Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - Amnon
Raz-Karkotzkin (Dept of History) supports pro-terror Arab Party
Balad
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3666519,00.html
Jews who support Arab parties: We seek true
equality
Sharon Roffe-Ofir
4/2/09
Daniel Edelson contributed to the report
Balad, United Arab List-Ta'al boast small but
loyal Jewish electorate, which they hope to increase in upcoming
elections. 'Balad's platform talks of full civil equality and I
believe this is the right track,' says one supporter
Although their electorate is predominately
Arab, the Balad and United Arab List-Ta'al parties also boast a
loyal Jewish support base, which they are hoping to expand in the
upcoming elections.
Some 1,000 Israeli Jews voted for Balad in the
previous elections, while United Arab List-Ta'al won the support of
several hundred Jewish voters.
Dr. Amnon Raz-Karkotzkin, a history professor
at Ben Gurion University, plans to vote for Balad on February 10.
"The ongoing incitement against Balad stems from a fear of equality,
which is why Azmi Bishara is being persecuted," he stated.
"Find someone who seriously thinks that he
spied for Hizbullah. Anyone looking for a spy wouldn't have used
Azmi Bishara," he added.
Raz-Karkotzkin said that the party hopes to see
more Jews voting for Arab parties in the upcoming elections. Balad
held a campaign rally in Hebrew last week, and plans to hold another
one on Wednesday.
"The Jewish public's support for Balad is
support for challenge," said Raz-Karkotzkin. "Balad doesn't give me
an identity and I don't vote in the elections in order to secure
self-identity. Balad's platform talks about full civil equality –
and in my opinion, as a historian that deals with the history of the
Jewish people - this is the right track to take.
"I feel compelled to identify with Balad's
demand for a state of all its citizens," he said.
Yehudit Ilani, who has been a Balad activist
for several years now, told Ynet: "We are brought up on certain
values. We are repeatedly told that we should live in a
democratic-Jewish state, and it definitely isn't easy to rebel, and
stop to think what this actually means.
"It takes certain courage to realize that this
thing called a 'democratic-Jewish state' just doesn't add up," Ilani
explained.
According to Ilani, the number of Jewish
activists in Balad has been constantly growing over the years, as
more and more people are exposed to an alternative political
discourse "and understand what goes on in our society."
Surprising support in West Bank settlement
Meanwhile Hadash, an Arab-Jewish party, also
hopes to enlarge its Jewish constituency in the elections. MK Dov
Khenin told Ynet that the he believed Hadash could significantly
bolster its support among Jewish voters, especially young ones.
Interestingly, Hadash's ideas seem to appeal
not only to members of the "Tel Aviv bubble" or to Arabs. Hanan, 22,
a resident of the Efrat settlement said he was seriously considering
voting for the party.
"Already in school I realized that I was more
dovish, more socialist. I studied the subject and came to understand
that what I was taught and what the majority of people around me
believe in isn't necessarily the correct narrative.
"There are other ways to thinking about our
reality and our history. It's clear to me that a two-state solution
must be established. I think very highly of Khenin and Mohammad
Barakeh – I believe they are the two most serious MKs at the
Knesset."
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