transferred to the
: Palestinian Authority, Shabane fears
: that new border restrictions could
: prevent him from getting to his
: garage.
:
: Shabane's family lives outside the
: Old City walls, and it's unlikely
: that Israel would agree to give up
: control of his East Jerusalem
: neighborhood. But Shabane and others
: seeking Israeli citizenship don't
: want to take any chances.
:
: "I prefer to stay under
: occupation rather than return to a
: Palestinian state that cannot
: govern," said Akram Jweiles, a
: retired 50-year-old carpenter who
: lives in an Arab neighborhood of
: Jerusalem .
:
: Though Jweiles has no desire to live
: under Palestinian rule, he also has
: no plans to request Israeli
: citizenship.
:
: "I am not the type of person to
: get an Israeli passport because I am
: a fighter," he said while
: looking out on the Israeli
: separation wall that divides his
: neighborhood from a large Jewish
: suburb on the adjacent hillside.
:
: Shabane said he doesn't have the
: same luxury to resist because of his
: wife, Samia.
:
: Because she was born in Bethlehem ,
: Samia Shabane has a West Bank ID
: that restricts her ability to live
: with her family in Jerusalem . She
: must request a new temporary entry
: permit every six months, can't send
: her children to Jerusalem schools
: and doesn't have access to Israeli
: public health care.
:
: Shabane hopes that getting Israeli
: citizenship will make it easier for
: his wife, even though current family
: unification procedures in Israel are
: restrictive.
:
: "Enough of the B.S.," a
: frustrated Shabane said after his
: wife declared herself to be a proud
: Palestinian. "I want her to get
: an Israeli ID. God forbid that she
: gets sick. Where can I take
: her?"
:
: Shabane understands the political
: complexities of his case, but he's
: made his decision.
:
: "If I choose to be Israeli,
: then the Palestinians will be
: unhappy," he said. "If I
: choose to be Arab, I don't get
: citizenship. I'm in a trap."
:
:
: http://news.yahoo.com/s/mcclatchy/20080119/wl_mcclatchy/2819205;_ylt=AmvJEZaXaIoNWAAjQUaHc0Ss0NUE
:
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