Yahoo – AFP,
4 May 2015
![]() |
Israelis
from the Ethiopian community take part in a demonstration in
Tel Aviv on May 3,
2015 (AFP Photo/Jack Guez)
|
Jerusalem
(AFP) - Israeli Ethiopian Jews protesting against alleged police brutality and
racism have staged heated demonstrations over the past week that turned violent
as they clashed with security forces.
The
integration of Ethiopian Jews into Israeli society has long been a struggle.
Israel has
some 135,500 Jewish Israelis of Ethiopian descent, including more than 50,000
born inside the country.
![]() |
Israelis
from the Ethiopian community in
Jerusalem take part in a demonstration
near a
major junction in Jerusalem on
April 30, 2015 (AFP Photo/Gali Tibbon)
|
For
centuries, Jews in Ethiopia were largely cut off from other Jewish communities,
and Israel's religious authorities only belatedly recognised them as members of
the faith.
Israel then
carried out two covert airlifts of Ethiopians to the Jewish state in 1984 and
1991, transporting thousands of people who had faced famine and persecution at
home.
Despite
government aid, Ethiopian Jews in Israel have always been disadvantaged.
They earn
40 percent less than the average Israeli, according to NGO the Israel
Association for Ethiopian Jews (IAEJ).
More than a
third (38.5 percent) of Ethiopian Jewish families live below the poverty line
-- a rate much higher than the 14.3 percent of Israelis as a whole.
Most live
in the poorest neighbourhoods of major cities.
The IAEJ
also points towards a high rate of imprisonment.
At Ofek
prison north of Tel Aviv -- a jail for minors -- some 30 percent of inmates are
from the Ethiopian community, despite comprising just 3 percent of the
population.
The
community has been at the centre of storms over alleged institutionalised
racism in recent years.
In 2013,
Israel's equivalent of the Red Cross refused to accept blood from an Ethiopian
Jewish lawmaker, sparking demands for a review of guidelines seen as deeply
discriminatory.
The health
ministry guidelines at the time barred donations not from the entire community,
but from 80,000 Africa-born migrants, ostensibly over fears about the AIDS
virus.
The
previous year, an investigative news programme into the declining birth rate
among Ethiopian Jews uncovered claims that would-be migrants were told they
would be refused entry if they did not take contraceptive injections.
The health ministry subsequently warned that immigrants must not be given contraceptives without their proper consent.
![]() |
Israelis
take part in a demonstration in Tel Aviv called by members of the
Ethiopian
community on May 3, 2015 (AFP Photo/Jack Guez)
|
The health ministry subsequently warned that immigrants must not be given contraceptives without their proper consent.
In addition
to the 1984 and 1991 airlifts, Israel has facilitated the immigration of
several thousand members of the Falash Mura community, notably in 2010 when the
cabinet approved a plan to allow some 8,000 into the country.
The Falash
Mura, or "wanderers" in Ethiopia's Amharic language, are Ethiopians
of Jewish descent. They are not considered Jewish under the faith's strict
rules because their ancestors converted to Christianity, many under duress, in
the 18th and 19th centuries.
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