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					 																Written by Rachel Shabi in Umm al-Fahm						Rachel Shabi in Umm al-Fahm									
 
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					 																Category: News						News									
 
			
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						Published: 19 October 2010						19 October 2010				
 
			
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					 					Last Updated: 19 October 2010					19 October 2010					
 
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						 						Created: 19 October 2010						19 October 2010					
 
				
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Arab citizens say they feel increasingly unwelcome in Israel and fear forced transfer to a new Palestinian state
Said Abu Shakra Said Abu Shakra: 'The state is saying to us that, as 
Arabs, we are a danger.' Photograph: Rachel Shabi for the Guardian
Like other Arab citizens of Israel, Leyla Ahmoud is anxious about her 
future. A young mother of two girls with another on the way, Ahmoud says
 recent moves by the Israeli government are making it increasingly 
obvious that the Arabs are not welcome in their own country.
"I feel like my life is not in my hands," said 24-year-old Ahmoud, who 
lives in Umm al-Fahm, a mountain-ridge town of some 43,000 inhabitants 
in northern Israel. "The government decides how I live and where I live.
 We exist in fear, from one day to the next."
Israel's prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, famously referred to Arab 
citizens of Israel, who make up a fifth of the population, as a 
"demographic bomb" in 2003. His cabinet recently passed a new citizens 
bill that, if approved, will require all non-Jewish migrants to pledge 
loyalty to Israel as a "Jewish and democratic state" – although, 
apparently in response to international pressure, the law may now be 
amended to apply to all new migrants, including Jews.
The Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI) points to a string of 
other laws in the pipeline that would require individuals from 
parliamentarians to film crews to swear their allegiance. During the 
latest round of peace talks, Netanyahu reiterated that the Palestinian 
Authority should recognise Israel as a Jewish state – again signalling 
the preference for an ethno-religious Israel rather than a state for all
 its citizens.
Just weeks ago, Israeli forces staged a training exercise to test the 
state's response to a potential revolt among its Arab citizens if a 
peace agreement involved their forced transfer to a new Palestinian 
state. In a comprehensive security drill, forces practised anti-riot 
tactics and established two detention centres to accommodate prisoners.
Israel's extreme-right foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, has 
ratcheted up talk of a population exchange with the Palestinian 
Authority, whereby illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank would 
become part of Israel while Arab towns such as Umm al-Fahm, in the 
northern area bordering the West Bank, would be turned over to a new 
Palestinian state.
Today in Umm al-Fahm, where the loyalty oath is referred to as 
"Lieberman's law", there is a sense of living inside a paradox. "On the 
one hand, the state is saying to us that, as Arabs, we are a danger and 
not welcome here," said Said Abu Shakra, the director of Umm al-Fahm's 
art gallery. "But on the other hand, we are constantly asked to prove 
our loyalty to the state."
While supportive of the Palestinian struggle for statehood, this 
population - which identifies itself as Palestinian-Arab or 
Palestinian-Israeli - has repeatedly indicated its wish to retain 
Israeli citizenship. Its struggle is for equality.
"Where else would I go? My life, my children, my future is here," said 
one 28-year-old mother of two, who did not wish to be named. "I don't 
have another place, but what can we do to stop it if they [Jewish 
Israelis] are the strong ones?" Residents of Umm al-Fahm, which is 
thought to date back to 1265, talk of family roots in the area 
stretching back hundreds of years.
"We find ourselves thinking about these things now," 50-year-old lawyer 
Adnan Asad said of a possible population exchange. "I think, if you do 
transfer us, just do it when the kids are still young so that they might
 have a change to adapt. We're making jokes about what we'll sell when 
we become the street traders from the Palestinian state that stand at 
Israeli junctions."
Recent developments have drawn protest from some Israelis who say they 
are alarmed by their government's "anti-democratic" and "fascist" 
legislation. ACRI has asked the prime minister to make clear that there 
are no transfer plans on the negotiating table, and l ast weekend, 
thousands demonstrated agaisnt the policies in Tel Aviv. Speaking at the
 protest, Knesset member Dov Khenin, of the leftwing Arab-Jewish party 
Hadash, warned: "The population transfer has turned from a nightmare 
into an operational plan."
In Umm al-Fahm, Israel's second largest Arab town, residents believe the
 policies aren't just bad for the Arab minority but for the entire 
Israeli population.
Abu Shakra said he had worked to further dialogue between Jews and Arabs
 in Israel in Israel for 15 years – but that the government now seemed 
intent on making this untenable. "They are looking for ways to provoke 
conflict, not to create dialogue or equality," he said. "After 60 years,
 it is time they embraced the Arab population and understood that if 
things are not good for Arabs in Israel, they won't be good for anyone."