A make or break election for Israeli women?
By SHARI ESHET
09/23/2012 21:40
Civil society issues such as the situation of women need to be at the forefront of the next election and cannot be sidetracked by the security concerns that have been and probably will be a major issue for generations to come.
The Knesset in Jerusalem Photo: Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post
With the start of the new Knesset session in October, all eyes will be on the
elections that must take place sometime between fall 2012 and fall 2013. Last
year at this time, with the Israeli summer social protest movement in the
streets and the establishment of an official committee to look at possible ways
to make major changes to benefit the working middle class, there was hope that
finally social change would become the number one issue for the upcoming
elections.
Sadly, a year later, not much has happened. No new housing has
been built, no help for students has been provided – just a watered down plan
for early childhood options for working parents and a new tax
hike. Attempts to bring people out into the streets again have failed and
unemployment is rising. While the women’s movement has been steadily gaining
strength and maturing and the High Court has condemned gender segregation in
principle, such segregation is still on the rise.
THE HIGH Court issued
two historic rulings – ordering bus segregation to end and, more recently, that
Egged buses in Jerusalem must show women’s faces on their ads, yet the battle
goes on. Most recently, an ad campaign for a new Israeli movie about a group of
Jerusalem high school students, boys and girls, has been showing all over the
country, but in Jerusalem, the girls’ faces were again blacked out on
billboards.
One new solution is specially designed glasses now available
that can blur out the faces of people so that when walking in the street, the
men do not have to see women if they choose not to. The unofficially segregated
buses still run, and now that the haredi (ultra- Orthodox) community may be
forced to serve in the army, the question of how to prevent contact between the
haredi men and women is still a major stumbling block to resolving the induction
controversy.
Civil marriage and divorce is still unsettled, along with
the plight of the agunot – women whose husbands will not grant a get or divorce
– despite more than 27 organizations working in coalition on the issue for
years.
It is clear that this election could become a tipping point.
Either the opponents of equality will win or those who believe in women’s rights
will prevail. Fighting back piecemeal is no longer a viable
option. We have made great progress as more and more grassroots movements
and advocacy campaigns have taken hold. Even more significantly, the mainstream
Israeli voter now understands that gender segregation and other discrimination
against women are not just “women’s issues,” but rather a symptom of a society
that needs to redirect its domestic agenda to stay a viable state with a civil
society that is healthy, strong and compelling to the next generation of
Israelis.
Security needs are always a priority in Israeli
elections. With a nuclear Iran looming, the lack of a peace process, and
the possibility of regime change in war-torn Syria, security will continue to be
a major issue in Israeli elections. This is nothing new. Since the establishment
of the state, it has always been a major issue. But civil society issues such as
the situation of women need to be at the forefront of the next election and
cannot be sidetracked by the security concerns that have been and probably will
be a major issue for generations to come.
Women must not only come out to
vote but also run for office. All politicians, new candidates, and most of all
voters must ensure that women’s status stays at the forefront of the election
campaigns. And once they (whoever “they” may be) take office, a strengthened
movement must see to it that those elected keep their campaign promises – not an
easy task in a parliamentary system where minority parties hold sway out of
proportion to their numbers in the electorate. But a task that needs the highest
priority.
The writer has been the director of the Israel office of the
US-based National Council of Jewish Women for 20 years, and has lived in Israel
for 30.