News Israeli Arab unrest prompts funding of coexistence projects Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | December 8, 2000 Sign up for Weekday J and get the latest on what's happening in the Jewish Bay Area. If there is any silver lining to the Israeli Arab riots that accompanied the first few days of the Palestinians' ongoing uprising, some analysts suggest, it's that the hot-button issue of Jewish-Arab relations within Israel will have to be confronted head-on. Even if Israel and the Palestinian Authority return to the negotiating table, the stark fact will remain that some Israeli citizens took up arms against the state and, in response, security forces killed citizens they had sworn to protect. "In some ways, the genie is out of the bottle, and there'll be no way to stuff it back in," said Staci Light, director of development for the Abraham Fund, which is devoted to Arab-Jewish co-existence projects in Israel. "If we want a Jewish state, and want it to be a democratic state, we need to pay attention to the minority," Light said. "We, as Jews who lived as a minority for 2,000 years, need to be more sensitive to their needs. This, she said, should not come at the expense of Israel's identity as a Jewish state, or the security of the Jewish state. Light's sentiment of "no alternative" is echoed by leaders of the New Israel Fund and Givat Haviva, two institutions that promote democracy and civil rights in Israel. But it's been a tougher sell to some of their supporters. NIF, for example, supports hundreds of Israeli Arab nongovernmental organizations. Some NIF members express concern that the Israeli Arabs "crossed a red line by resorting to violence," said Norman Rosenberg, the group's executive director. "They feel Israel is again under siege, and the focus at this time should be on the Jewish community, not on the rights of Arabs." While "one or two significant donors" have indicated they intend to cut or halt their support to the group, Rosenberg added, they have been far outweighed by increased donations from established sources and a surge in first-time donations. NIF will contribute an extra $1 million to $2 million next year to the Israeli Arab projects it supports in Israel, more than double the usual sum. The Abraham Fund reports a similar pattern. On one recent day the fund received a $25,000 first-time gift from a private family foundation, then a $5 check from an indigent Jewish grandmother in Brooklyn, Light said. J. Correspondent Also On J. U.S. Arab Israeli MK applauded in U.S., but snubs Jewish confab U.S. Federations weigh funding Israels Arab population U.S. JCF funds new program to help Israeli Arab jobseekers News Netanyahu blames incitement for Tel Aviv shooting Subscribe to our Newsletter I would like to receive the following newsletters: Weekday J From Our Sponsors (helps fund our journalism) Your Sunday J Holiday Bytes