News In Galilee, Israeli Arabs populating Jewish areas Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | November 7, 2008 nazareth ilit, israel | Saher and Fida Abudbai grew up and lived most of their lives in Nazareth, the largest Arab city in Israel. Now they live in the hills above what is considered a Jewish city, Nazareth Ilit. They would have preferred to stay in Nazareth, near their families, friends and work. Its labyrinth of steep, winding streets is the cultural and political center of Arab life in Israel, and the city is still very much the heart of the Abudbais’ lives. But like many young families, they simply could not afford to buy a home in Nazareth, which is running out of room to grow. “It was a financial decision,” says Fida, 32, a social worker who still works in Nazareth and sends her two young daughters to school there. “An apartment of the same size in Nazareth costs twice as much as ours.” Gazing out from the balcony of their seventh-story apartment, she sounds resigned. “There’s just no land left for building,” she says. Nazareth Ilit was built by the Israeli government in 1956 as the cornerstone of a strategic decision to Judaize the Galilee, a majority-Arab region of Israel. More than 50 years later, the Galilee remains mostly Arab. Contrary to the intentions of military planners who designed Nazareth Ilit, the city is losing its Jewish residents. Meanwhile, the city’s Arab population is growing — now 15 percent of the city’s 52,000 residents. The evolution of Nazareth and Nazareth Ilit is part of the broader story of Israel’s uphill effort to boost the Galilee’s Jewish population. It also points to the growing phenomenon of Israeli Arabs moving into Jewish areas. Mostly educated and from the middle class, these Arabs are drawn by the higher quality of life and services in Jewish areas, in contrast to urban Arab communities that suffer from public neglect. “When there are no plans made in Arab areas, people out of lack of choice have to go elsewhere,” says Cesar Yeudkin, an urban planner at Bimkom, an Israeli nonprofit that promotes the integration of human rights in urban planning. The director of Israel’s Interior Ministry, Arieh Bar, says the government is not neglecting Arab communities. He says the government has approved zoning plans for thousands of new apartments in Nazareth over the past four years, and the ministry has worked to improve planning for Arab towns and villages. “There has been great progress,” he says. It remains to be seen whether these new plans can reverse decades of neglect. In northern Israel, more and more Arabs are moving into towns established for Jewish residence, such as Carmel and Ma’alot, Yeudkin says. In central Israel, neighborhoods such as Jerusalem’s French Hill, also established for Jews, are experiencing the same phenomenon of Jewish attrition and Arab influx. In Nazareth Ilit, the phenomenon owes to the circumstances of its birth, which saw the state expropriate some 300 acres of land, much of it from landowners in Nazareth and surrounding villages, to create the new city. The move led to a shortage of land for the rapidly growing local Arab population. These days in northern Israel, many Jewish Israelis, particularly younger ones, leave home for the center of the country, where the vast majority of Israelis live and where jobs are more plentiful. This includes tens of thousands of immigrants from the former Soviet Union who were settled in northern Israel in the 1990s. In Nazareth Ilit, Russian-speaking Israelis compose 60 percent of the city’s population, though their number is dwindling. With municipal elections for Nazareth Ilit — and cities across the country — scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 11, a new list of Arab candidates hopes to capitalize on the votes of the city’s growing number of Arab residents. “Nazareth Ilit is already a mixed Arab-Jewish city and no longer a Jewish city,” says Salim Khoury, a former city council member who again is running for office. He wants to establish Arabic-speaking schools so local Arab residents will feel more connected here. J. Correspondent Also On J. Local Voice Critical thinking: embedded in Judaism, needed in society Religion First Ukrainian haggadah marks community's break with Russia Talking With ... Q&A: Singin' the blues and the Jewish women of Tin Pan Alley Tech Alef's post-Soviet CEO imagines a future with flying cars Subscribe to our Newsletter Enter Email Sign Up