Enemies Inside The Gate
Arab 'Legal Intifada' in Pre-1967 Lines Continues by IsraelNationalNews staff(IsraelNN.com) A tender for construction of new housing in a Jewish moshav (agricultural community) within pre-1967 Israel has attracted the interest of Arabs in the nearby city of Umm el-Fahm, who said they want to purchase some of the homes.
Attorney Taufik Jabareen of the Arab town of Umm El Fahm said there is a severe land shortage in Umm el-Fahm and is therefore insisting the government allow its residents to purchase some of the new homes in Mei Ami.
Mei Ami is a relatively small community, in terms of population: it has only 70 families and 230 residents. Its territory is about 3,500 dunams. It is immediately adjacent to Umm El Fahm, a town of more than 50,000 residents, which is considered to be a hotbed of Arab nationalism within Israel and the seat of the radical Northern Islamic Movement headed by Sheikh Raed Salah.
Mei Ami, which was established in 1969, is due to grow considerably as a result of the new tender, which calls for construction of 410 new housing units along the road separating Mei-Ami and Umm el-Fahm.
Ties with Islamic movement
A report on Voice of Israel radio said the project is being disputed, with Arab villagers saying the land on which the Jewish community is built was once an Arab village.Attorney Jabareen, who has a history of involvement in land struggles against Jews and (according to Jews living in the area) has close ties with the Islamic Movement, published a declaration in a local newspaper, Al Murjan, in which he called upon young couples from Umm El Fahm to apply for houses in the tender.
In 1995, Jabareen bought and moved into a house in the nearby community of Katzir, which he also claimed was built on Arab land, and encouraged Arab couples to move there in what he boasted was a project "to conquer Katzir by democratic means."
One Arab couple sued Katzir in what became a landmark case, and was allowed to build a home there.
A dangerous trend
The Secretary-General of the Moshav Movement, Eitan Ben-David, said that the recent trend, in which Arabs try to enter small Jewish villages, is dangerous. "The key to coexistence in Israel is separation between the populations in the small communities," he said.It should be noted, however, that Umm El-Fahm, too, published tenders for expansion in recent years, after the High Court decided to give it land which was confiscated from it in the past. However, these tenders were only open to residents of Umm El Fahm and a Jew from Katzir who applied to one of them was rejected.
The Zubeidats want to live in Rakefet
Also on Sunday, the High Court allowed the Misgav Regional Council to join the respondents in a petition filed by an Arab couple, the Zubeidats, who wish to build their homes in the Jewish community of Rakefet, near Karmiel.The council asked to join the case because it was a matter of principle which it said could dramatically affect the process of accepting new families into the communities in Misgav.
"Accepting the Zubeidats' petition could dramatically hurt the special fabric of communal life" in the communities of Misgav, the Council said, "and the entire fabric of development of [Jewish] settlement in Misgav could be damaged."
Similar challenges to the national and religious character of small Jewish communities have been mounted throughout Israel in the post-Oslo era. To date, Jews have been slow to mount effective countermeasures.
Most if not all of of the press reports on the matter tend to credit the Arabs' claims that they are only seeking a higher standard of living by moving into Jewish territory. They refuse to consider the possibility that this is not their true motivation, and that the petitions are systematically organized by the radical Arab leadership.
Israel has lost sight of the fact that we are locked in a total war for the survival of the Jewish State. We have leftist attorneys and member of the Supreme Court that see nothing wrong with allowing Jewish lands to be bought by Arabs.
This is not a case for equal rights for the Israeli Arabs this is a tactic to remove Jews from the Land that G-D gave us and then was purchased from it's owners when Jews returned to reclaim our home land.
But if you don't believe that Israel is the land that G-D gave us then you see nothing wrong with allowing Arabs to purchase homes in Jewish communities. This will bring about a weakness in Israel for many different reasons.
First it will be harder for our boys to go to the IDF and then kill Arabs since their playmate down the street was an Arab. It will bring about inter marriage since the kids will have grown up together what's the harm?
Lastly if the situation breaks down and we are force to fight village by village to keep out homeland their will be villages with the enemy not only at the gate but inside the gate.
