Middle East and Africa | How Israel’s Arabs see themselves

Even as war rages in Gaza, Israel’s Arabs are feeling more Israeli

That is partly because of their shared horror of Hamas and the threat it poses

A Palestinian woman and orthodox Jewish man walk past each other in the Old City in Jerusalem.
Turning a cornerImage: Getty Images
|JERUSALEM

Correction (January 22nd): An earlier version of this piece said any gatherings in Israel demanding a ceasefire were forcibly dispersed. In fact it was only some.

“O people in the Negev, in the Galilee and the Triangle, set the ground ablaze under the feet of the invading occupiers through killing, burning, destruction and roadblocks.” The command came from Muhammad Deif, Hamas’s military chief, as he unleashed the horrors of October 7th. It was aimed at Israel’s Arabs, who make up a fifth of its population. They have not answered his call. “We all agree that civilians should be outside the theatre of battle,” says Muhammad Barakeh, the head of the High Follow-Up Committee, an umbrella group of Arab factions in Israel.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Calm at home”

He’s winning: Business beware

From the January 20th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Middle East and Africa

The death of the president changes the power dynamics in Iran

The supreme leader’s son may be the beneficiary

The ICC’s threat to arrest Binyamin Netanyahu has shocked Israel

America and Israel have reacted with outrage at the implied equivalence between Israel and Hamas


The death of Iran’s president will spark a high-stakes power struggle

Amid a regional war, a fight at home between the clerics and military looms