The land of Zion
Sep 27th 2007 | JERUSALEM
>From The Economist print edition

How the Jewish National Fund may have to change

WHEN the Jewish National Fund (JNF) was set up a century ago, its mission was 
to buy land in Palestine for settling Jews there, with the coins that diaspora 
Jews the world over put into the fund's distinctive blue-and-white collection 
boxes. Now the fund is fuelling the tension inherent in Israel's desire to be 
both a Jewish state and a democracy. This week a court gave the JNF three 
months to conclude a deal with the Israel Lands Administration (ILA) on how the 
fund's land is managed. 
The JNF owns nearly 2.6m dunums (2,600 square km), 13% of Israel's land, and 
its covenant states that the land can be leased only to Jews; most land in 
Israel can only be leased, not sold outright. Arab Israelis who have tried to 
acquire homes on JNF land have been refused, sometimes after they have signed 
contracts and paid deposits. But most of the actual leasing of JNF land-as with 
almost all the land in Israel-is done by the ILA. Three years ago a group of 
Arab Israelis petitioned the high court, arguing that the ILA, as a government 
body, discriminates illegally by following the fund's Jews-only rule.

The fund argues that it is a private body doing what its contributors gave it 
money to do: buy land for Jews. Its critics counter that at least half of the 
fund's lands were not bought this way, but were seized by the state after their 
Palestinian owners fled the war that accompanied Israel's birth in 1948; they 
were then sold to the fund for a token sum. Jews still owned only 6% of the 
land when the British Mandate for Palestine ended.

There is controversy over the amounts, but between 1949 and 1953 the fund did 
obtain either 1.25m (its version) or 2m dunums this way, for a price then equal 
to somewhere between $4 and $18 per dunum. It says it paid "market value". That 
may conceivably have been so, after the creation of the state suddenly made a 
lot more land easily available to Jews, but it was certainly lower than the 
going rates of tens to hundreds of dollars per dunum in the run-up to Israel's 
birth.

Realistic, righteous or racist?
The government accepted the petitioners' argument, in a way. It struck a deal 
in principle with the JNF: the fund will lease land to non-Jews, but each time 
it does so the ILA will give it an equal amount of land from somewhere else. 
Rina Rosenberg from the Adalah legal centre, the lead petitioner, admits that 
this would end the discrimination in practical terms-non-Jews would be able to 
acquire land anywhere-but argues that it would continue in principle, since the 
JNF would still own the same quantity of land. 

Besides, in the proposed deal the fund would relinquish land in mainly Jewish 
urban areas in the centre of the country and get new land from the north and 
south, where mostly Arabs live. Adalah worries that this could end up making it 
harder for Arab Israelis to obtain land even in those areas, let alone the 
primarily Jewish ones.

But things may not even get that far. The ILA and the JNF have already spent 
two years trying to sew up the details of their deal. The ILA's lawyers gave 
warning that the three months the court has now granted will probably still not 
be enough, though an interim form of the deal will now go into effect. 

Meanwhile, a bill that would make pro-Jewish discrimination in land allocation 
explicitly legal has passed its first reading in the Knesset, Israel's 
parliament, by a large majority. At a time when anti-Israel campaigners are 
seizing on chances to compare Israel with apartheid South Africa, this has 
troubled some Jews both abroad and in Israel: the liberal Haaretz newspaper 
titled its editorial "The racist Jewish state". 

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