Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Killings Spark Reckoning Over Status Of Arab Women In Israel

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Nov, 2016 01:04 PM
    LOD, Israel — After years of abuse and death threats, Duaa Abu-Sharkh had finally divorced her husband, agreeing even to give up custody of her four young children and family property to escape his violent grip. 
     
    Then, one night in late September, as the 32-year-old mother was dropping off her kids after a rare visit, a masked gunman dragged her from her car and shot her in the head before their eyes.
     
    Her killing is the latest in a string of murders of Israeli-Arab women believed to have been carried out by relatives. But after years of silence, the recent outburst has sparked soul searching in the community and unprecedented demonstrations against its mistreatment of women.
     
    The killings have some similarities to the so-called "honour killings" elsewhere in the Muslim world, where women can be murdered by relatives for tarnishing the family name through perceived sexual indiscretions. But activists in Israel reject such comparisons, saying the vast majority of the killings are the result of rampant spousal abuse that has been ignored by police in a landscape rife with drugs, crime and poverty.
     
    Traumatized by the recent death of Abu-Sharkh and other women in their communities, Arab citizens, who have long been suspicious of Israeli authorities, are now calling for more police and social services in their long-neglected neighbourhoods.
     
    Though just a fifth of the population, Arabs represent half of the women killed in Israel each year.
     
    And half of those women are killed in Arab neighbourhoods of Ramle and Lod, cities just outside of Tel Aviv where several large clans involved in organized crime have made weapons easily accessible and allowed violence, particularly toward women, to go unchecked for years.
     
    "Women in Arab society have a lower status. So, when there is violence, who pays the price? Women," said Samah Salaime, a social worker who founded the Arab Women in the Center organization to aid victims in the Lod area. She said Israeli authorities treat the oppression of women as a value in Arab society. "They deal with us as if the blood of the Arab woman is cheaper," she said.
     
    But things are starting to change.
     
    Abu-Sharkh's killing, and that of another divorced mother of four in Jaffa a month later, spurred a series of street protests that drew hundreds of women and men, both Arabs and Jews. A parliamentary committee heard testimony from Arab women and the national police chief said the level of violence was "unacceptable," and vowed to battle it.
     
    Arabs hold full citizenship rights in Israel, but are generally poorer and less educated than Jews and suffer from discrimination and substandard public services. Some Israelis, including top politicians, have questioned their loyalty to the state, contributing to their sense of being treated as second-class citizens. Arabs often accuse the police of being indifferent to Arab crime, so long as Jews are not harmed.
     
    Earlier this year, after a deadly shooting in downtown Tel Aviv and a subsequent weeklong manhunt for the Arab shooter, Israel launched a campaign to collect illegal arms in Arab towns. Later, it promoted an Arab police officer to deputy commissioner, making him the highest-ranking Muslim ever to serve in the force, and putting him in charge of the new law and order drive in Arab communities.
     
    Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said families used to tamper with crime scenes and make it difficult for police to collect evidence and testimony in Arab areas. But he said attitudes have changed in recent years and co-operation is much better. The police force is currently recruiting an additional 1,500 Arab officers and holding outreach programs to strengthen its ties to the community, he said.
     
    "The days of the instant anti-police, anti-government and anti-establishment sentiment are over," he said. "The main emphasis now is to be there and to connect with the Arab community."
     
    Arab lawmaker Aida Touma-Sliman, who heads the parliamentary committee on the status of women and gender equality, said that wasn't enough. She noted that 15 women have been killed in the Ramle-Lod area in the past year, but only three men have been charged.
     
    "What kind of message is given to the population and what kind of message is given to the perpetrators?" she asked. "You can kill and you will still go on free. And for the women it is a clear message from the police that nobody can protect you."
     
    Touma-Sliman said police have been persuaded to stop automatically referring to the deaths of Arab women as "honour killings," saying it was an offensive term "developed by the patriarchal society in order to legitimize the murder itself."
     
    In Abu-Sharkh's case, the writing was on the wall. Her ex-husband, who had links to local criminal gangs, would beat her regularly, once breaking her arm and nose, and strangle her until she turned blue, said her mother, Majeda Abu-Sharkh. When they complained to police, the ex-husband threatened to kill Abu-Sharkh and gunmen opened fire at her family's home.
     
    Police briefly detained him after her killing but released him for lack of evidence.
     
    "If it was a Jewish woman, the police would have found her killer in two hours," Majeda said, clutching pictures of her dead daughter. "Thank God, it is all over with now. She has gone to God and it is better for her there. She is resting."
     
    Salaime, the social worker, said such tragedies would hopefully diminish as taboos are broken and the status of women slowly improves.
     
    "Men know that the Arab woman is now studying more, has more freedom and we have left a lot of men behind who still think that an Arab woman is worthless, that her body is a property that you can harm without being held accountable," she said. "The path is very long. It is a very painful journey."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Mark Zuckerberg Faces Flak After Facebook Removes 'Napalm Girl' Photo

    Mark Zuckerberg Faces Flak After Facebook Removes 'Napalm Girl' Photo
    The editor-in-chief of Norways biggest daily newspaper has criticised Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg over his role in deleting an article from Aftenposten's Facebook page containing a historic image from the Vietnam war.

    Mark Zuckerberg Faces Flak After Facebook Removes 'Napalm Girl' Photo

    Mark Zuckerberg Philanthropic Arm Leads $50 Million Investment Into BYJU

    Mark Zuckerberg Philanthropic Arm Leads $50 Million Investment Into BYJU
    Online education start-up BYJU's has raised $50 million (about $332.3 crore) from a clutch of investors, led by Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI) and Sequoia Capital.

    Mark Zuckerberg Philanthropic Arm Leads $50 Million Investment Into BYJU

    100 Years, 3,300 Miles: Vintage Motorcycles Hitting The Road

    100 Years, 3,300 Miles: Vintage Motorcycles Hitting The Road
    ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Thomas Trapp sells new Harley-Davidson motorcycles in Germany, but for the next two weeks he'll be riding 3,300 miles coast to coast in the United States, aboard one made 102 years ago.

    100 Years, 3,300 Miles: Vintage Motorcycles Hitting The Road

    He Sexually Abused Her As A Child. She Became A Police Officer And Hunted Him Down

    He Sexually Abused Her As A Child. She Became A Police Officer And Hunted Him Down
    When Erlis Chaisson met with the now grown woman he abused as a child, he had no idea she was recording his confessionA woman who was sexually abused from the age of eight has seen her attacker put behind bars 15 years later, after she became a police officer and secretly taped his confession.

    He Sexually Abused Her As A Child. She Became A Police Officer And Hunted Him Down

    Kansas Man Chooses Jail Over Wife - Robs Bank, Sits In Lobby Until Arrested

    Kansas Man Chooses Jail Over Wife - Robs Bank, Sits In Lobby Until Arrested
    Lawrence John Ripple gave a note to a Bank of Labor teller on Friday in Kansas City, Kansas, demanding cash and warning he had a gun, court documents say. 

    Kansas Man Chooses Jail Over Wife - Robs Bank, Sits In Lobby Until Arrested

    Indian Billionaire's Australia Mansion 'Taj Mahal On-The-Swan' To Be Demolished

    Indian Billionaire's Australia Mansion 'Taj Mahal On-The-Swan' To Be Demolished
    The residence was said to emerge as Perth's most expensive home on the 6,600 square metre block of land in luxurious riverside suburb of Peppermint Grove for which the couple had already paid more than 22 million dollars.

    Indian Billionaire's Australia Mansion 'Taj Mahal On-The-Swan' To Be Demolished