Home
/
Isiam
/
Politics & Economics
/
Rabbis say 'no housing for Arabs'
Rabbis say 'no housing for Arabs'
Apr 29, 2026 10:33 PM

  Hundreds of Israeli rabbis have signed a religious edict forbidding Jews from renting or selling homes or land to Arabs and other non-Jews. The public letter instructs Jews to "ostracize" those who disobey the order, which is widely viewed as an attack on the country's Palestinian citizens.

  When the decree was announced on Tuesday, it had been signed by 50 rabbis, many of who are employed by the state of Israel as municipal religious leaders. Despite sharp public criticism, another 250 rabbis have added their names to the proclamation.

  It is the latest battle in the ongoing religious campaign against non-Jews.

  A similar edict was issued in the city of Safed less than two months ago, when over a dozen rabbis banded together to urge Jewish landlords not to rent apartments to Arab college students.

  African refugees - a group the state refers to as "infiltrators" - and migrant workers have also been targeted. This summer, 25 Tel Aviv rabbis signed a proclamation that forbids Jews from renting to "infiltrators". Ten real estate agents who work in neighborhoods that are home to large populations of African refugees answered the call, publicly stating that they would refuse such tenants and would not renew the leases of those who are currently residing there.

  And in late November, the municipality of Bnei Brak - an ultra-Orthodox suburb of Tel Aviv - began notifying migrant workers and African refugees that they will be evicted from their homes in the weeks to come.

  But the latest proclamation, which was signed by rabbis from across the country, is the largest of its kind.

  Israel's litmus test

  Small demonstrations were held in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. In Jerusalem, protesters were met by counter-protesters screaming "Leftie traitors!"

  A number of rabbis spoke out against the edict, calling it a "distortion" of Jewish religious law. A prominent rabbi remarked that signatories must be stripped of their pens. After his comment, two rabbis removed their names from the letter. But others dug in their heels, announcing that they would collect an additional 500 signatures against renting or selling property to Arabs and other non-Jews.

  The edict was condemned by many members of the government, including Binyamin Netanyahu, the prime minister.

  Avishay Braverman, the minority affairs minister, called on the state to fire one of the rabbis involved. And the Israel Religious Action Center (IRAC), along with the Coalition against Racism, lodged a formal complaint with the justice ministry.

  Einat Hurvitz, the director of IRAC's legal department, explained: "There are laws against these kinds of statements and this kind of incitement and they haven't been used against the rabbis."

  "The attorney general must take immediate action," she said, adding: "If we don't receive adequate answers, we'll go to court."

  On Thursday, the attorney general issued a statement calling the rabbis' edict "problematic" and "inappropriate for public officials". It also said it would examine whether or not the rabbis' actions were against the law.

  Still, the attorney general did not launch a formal investigation. Nor did he sanction the rabbis.

  "I expect the law enforcement authorities to do their part," Hurvitz said.

  Hurvitz added that the public outcry gave her hope that change was on the horizon.

  Climate of racism

  Abeer Baker, an attorney at Adalah, a local NGO that advocates for Israel's Arab minority, felt that legal avenues would prove ineffective. "Usually the struggle is against the state, now it's the private sector. You will find employers and renters with no will to help us now," she remarked.

  And because the rabbis are publicly sanctioning racism, "people [who refuse Arab tenants or employees] will not feel guilty".

  "In the past, people were afraid to say things like, 'I don't want to hire an Arab person'. They saw something immoral with it. Now the morals and values are deteriorating."

  Baker, who called the edit "very scary" and "very dangerous", said "racism existed [before the decree]" and the proclamation is "an outcome of the general political climate of racism .... The struggle should be against the whole climate".

  Speaking of Israel's Arab citizens, Baker added: "When you are under attack and people don't like you, you might treat people the same way."

  The edict, she pointed out, gives permission to both sides to be racist. And that could escalate tensions.

  'What we've become'

  Roi, a 27-year-old Israeli who asked to be identified by a pseudonym rather than be associated with Al Jazeera, said he doubted that the proclamation would lead to violence. Still, he called the move "terrible".

  "It's racist," he said. "But the thing that bothers me the most is that mainstream rabbis signed it, not just extremists. These are municipal rabbis. They're employed by the state."

  He said the rabbis who signed the proclamation "don't represent" him and are "giving Judaism a bad name".

  "Maybe [the decree is] something good because [Israelis] will understand what we've become," he said.

  Roi emphasized that his feelings do not mirror public sentiment. "I'm sure there are a lot of people who are saying that the rabbis are just doing what everyone thinks. No one wants to live with the Arabs."

  A recent poll conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute, a non-partisan think tank, found that almost half of Jewish Israelis would prefer not to have an Arab neighbor.

  Neve Gordon, the author of Israel's Occupation, remarked: "The rabbis are just an expression of the sentiment."

  Some landlords have refused Arab tenants for years, Gordon added. "It's not new. What's new is the feeling that one can express this [without] shame ... and when you lose shame you've reached an extremely dangerous situation."

  Gordon emphasized that this shift is not limited to the religious community.

  "We shouldn't understand this outburst as an island. It has to do with the loyalty oath and other legislation that is now in the Knesset," Gordon said, referring to the controversial bill that would force non-Jews who seek citizenship to pledge allegiance to Israel as a Jewish state.

  Human rights groups are concerned about scores of other bills, including one that would allow communities to turn potential residents away due to their ethnic, religious, or socioeconomic background, and another that would punish any citizen - Jewish or Arab - who participates in the global campaign to boycott Israeli products.

  Gordon called such legislation "proto-fascist" and remarked that "the democratic elements of [Israel] are under intense attack".

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Ultra-Orthodox Jews pray in Jerusalem's Old City.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Politics & Economics
Record half-a-million refugees reach Europe this year
  A record number of refugees have crossed the Mediterranean into Europe this year, breaching the half-a-million mark for the past nine months, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).   As of Tuesday, the group said 522,124 people had travelled by sea to reach the continent.   About 388,000 have entered...
More than 900 migrants were on 'ship genocide'
  A Bangladeshi national rescued in the Mediterranean Sea from a capsized migrant boat off the Libyan coast on Sunday has claimed that there had been more than 900 people on board, Italian media reports.   According to Italy's La Repubblica newspaper, the Bangladeshi woman -- who is now hospitalized in in...
Israeli NGOs report on routine abuse of Palestinian detainees
  Israel's Shin Bet domestic security agency abuses Palestinians under interrogation in a manner so systematic it points to official endorsement, two Israeli NGOs said in a report published Wednesday.   The 70-page joint study by rights groups B'Tselem and Hamoked is based on accounts by 116 suspects interrogated at Shikma prison...
Some leading Islamophobic Organizations declared
  According to official website statement, The Council on American-Islamic Relations’ CAIR categorizes U.S. Islamophobia network groups.   The Council on American-Islamic Relations’ (CAIR) publishes the groups list that spreading anti-islam prejudice in America. According to its official website statement, the Islamophobic Organizations are these:   Abstraction Fund   The Abstraction Fund is part...
UN 'shocked' over Hungary action against refugees
  The UN chief has said he was "shocked" after Hungarian riot police fired tear gas and water cannon at crowds of refugees desperate to cross the border from Serbia.   When asked about the border clashes on Wednesday, Ban Ki-moon said the treatment of the refugees by the Hungarian police was...
Trump's anti-Muslim rhetoric whips up hate
  At a campaign rally in New Hampshire Wednesday night, Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump declined to correct a supporter who declared that “Muslims” are “a problem in this country” and urged the candidate to “get rid of ‘em.”   Voicing the beliefs of nearly half of U.S. Republicans, the speaker also...
Israel spraying toxins over Palestinian crops in Gaza
  On January 7, a low-flying agricultural aircraft sprayed herbicides onto Palestinian farmlands along the eastern border, eradicating or damaging up to 162 hectares of crops and farmland along the Israeli border fence.   "Herbicides are sprayed in high concentrations. Thus, they remain embedded in the soil, and then find their way...
UN report: French soldiers raped children
  Some of the French soldiers alleged to have sexually abused children in Central African Republic while there on peacekeeping duties have been identified, a French judicial source said on Thursday.   The matter came to light this week when Britain's Guardian newspaper said it had acquired a U.N. report that raised...
More than 10,000 refugee children missing in Europe
  More than 10,000 unaccompanied refugee and migrant children have disappeared in Europe, the EU police agency Europol said on Sunday, fearing many have been whisked into sex trafficking rings or the slave trade.   Europol's press office confirmed to Al Jazeera the figures published in British newspaper The Observer.   The number...
Year 2015 termed 'deadliest for refugees' crossing sea
  The year 2015 was the deadliest on record for refugees trying to reach Europe by sea, with 3,771 deaths recorded in the Mediterranean alone, the International Organization for Migration said on Tuesday.   The Mediterranean was followed by Southeast Asia, mostly in the Bay of Bengal, Andaman Sea, Malaysia and Thailand,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved