Published on Wednesday, May 6, 2009 by The Guardian/UK
Israeli Activist to be Jailed for Caring
Ezra Nawi was ridiculed and arrested for trying to protect people's homes. Only international attention can help him now
Without international intervention, Israeli human rights activist Ezra Nawi will most likely be sent to jail.
Nawi is not a typical rights activist. A member of Ta'ayush [1] Arab-Jewish Partnership he is a Jewish Israeli of Iraqi descent who speaks fluent Arabic. He is a gay man in his fifties and a plumber by trade. Perhaps because he himself comes from the margins, he empathises with others who have been marginalised - often violently.
His "crime" was trying to stop a military bulldozer from destroying the homes of Palestinian Bedouins from Um El Hir in the
As chance would have it, the demolition and the resistance to it were captured on film and broadcast on
The film then shows the police laughing at Nawi. But in dealing with his audacity, they were not content with mere ridicule and decided also to accuse him of assaulting a policeman. Notwithstanding the very clear evidence (captured on film), an Israeli court recently found Nawi guilty of assault in connection with the incident, which happened in 2007, and this coming July he will be sent to prison. Unless, perhaps, there is a public outcry.
Nawi's case is not only about Nawi. It is also about
Most people are not really surprised when they read that human rights activists are routinely arrested, prosecuted, imprisoned and harassed in Syria [2], Egypt [3], Saudi Arabia [4], Morocco [5] and several other Middle Eastern countries. Indeed, it has become common knowledge that the authoritarian nature of these regimes renders it dangerous for their citizens to actively fight for human rights.
In this sense,
People might assume that Nawi's impending imprisonment as well as other alarming developments (like the recent arrest [6] of New Profile [7] and Target 21 activists, who are suspected of abetting draft-dodgers) are due to the establishment of an extreme rightwing government in
Nawi's case, for what it symbolises on both an individual and societal level, encapsulates the current reality in
© 2009 Guardian News and Media Limited
Neve Gordon teaches politics at
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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