I am a British immigrant to Israel. I am secular, I read Haaretz, I go to the opera and, worst of all, I am left-wing. According to the mindset of Israel’s minister of national security, I am a guilty party and these are all good reasons for issuing me a one-way ticket to go back where I came from. But he should know that I am not going anywhere, at least not for long. I am guilty of participating in peaceful protests to preserve the soul of the country I love, and if I take a break to renew my energy, I will be back to continue the fight in whatever way is required to combat attempts to rewrite Israel’s Declaration of Independence.

For that is exactly what the present government’s so-called legal reform agenda is attempting to do. I spent many years of my professional life promoting an image of Israel based on its being the only genuine democracy in the Middle East, on its declared belief in the rights of all its citizens, their equality before the law, the freedoms every democracy embraces, of speech, of movement, of worship and yes, to demonstrate and to be different.

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