Newsweek

Ethiopian Jews Face Increasing Discrimination in Israel

In Ethiopia, 9,000 Jews are waiting to move to Israel—but it may not be the promised land after all.
Protesters during a demonstration of Ethiopian Jews in Tel Aviv on May 3, 2015. A few thousand people marched through Tel Aviv in what was mostly a peaceful demonstration against police brutality directed against the Ethiopian Jewish community in Israel. The demo turned violent in the early evening as clashes broke out between the protesters and the police and 40 people were injured.
Ethiopian Jews in Israel

For five years, Avishai Baruch served proudly as an officer in the Israeli military. Since leaving active duty in 2003, he has been a willing reservist, ready to be called up whenever necessary. But following comments from Israeli Police Commissioner Roni Alsheich—who said at a conference of the Israeli Bar Association in August that it was “natural” to suspect members of Israel’s 140,000-strong Ethiopian community of criminality—Baruch says he will now refuse to serve if he’s called up. He will be joined by about 340 of his fellow Ethiopian reservists, according to a Hebrew-language petition he shared with Newsweek. “We have just had enough,” says Baruch, an Ethiopian-born filmmaker who lives in the central Israeli city of Ramla. “If the Israeli government wants to ask us to do reserve duty, we refuse to do that. If you give us our rights, we will do the obligation.”

Alsheich’s comments—for which he has since apologized—brought into reality-TV show by public vote in 2013, the country as “one of the most racist in the world.”

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