@@rimaelayoubi1294 Yeah....all those who couldn't say anything more than a "feeling" or "bigotry", using the same logic African-Americans in the US are living under occupation.
@@eleSDSU African Americans r Americans, their skin complexion doesn't change the fact of whom they r besides when america was created those people came in along after all how old is america? Those Palestinians had their parents and grandparents living on that land long before the Zionist regime evr existed and they were forced on taking Israeli passports or else leave as 70 thousand Palestinians were terrorized out of their homeland in 1948.
@@theanoiders9931 maybe I don't say no, I just that becz I had many colleagues when I was in uni that were Palestinians holding Israeli passports and despite the fact they were in Europe, it was obvious that they were afraid to express their opinion regarding the occupation openly and some even admitted that.
My Son went to the Technion University in Haifa. For those of you who do not know, The Techion is considered the M.I.T. of the Middle East. We are Jewish. My son was required to achieve a minimum score of 80% on the entrance exam. An Arab is required only to achieve 60% on the same entrance exam. Why you may ask? Because the Israeli government wants to create an Arab middle class. When my son applied to stay in the dorm he had two roommates. One Jewish and one Muslim. He told me that this was done on purpose by the University to help Jews and Arabs realize we are all human beings.
4 million natives controlled by Israel can't vote for the state that actually controls them. 2 million can't move to 50% of cities in the country because of their native status even though they have citizenship.
The 60% requirement is more like misguided affirmative action similar to what is there in the United States or India. Affirmative action should only be based on economic conditions and not based on any other parameters. Just imagine if you are a Jew born in an extremely abusive, financially poor family where the father or mother or both parents are alcoholics and exhibit all forms of abusive behavior with constant arguments about money. You don't fare well in that environment, are in constant trauma and your cognitive ability is affected, but you may get 70% in the entrance exam. Now, the state inadvertently ends up abusing you by saying, you don't qualify but a economically better off Arab who manages to get 60% gets in? These kind of affirmative action initiatives ends up creating more problems, is abusive and breeds resentment.
Another Arab Israeli young woman was explaining that at university the Arabs would get more time at the exams because this was not their native language. Regarding the small signs of racism, I think they exist everywhere in the World (against Arabs but also against Jews and against non-Moslims by some Muslim people)
Im leaving in Israel 30 years, im not a jewish, im never heard that im Goy, or i cant work in any jewish places bcs im not Jewish. Everybody kind to me, and im kind to everyone. Thank you Israel.
Brother Stephan, like you said: we should all be brothers and sisters! And some of the people living on that land do what they can to live in peace. But here is a question for you: If someone forces themselves into your family home and exterminates those, who lived in some of the rooms and over years pushes the rest of your family to various corners of the home and takes the home ownership papers from you and puts fences around those small areas in your home, where your family ends up having to survive, what would you see them as? Who would you perceive their leaders as??? Thank you for your answer and peace be upon you, brother
@@yunison21 especially since the killing has already gone both ways. I don't want to say who's at fault here since I think there's plenty of blame to go around. But it is worth knowing that the Jews were immediately attacked by all neighboring countries as soon as they arrived. If that hadn't happened they may well not even be militarized. There might be no wall or no soldiers. And your Arab neighbors were perfectly willing to annex you, which I would like to point out Israel hasn't done. They're not evil and neither are you. The situation is what it is mostly because of the British, the Nazis, and the poor treatment of Jews throughout Europe in general, as well as the immediate hostility by all of the neighbors of both Israel and Palestine.
@@johnrollex680 You sound nice and all. But you are forgetting that between "the Jews were immediately attacked by all neighboring countries" AND "as soon as they arrived", there was the time of forceful, militarized expulsion of the citizen of Palestine, who lived on those lands for centuries! Some - not all - of our Jewish brothers prefer to conveniently forget to mention this period of bloodshed - yes, that was the time of nothing less than "ethnic cleansing" not only by forcing people to move, but by mass murdering those of the the locals, who refused to give up the land they inherited from their ancestors - the land which they loved and took care of for many many centuries! WHY do you highlight the neighboring countries attacks and MAKE IT SOUND LIKE "the poor Jews came after WW2 holocaust and instead of being helped, they were attacked"? WHY are you "forgetting" that Palestinians (Muslims and Christians and Jews and Druze and Beduins and many other aboriginal locals) were not asked if they wanted to give the better and bigger parts of their lands to newcomers? Instead they were murdered in case they didn't want to make room to foreigners merely on the grounds that "God promised the land to those foreign Jews"? As if a clear decree from God exists to prove any of that nonsense! If you didn't know this, which is very hard to believe, please do some reading, man! I am wishing you peace! Which is impossible without wishing the whole humanity peace! if you understand this logic, then start by acknowledging facts (that, what took place and for what there is ample proof). Again, Peace be upon you!
@@yunison21 my understanding (and correct me if I'm wrong), is that violence broke out on both sides immediately following the UN resolution. Now I really have no idea what the plan was that the Jews were going to implement. However they didn't really get a choice in the matter seeing as how when they arrived Palestine was already in the midst of a civil war, and then immediately following it they got invaded. I think that it's fair to say the Jews were in a rather bad situation. I don't know if you've ever seen pictures of the Holocaust, but they aren't pretty. It doesn't mean that the Palestinians weren't also in a bad situation. Both can be true at the same time. And in fact that's how I view the situation. It's also worth noting that the Israeli parliament condemned the deir yassin massacre specifically. And it seems that that specific incident is shrouded in so much propaganda and politics that we may never know what really happened. Apparently the survivors were interviewed and said that there were rapes, but then a survivor came forward and said before God that it didn't happen, and Israel refuses to release photographic evidence of the incident. Additionally none of the people involved were convicted, which I'm certainly not here to defend. You also have the issue of settlements which really have no legal, or even much of a strategic justification. It seems the primary motivation is just that netanyahu is catering to the Zionist base. but if you want me to say that Palestinians are 100% in the right and everything they do is justified, and that this whole situation is Israel's fault and it would be simple for them to just leave, obviously that's ridiculous. To me it's a complex issue. I understand if you don't feel that way.
@@mastereppsreturns6586I have no problems with critique. I have a problem with hate and racism. What is your "critique" of israel, and what is your critique of hamas my friend? Show your real face.
@@MrPainfulTruthIsrael is the problem, she didn’t feel the occupation because she throw the Palestinian identity and she’s Israeli but also Arab (israel is a jewish state) just because there are arabs doesn’t mean that they love them, there’s occupation in the West Bank, we don’t want to end the occupation by becoming “Israelis”
@@fira3reoUntill the 60s the Arabs refused call themselves Palestinians, even Arafat said there are no Palestinian people but it's an act to destroy Israel. what Abu Mazen gave you? And how is it occupation if the PA rules there?
Londoner here, only just discovered your channel. Love your questions and the people answering. I understand so much more from you talking to real people than I do from reading the big press. Keep up the good work.
then wake your European friends the fuck up because the hate to Israel need to fucking stop ! you are all gone insane about stuff u have ZERO knowledge about !
I've been following Corey since long time, and I've watched most of his videos. His problem that he always has an answer in his head before asking and is always looking forward to people acknowledging that. I am not claiming that he does edit the videos or mislead the truth, but the way he asks the questions and argues with people, always makes me thinking: Do you want to find out the answer, or you already have yours and want to change People's mind.
I disagree, because if they felt bad inside, and their life was misrable, you would feel unambiguous hate( as an emotion) or very unambiguous opinion. Because when you suppress somebody, then he wants to express himself.
I kind of agree. I can understand that he starts with a very blunt question to sort take people by surprise and perhaps get a more honest answer; but when he keeps stressing people out, it makes them either retreat or become defensive. I think he's not as unbiased as he thinks he is (true for everyone to some degree). He reminds me very much of older educated white liberal South-Africans. Nevertheless, I appreciate his work and find it very interesting.
@@izielisakov3264 but they are helpless too, they have been born into it, these discriminations due to occupation (like the last guy said) they experienced them all their lives. when you feel like you can't change it no matter what, you just learn to live with it.
Little known fact Israel offered citizenship to all of east Jerusalem after 67, most refused it. This is saying it take so long to apply yet he’s lived there his whole life and hasn’t even tried......
@@deflexion3677 I am not criticizing the policy - I am simply saying that the guy is correct. It's not as easy as 'getting the citizenship' when only 7 out 1000 are approved. That's the difference between laws and practicality. It's like the citizens of the USSR on paper had way more rights than any modern democracy, but in practice, none of it was actually enforced or applied so day to day - they didn't. But politicians in the USSR would point to their document and say 'LOOK LEGALLY WE HAVE SO MANY MORE RIGHTS THAN YOU'. But as Justice Scalia described it - it's a 'paper guarantee'. It doesn't mean anything in practical terms - it's for politicians to point to in order to score points. What Israel is doing may or may not be the right thing to do (I am not knowledgeable enough on the subject to comment), but based on pure numbers, he is correct that while he is "allowed" to get citizenship, in practical terms, he is not.
Black Americans have similar complaints. A lot of disparity in treatment is due to a significantly higher crime reate in the black community. Might be the same in Arab neighborhoods.
They would not be the minority if you include Gaza and the West Bank. It’s about 6-7 Million each of Jews and Arabs each then. I believe that is why Israel is focused on ethnically cleansing those areas. Because if they were all to get votes then they would not be minorities anymore and it could not be a Jewish state.
@@trevoraugustus2249 considering the exponential growth of the Palestinian territories, I don't think ethnic cleansing is the goal. Israel has been providing Gaza with free electricity and water. They provided healthcare & jobs. Everything Palestinian government failed to provide.
When the one Arab guy talks about how the nation-state law is a precursor to worse -- he speaks eloquently, by the way -- the interviewer kind of scoffs. I think that's an unfortunate reaction. If you really wanted to understand the issues here you'd ask how the nation-state law makes Arab Israeli's feel -- some of whom have lived there for decades and served in the military. That law says, by the way, that he right to exercise national self-determination" in Israel is "unique to the Jewish people," which just sends a bad signal. It was an unnecessary law designed to put people in their places -- like the confederate statues in the US South.
@@maevadim4548 Nope. The Arab Nation States have been ethnically cleansing their minority Peoples for years. I was in eastern Turkey in 1988, just in time to see Kurds streaming across the Border, as Saddam Hussein was busily killing them off. In 1948 the Jordanians ethnically cleansed Jews from areas of Israeli Territory they captured during the Arab League Invasion. Arab segregation is imposed upon themselves. Arab Palestinians have demonstrated that their autonomous governance bodies will not stop them from suicide bombs, random attacks upon Israelis. So controlled entry into heavily Israeli Areas is necessary. Arab Israelis with full citizenship are not controlled at all. They are Israelis.
what does her being in a mall have to do wiht anything!!!!! it doesnt change the fact that Israeli mark Palestinian houses with a red mark so their houses can be attacked and burned? The only two people that have done this before are isis and the nazis. What does that say about Israel? Watch the video bellow explains the brutal conditions that Palestinians citizens of Israel have to live under. Never given a permit to build. Isreal haven’t given Palestinians in lud building permits in 10 years? Israel destroys Palestinians houses whenever they please even though they pay the same taxes to the Jewish citizens. Rubbish thrown in their areas and is never collected for their area. Meanwhile they Isreal is building tons of jewish only neighbourhoods that are servised perfectly. There are countless of ways Isreal discriminates against the Palestinian from not giving them the insurance so they can open businesses to the mayor who doesn’t give servises to the Palestinians even though they pay the same taxes. I know many Palestinians citizens of Israel and they have told me the horrific stories of how they’re treated. It’s ugly it’s brutal and it’s beyond heartbreaking. Please no one believes your lies anymore. The mask has fallen everyone can see Israel for the terrorist it is. Here’s a little video that shows you a little glimpse of hell Palestinian citizens of Israel have to live in the worst democracy in the Middle East. th-cam.com/video/MpW409WOgwE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=ECUe8uYVHvAPTVgU th-cam.com/video/8RVoPZPKxLY/w-d-xo.htmlsi=p0I5FQsNacabVFjb
The woman saying houses are going to be demolished bcoz they were built without permit , that's why she feels she is under occupation is the most ignorant thing I've heard
So glad to hear you say that . My grandfarther was A ISRAELIE JEW and spoke highly of the Arabs and had many Arab friends and unfortunitly the media will often say there is hatred between the two cultures and yes it exists but not everyone has them views and I Am so glad that you are willing to speak your feelings . ❤ peace is what this world needs
@@slsstar100 yea cry about it boo, because we have ALL the right in the world to hate what the zionists have done to our families and OUR land. But dont you worry because freedom is soon to be, we wont ever forgive what your people have done, and you, clearly, are not the victims. Peace.
Occupation..?! Who occupied what? The Jews their own country? What an impertinence, meantime the British Had occupied England and the Russians occupied not only Königsberg, Chechnia, the Krim and half of Poland, but Moscow too!! Terrible..! And the local arabs who appeared abruptly after the 6 day war as 'palestinian people'... just miraculous!
Alexander Huzau it was their country 1500 ago !!! Not anymore !!! This is occupation ! People lived there and Jews came from other parts of the world and took other people’s lands. I don’t care if your grandfather lived there 2000 ago or else give the Americas to the natives
@@desertfalcon2786 By the Arab system of accounting, the only event that bestows ownership is the Arab conquest of the 7th century. The only local population that matters is the Arab population.
Because we have minorities law. If there is last place in certain class in university, the minority will get the place instead of the jew which is the majority most of the time, it's partly our will to moderate them and make them integrated
It's quite funny that if you had a group of 100 people half Arab half Jewish dressed in similar clothing you would have great difficulty telling them apart. Learn to live together Humans of Earth!
6:15 Btw, I went to Haifa University. We had 2 Arabs in class, and despite multiple efforts to communicate with them, they preferred to be with themselves.
I had to laugh when he explained how rude the people are to them at Social Services. I'm a Jew living in Jerusalem and there is absolutely no discrimination . . . they treat everyone equally badly. They must just hate their jobs!
I visited Israel from the UAE and noticed that Israelis can be pretty rude with each other. So, I didn't take it personally as an Arab; it seems to be their style.
@@saadalameri living in a perpetual state of war makes you be on your high alert all the time and to be honest its just a posture that they put up but once you know them a little bit better they are warm people
Israeli's are not know for their customers service, but that's to anyone. Having said that, the DMV in the U.S. also treats everyone equally like trash. Although there are a few sweet people here and there, they're the exception to the rule.
@@orange7916 You don't get the point. You can call it what you like, but there's no lack of opportunity. If it is occupation it's not really oppressive.
@@vivaldesque occupation is occupation no matter what degree it is and you are so contradictive in your opinions first you said they are not living under occupation and now you are saying it is occupation but less oppressive .you probably never been the oppressed one and would never understand how it feels to be oppressed
@@orange7916 I disagree. In this video they interviewed Arab Israelis. They are not living in Gaza or the West Bank, but in Israel itself. I don't believe this is an occupation at all. Many Arab Israelis recognize that their situation is not bad, and are quite happy in Israel. Gaza and The West Bank have autonomy and self rule. The main problem now is the blockade of Gaza due to the election of Hamas. Second, Israel has been building settlements in disputed territories. Otherwise, I don't believe that the term occupation is appropriate.
@@vivaldesque i wonder how the arabs actually identify as israeli or palestinian ,in terms of their history ,culture and heritage they are palestinian , from your reply it tells me that you actually acknowledge israel as a country so there is no point in this argument and i personnaly think palestinian and israeli should live as one nation without one goverment/religion having full control of the administration
Corey What you do is great, and so important. But you can't (shouldnt) interrupt everybody you interview, and expose what you think, when you are interviewing them. It is really pushy, uncomfortable for them and doesnt put you in a good light. They actually have a lot of very relevant points and the more comfortable people are around you, the more they will be willing to share what they feel with you*. Keep doing what you do, From a global citizen :)
When did it shut them down instead of facilitating a clear answer to his focused question - he is surveying - it is not a feeling fest nor it is meant to be eg, How do you experience occupation - "I feel the occupation in the air' - should he focus her or let her waffle on?
Unfortunately normal people like you have no idea at all - He is surveying views on a topic - it is his role to keep the replies on 'track' of the research question - otherwise the research is completely invalid - Don't try to pass Survey 101 anytime soon - Perhaps read up and educate yourself - have a good day @@saltybrackishfresh
@@skpn123you can continue to cope for your bias in every way possible and never reach a conclusion. This is not how a good-faith conversation takes place. And without good faith there is no logic . This is propaganda and it’s sad to watch ppl fall for it so hard. I’m Jewish and I have studied this conflict for quite a while. Corey often incorrectly translates their langauge to sound more aggressive (examples on basically every video and in the comment section) And lacks empathy for non jews
I feel that when you talk to the Arabs, you have sort of a biased demeanor to the Israeli side, although I love your videos, feels like you have an upset sort of undertone in some of the things they say, I feel like you should listen more on how they feel and not shove in your pro Israeli rhetoric. Idk maybe I’m just taking it the wrong way, love the vids tho
Yeah... I get that... yet sometimes it’s just that he’s correcting them because the answer is not logical.. some of the answers talk about fucked up racism, but not occupation, while saying- “this is the reason I feel that I am under occupation ״... This is a very important distinction.
As a non-arab non-israeli foreigner, agreed. He is not always pro-israel, but he almost always lacks tact and does not consider how his thoughts will be received by who he is talking to.
@@gareth9213 challenging people with an opposing viewpoint is often good, but the manner in which he does so makes people feel more tense and defensive
0:35 honey, you can't go to other arab countries not because of "israeli occupation" but because your fellow arab nations do not dignify the country you're living in as a nation. blame it on them rather than your homeland (ie if you even are loyal to it).
@@user-3w9jf4r5qz is it not natural that you would have grudge against me if I were to be thrust upon your inhabited land? Europeans and other foreigners living in the midst of a region you do not fit into !?
@@maevadim4548 OK, you obviously do not realize there are nearly 2 million Arabs/Palestinians who are Israeli citizens. Those are the people interviewed in this video. They are *citizens" of Israel, and their license plates are the same.
@@maevadim4548 All civilian Israel license plates are yellow and have Hebrew and Arabic inscriptions. This applies to all Israelis, Jews, Arabs, Christians, Bedouin, Druse, etc. Again, I have the sense you are not distinguishing between Palestinian Arabs who are Israeli citizens and those who are not.
Occupation already happened and is still happening and with more occupation there will be more discrimination isreal is trying to keep a good image other than that they woulda loved to kill every palastinen "snake" as they say
If you build anything anywhere in the known universe without a permit you will have to take it down. My mom’s neighbor, who is Jewish tried to add a room onto his own house that he owned and didn’t have the right permits. The gov comes with a crane, no warning and no questions and just took it down for him. It makes no difference if you are Jewish, Christian, Muslim or from outer space the Israeli gov will not wait for a court battle over this issue. They will take it down that’s it. Because the Arabs are breaking the law they then blame Israel. There are a lot of shady builders in Israel. Everyone remembers the synagogue collapse from 2 years ago in Givat Zeev. That was because they moved into the building before they had the permits and it hadn’t been inspected. Many people were injured and 3 died. How absolutely ridiculous to blame improper and illegal building on a fabricated occupation. Imagine if everyone just was allowed to build illegally anywhere. I mean just imagine the liability, fighting, the destruction of important sites, how can anyone be so stupid to think it’s a form of oppression. It’s just the law and it’s for everyone’s safety and well being.
the second lady seemed to just throw phrases not related to each other, so she felt she was under occupation because there were some houses under the threat of demolition and that other countries didn't want to accept her... That's what brainwashing is: repeating phrases with no real arguments... then I kept listening and it didn't get better "something is wrong in the air"? I felt that when I was told not to show my shoulders and knees in Arab countries, so I left. And you can also lose a job in Arab countries, for showing a map with Israel on it, or mentioning Jews, especially in positive context.
Neither the interviewer nor the interviewees ― understand the term "occupation". Just one example ― the guy who wasn't allowed to work in a kosher restaurant ― wouldn't be allowed to work there ― even if it would be Palestine; it's just part of their religion. There are always collisions between cultures; a totally separate issue.
The state of compromise arguably effects the perception of all and certainly those who do worse out of those compromises of whether it's an occupation or nor.
Is it rasism to fire white worker from restaurant because it turns to be a Japanese restaurant and the owner wants the workers to look japanese? No, it's just a style.
They talked about discrimination which is different than occupation, but I think he should have realized that he has a communication problem here and find a better way to ask the question. Some Arabic could have helped, plus more Hebrew.
@@sasino4569 because to say yes is profoundly stupid and duplicitous “I’m under occupation because I feel it in the air because a security guy looked at me funny once” is basically their case
6:43 He’s literally at Haifa University complaining he’s a “second class citizen” when he clearly, is NOT. Arabs have all the same rights, responsibilities and access as Jews and Christians in Israel!
No they dont, theres is a law that determines that israel is a JEWISH state and only jewish people can exercise self determination. So theyre literally second class citzens
well for them in Arabic Israel is a synonym for occupation - once you understand it everything makes logic. the occupation in Corey's sence is Israelis' fabrication.
The irony is that they complain about the nation state law but every Arabic state has such clause of arabic nation state in their constructions excluding native people like Kurds, Amazighs, Coptes, Subsahaian Africans in Sudan (they killed 2 Millons of them)..
These Arabs have Israeli citizenship. The Palestinians in West Bank are MOST CERTAINLY UNDER OCCUPATION according to every measure of international law. These silly videos are for PRO ISRAEL folks that are so ignorant they can't point to West Bank or Gaza on a map.
Fess 007 as an arab, im going to have to disagree with you because first, why would israel train thier enimies? Seceond, saddam hussain was never in the CIA and, no, he was not appointed since America never had any colonies, third, the british did not appoint anyone in saudi arabia.
lol what ? you get 10 years for throwing a rock on IDF when they come destroy your house to build new settlements for new comers from the east not occupation loooooooooool "without being tortured to death or jailed without trial for life" what ? there are hundreds in jail from 13 to 90 for defending their land, learn before you speak or you wanna be a clown ?
Well I don't know if you've noticed but authoritarian countries tend to always have lower crime rates than countries that aren't. I'm really sorry we couldn't comply with your wishes Mr. Snowflake but it is how the world must be. It is harsh but it is the only thing that works.
"I live under occupation, because when I meet a Jew I feel something wrong in the air". "I live under occupation because I build a house without a licence and they want to demolish it". "I live under occupation because I can't travel to Arab countries because they are at war (although jewish israelies also can't)". "... because there are some differences between Arab people and Jewish people, but I don't have anything on my mind". "because I have to speak hebrew to assimilate - like in any country of the world". "You feel it but I can't specifically tell you". "I don't think we live under ocupation, Jews and Arabs live together in Israel; maybe is different in the West Bank". Okay that's fair. " - I live under occupation. - As a citizen? - Yes. - With all the righs?. - Yes. - Why? - Because I'm Arab."
Those are the arab of inside , they are melted in israel and theu have chosen to live that humiliation. There are 3 types of palestinians The Palestinians of the inside The Palestinians of the west bank (under occupation) The Palestinians in gaza ( under siege )
@@hannibalbarca8411 for me arguements like yours are more 'separatists' than what actually happens in Israel, and quite racist. Arabs inside Israel live assimilated in israelie society; of course there are cultural problems, as in many countries. But your ideology is quite harmful. Idealistic. As most pro-palestinian to be honest.
@@blackalien6873 no he has a lot of videos where people send in their questions and he asks them to Israelis. He has other videos saying "did Israel steal the land off palestine" and in that video he poses questions which would support Palestine. So clearly if he is asking why they stole land off palestine he's not a hard supporter of israel
@@alexanderzerka8477 There is a world apart between neutrality and leading questions. He is an Israeli in Israel. Nobody thinks he is neutral. However, he could at least let their answers flow naturally, instead of pushing them in the direction he wants them to go.
@@alexanderzerka8477 I'd counter that when he asks Israelis loaded questions, inflammatory statements, he preps them before in order for them to be not completely offended. Numerous videos, including the one you mention, come off that way. And he does cherry pick, as far-right politics seems to have taken over the knesset you never see anyone with that type of view being interviewed. At least I haven't seen it on the channel..
Mostly, they bring up micro-agressions and the fact that there is a law defining the main ethnicity of the country. Then the interviewer starts feeding the interview subjects his opiinion. Very biased.
All answers are related to occupation. When you aren’t free in your own land because it’s been occupied and the occupier micromanages you life, yes it is due to occupation.
I hope that the Israeli officials are watching these videos and taking note of what they could change in order that Arab citizens and residents lose the feeling of 2nd class status.
@Robert Pearce - What the hell is a "Christian country?" That is a religion not a nationality. I sure as hell wouldn't want to live under any religious dictatorship. So called 'Christianity' has killed more people than any other religion. That's one reason I'm an atheist.
@Yass Tomi They are a minority living in a democratic country, where the government is elected by the majority. they do have equal representation rights in the parliament. In fact, the biggest Arab party is the third largest party in the Knesset right now. Moreover, by your logic, native Americans should govern the united states cause the European settlers took their lands, the Celts and Druids should govern the great Britain cause the Romans, then the Anglo Saxons, then Nordic people out of Scandinavia destroyed their homes and religion and then took their lands, Gauls should govern France cause the Franks outnumbered and assimilated them, and last but definitely not least, ancient Egyptians and Berbers should govern all of north Africa, cause Arab tribes out of what is today Saudi Arabia conquered all those places by force during a period of 60 years starting in 649 AD. :D
Bozonini what a shallow idiot!! I'n Catholic and live in the UAE, i don't mind that, but if the country is going to categorize me and my rights as a citizen based on my religion!? Then yes that's bigotry and discrimination especially, if i'm the land' owner
The girl that didn't want to show face is an example why interviews like this must be done in language they can't express themselves completely. When they keep going in English she can't give perfect example, once she changed language, she talks without hesitation. This is what might happen in today's world a lot of media conveyed messages to the world in English and from reporters understanding & interpretation. Maybe some sentiments are lost and therefore western people/world in general become hateful and resent a certain group of people
implying a man cant be discriminated against because his ID is the right color is wild. the fact that his ID has to be a certain color to make sure he can use roads or access areas tells you clearly there is an occupation
Sorry out of topic but thought to share In India ruling political party BJP have spread so much hatred towards minorites especially Muslims thru hate propaganda by MADE-UP claims, misinformation, disinformation. A Muslim life is even cheaper than a dog's one. Govt arrested many journalists, activists, scholars just bcoz they were speaking TRUTH. Here Muslims are being mob lynched and brutally murdered in POGROMs (not riots) and when relative of victims go to file FIR (complaints) then police arrests them only instead of attackers.
@@SaddamHussain-we9ec Modhi’s government is as corrupt as Netanyahu’s and as intent on dehumanizing Muslim minority groups. I hope we see justice in both of these countries
@Moljo yes. there are thriving christian communities in egypt, syria, turkey, ethiopia, jordan, iran, and many of the arab countries, lebanon in particular. prior to the US invasion of iraq the same could be said there. where persecution occurs its extremist groups and not state sanctioned violence. there is NOTHING comparable to israel’s ethnic genocide against palestinians. so anyway eat shit
that isn't true. he's claiming discrimination because he's got a permit of permanent residency but not citizenship. he's an east jerusalemite so his situation is a lot more different to the others in the video. he's not claiming that his id has to be a certain colour to access certain roads etc. hes basically pissed off at israel being a jewish country and being inconvenienced for 1 day a year when his commute becomes 30 mins instead of 5 mins. it's a bit like living in saudi arabia and getting pissed off that alcohol is illegal and punishable by lashings there just because you want a beer once in a while. you live in a country that has a certain culture, you respect that culture - that is the social contract. another example is that polygamy isn't legal in the uk and polygamist marriages arent recognised here either but they are in pakistan - are you seriously gonna claim occupation because you chose to take on 3 wives in another country where it was ok and now have decided to move to another country where the law doesn't deem it legal?
Ask all those same people what's better? Living under "occupation" in Israel or living in Syria or Iraq? Where are they the most free to enjoy their lives?
They have a country, their country I'd palestine y should they live in another? Or maybe we should ask them how about living in Gaza or the West bank? ☺
Both Arabs and Jews recognize this breach in trust and how it needs to be addressed. For me personally, I am Jewish. I live in the West Bank. I enjoy very much talking to Arabs that work in the supermarket and other places. I always find that they are very nice. It makes me sad because I see the humanity in the conflict. There are many good people just living their lives, trying to provide for their families. I wish there was a solution to the problem but so far there has been little progress toward peace. I am humble enough to say I don't have the answer.
Lol for the arabs you even are the problem because you are a "settler", but people often focus on the consequence rather than the cause...Israeli occupied the West Bank and Gaza for military control, to prevent terror attack, I remember watching a documentary abou the 2002 terrorist attack at a hotel during Pessah, and a member of Shabak said he's been tracking down the terror cell that caused it but could not reach them and kill them because they were from Area A, which is strictly under Palestinian Authority, so Israeli weren't allowed, that was caused the "Operation Defensive Shield"....and I think Israeli govnmt allowed people to settle in the West Bank for security reasons (control the border) but also religious reasons, to secure access and reapply the sovereignity on the Holysite in Hebron, I was born to a Muslim father and a Christian mother, and I find disappoiinting, that Jews can't go pray on Temple Mount without the Army and they're only allow to visit the Patriarch Cave like several times a year, it's a disgrace for me!!
@@anissadiraa5310The disgrace is that jews stole the land of Palestine in the first place, Palestine would have allowed jews to visit holy sites if it wasn't for the war
@@cincoy3679it is worse today. The fact is the problem is the hatred taught in Palestinian society of the Yahud… every Yahud in the land is considered a settler and so there is no compromise. Until Palestinian society starts teaching towards peace and coexistence with Israel we will not see any changes.
Wtf! They described non issues, I have more problems in my own country and I’m a Citizen of my country and in the majority! They should try living under arabs, they’d have zero rights!
to be honest, they don't feel OCCUPATION, they feel DISCRIMINATION. That is a BIG difference, not good either of them, BUT natural. In hungary gypsies are discriminated also, in US black people etc. No connection to appartheid, no connection to "occupation", only a natural thing against minorities.
@nature giver Just because you supposedly contributed more in taxes does not mean you are entitled to anything. There's a pattern here: "money buys rights and loyalty". That's not the way it works.
@@matiasbrachini8741 go tell it to the UN. Not the jews are responsible for Israels existance, but UN itself. Jews only defended what they GOT from international community, Palestinians went against it, and they lost it. Sad story, but true and not the jew's mistake
I want everyone to understand - if this person would ask a Jew, a repatriant from Russia or Ukraine he would get the same list of problems: 1. when you look for job - in particular types of job whey ask you if you served in IDF, and most older repatrians did not serve. 2. Any non-religious, and not-keeping-kosher chef (Jewish or not Jewish) probably would no be able to work in a glat-kosher restaurant, because where are alot of rules, and mistakes cannot be made. 3. And yes, Russian Jews could also say they there are not enough Russians in the government. There is about 1,500,000 Russian speaking Jews in Israel. probably much more since the Ukrainian war. About 2,000,000 Arabs. There is a lot of benefits that only Arabs receive in Israel and not Jews: 1. free education 2. free health care. 3. Arabs often build housing without permits 4. there is Arnona (some type of housing tax) that is a real burden for everyone, and in my city is about 800 shekel a month. In Arab municipalities they pay at least 60% less of this tax. 5. Muslims can get married in Israel, atheists (most Russians are) or non-Jews (also plenty) need to go abroad to get married. 6. Arabic is the second official language of Israel, Russian language is obviously not. 7. There are tons of public schools in every city that teach only in Arabic. You cannot find public schools that teach in Russian or in English, or in any other language. BTW, all the Arabs in the video speak with a heavy accent, some hardly can speak Hebrew. Because, although they were born in Israel, they learned in Arabic schools. It's a choice, they could choose Hebrew school, no one forces them to attend Arabic school. Finally, when my family came to Israel from Soviel Union, we totally felt like second type citizens, my parents (an engineer and a pianist) worked as cleaners for a decade. What I am saying here - as a Russian speaking person I could feel discriminated in Israel but I am not. Because I am not constantly looking for the signs of being discriminated. We build this country together! Post Soviet community brought lots of incredible positive things to Israel. We mad it better. Just like any other nation here in Israel. The question was simple - "Do you think that you are under occupation?" Their reasons are laughable! This is not occupation. Google what other nations under occupation go thru. As a Russian Jew I can explain to you how it was during Nazi occupation. And that nice Arab student from Haifa University rightfully complains that "there is no trust between Arabs and Jews, just like there is no trust between religious Jews and non-religious Jews in Israel". He is right. As a nation - up until recently we were not very united. It has changed because of the recent war. Maybe after Oct 7 this your man understood better why it's hard for Jews and Christians to trust Muslim community. We have t*rror at*aks every few weeks, carried out by Arabs. It has been like this since I remember it, and I remember it since 1991 when I came to Israel. At the same time we absolutely adore Arab citizens who serve in IDF for example or, who simply supports Israel - their country that gives them so much.
what about the fact that Israeli mark Palestinian houses with a red mark so their houses can be attacked and burned? The only two people that have done this before are isis and the nazis. What does that say about Israel? Watch the video bellow explains the brutal conditions that Palestinians citizens of Israel have to live under. Never given a permit to build. Isreal haven’t given Palestinians in lud building permits in 10 years? Israel destroys Palestinians houses whenever they please even though they pay the same taxes to the Jewish citizens. Rubbish thrown in their areas and is never collected for their area. Meanwhile they Isreal is building tons of jewish only neighbourhoods that are servised perfectly. There are countless of ways Isreal discriminates against the Palestinian from not giving them the insurance so they can open businesses to the mayor who doesn’t give servises to the Palestinians even though they pay the same taxes. I know many Palestinians citizens of Israel and they have told me the horrific stories of how they’re treated. It’s ugly it’s brutal and it’s beyond heartbreaking. Please no one believes your lies anymore. The mask has fallen everyone can see Israel for the terrorist it is. Here’s a little video that shows you a little glimpse of hell Palestinian citizens of Israel have to live in the worst democracy in the Middle East. th-cam.com/video/MpW409WOgwE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=ECUe8uYVHvAPTVgU th-cam.com/video/8RVoPZPKxLY/w-d-xo.htmlsi=p0I5FQsNacabVFjb
Agreed with most comments on here that occupation and discrimination may have cause and effect but they are not the same question. The lady that the interviewer hostily silenced was closer to answering the question. The lack of peace due to the occupation DOES limit her travel to other Arab countries. The guy talking about universities being a place of dialogue and that conversation and acknowledgement is a good start. The interviewer immediately pushed back emphasizing that there is no discrimination. I also don’t understand why you didn’t let people speak in their preferred language off the bat since you clearly have English, Hebrew, and the ability to translate from Arabic. The reason this is important is that when people don’t speak in their preferred language they sound to others like they are less intelligent/eloquent. Also the interviewer keeps asking people if they feel oppressed and if he doesn’t agree he pushes back with generalims like I work in Tel Aviv uni and I see “a lot” of Arabs. I think these conversations are important and this dialogue is a good start just giving heartfelt constructive criticism to the interviewer. But keep up the good work these conversations need to happen. I’m an Israeli Jew btw (that is the lens I come from).
Can you as an israeli je ws as you claim to be , travel all over the lovely middle east ? Perhaps visit all the je wish communities in gaza , saudi ar abia , iraq, egypt , algeria etc?
The Palestinians are not welcome anywhere in the Arab world, there's reasons for it, i know this is a late reply you probably wouldn't read or maybe you no longer alive, who knows after china's virus in 2020 :) but all in all there's a long history of Palestinian people destabilizing Arab countries around the world, through extremism and Terrorism, so ye that's why they can't travel there.
A suggestion: if you take upon yourself to translate the things your interviewees are saying - do it correctly, and in an objective way. When a person gives you a statement which you didn't like - you still should translate his exact words and show the things the way they really are. For example, the first guy. Seems like he wanted to voice a certain opinion, and you decided to leave it out - change his words. If it was a simple mistake, and by no means you were trying to turn the statement to something it wasn't - please consider finding a real professional translator, someone who'll do it better than you.
For me, the most impactful aspect is not the answers themselves but the look in their eyes as they are choosing their words carefully. I noticed that the Jewish Israelis throughout this video series always have direct, often thoughtful answers. I may not always agree, but I honestly admire that sense of privilege and courage to speak clearly on a topic. The Palestinians in the occupied lands also give direct, unapologetic answers. Although their positions are often harsh, and again I don't always agree, I can appreciate their feelings of pain and the deep wounds that drive their reality. But these Arab Israelis, somehow somewhere in the middle, have that cautious, guarded look that I have seen so many times in the eyes of minorities in the West.
Thats the look of having to defend a feeling you have with facts/experiences. Its the confrontation with the delusion, instant confusion and chaos ensues. Happens when u ask a minority in the west to provide examples of experienced oppression.
Yeah, its when a foreign people (jews from Europe and America) comes and takes your god-given land where the blood of your blood has been living for centuries.
As a Jewish Israeli it saddens me to hear these stories. I do not doubt their truth. I think the Arab Israeli population is a going to become a bigger problem unless as many as possible of these, many of them relatively simple examples of discrimination, are put right. Having said that, it will take a long time no matter what for Arabs to feel fully Israeli.
Unfortunately Islam will never surrender to non Muslims. Muslims in Europe also play the victim card. Let’s not forget how Islam conquered so many countries.
@@arsenal_84when he says Arab district in Jerusalem it means that Arabs just tend to live there. Towns or districts where they tend to live and group up. It's not like they limited to live only there.
the difference really is there. you must think along the lines of what the young man said about the clerks. if you are a jew, there are 20 booths open and when you are arab there are only 2. and when you ask about that, you either get no answer or a silly answer. if a jew immigrates into Israel, they would have no problem getting citizenship. if an arab wants to do that, he will be looking at years of waiting, obstructions being put up etc etc. all legal, but the difference is obvious.
I don’t think you listened well. The 20 booths were not for Jews, they were for residents of Jerusalem. This man does not have citizenship in Jerusalem. The 2 booths were for I believe international affairs. He even said that if he were a Palestinian with citizenship he’d be allowed to go to the 20 booths.
As someone who had been born under soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia in early 80’ I have to say I see many similarities. This all is about people. Unfortunately politics and common sense can’t cooperate anywhere in the world. Peace to all. ✌️🤞
@@tamsinwood2 Are you living under occupation? I really think you guys (like the guys in the video) confuse between occupation and feeling like a stranger in a country. Occupation is a whole different thing. Also I'm really sorry that that student feels like a victim of racism since she was checked by a security guard and a Jew wasn't (though he should have been), but hey, I've never heard of a Jew trying to stab someone in a bus station, or blow himself up. I have especially never heard of a phenomenon where thousands of people were killed by those things. I find it ridiculously hypocritical how a security guard who lightly discriminated someone bothers people more than the actual terror victims who are the reason he does it.
@@kfirlevy7635 No, I'm not living under occupation. Hence, I said that I see the SIMILIARITIES. It's all about "othering" and excluding people who often look visibly different. I do not condone terrorism, but unfortunately I can understand people's desperation. It's like Nelson Mandela in South Africa or the IRA in Ireland. You can only oppress people for so long before they rise up and fight back. The optics are that the "David" in this situation are the Palastinians and the "Goliath" is the Isreali state.
What similarities do you see? the only form of discrimination I can think of in Israel is that Arabs might get checked by security guards more, but that's because security guards have to check them more often because 99.9% of terror attacks (and terror attacks happen regularly in Israel), are committed by Arabs, and many of them are on buses. While security could be tighter on Arabs can feel discriminating towards them, it's not racism, it's perfect pragmatism.
@@kfirlevy7635 Occupation is not a different thing, this is what occupation is after 75 years looks like. Egypt was occupied as well, occupation does not mean stopping daily life, it means your people who lived there are now controlled by some goverment that came from some other place and established itself as the ruler by force
The cook guy getting fired because he's not Jewish is not because of occupation. It's because they became a religious, Kosher food joint. If I was working for a restaurant that became Halal, they would do the same to me. If I worked as a cook for a burger place and they switched to a new style of food that I am not qualified for, they would do the same.
I don't think your rather aggressive way of asking questions is promoting thoughtful answers. Rather, you make people nervous and defensive. You have the power of providing context* and standing behind the camera whereas the interviewees are in a vulnerable position. You express your own opinions and judgements while interviewing, reminiscent of a teacher interviewing a student. Thanks for your endeavour to bring voices from 'the street', but we all need to be cautious when interpreting information like this. * Posing and framing questions. Choosing who to ask, who to show and in what order. The choice of words in the translation, the comments you give in the subtitles.
In Arabic saying “I am free” in such contexts basically means something along the lines of “that’s what I think” or “that’s what I want”. So the translation is not really inaccurate.
@@Criticalmass96 i speak arabic and no "i am free" and "that's what i think" is not same thing...are you stupid in no language is "i am free" and "that's what i think" means the same including the english i am writing in
@@rimaelayoubi1294 hahaha you were talking about knowing what the first guy was tginking and now changed to a different person. You are just a brainwashed uninformed person. Listen to the last interview again, you need it.
@@eleSDSU I m being practical and said my reasons, I heard everything very well and it was obvious that despite the "Israeli" passports they still feel they r under occupation, not surprised with the apartheid roads and second class citizen descrimination
I can’t believe how mild the discrimination is considering what’s going on. Have you interviewed Jews living in Muslim nations to see how they are treated?
Well Before 1948(creation of israel) here in egypt it was good...We payed 72 million last year to renovate the synagogues left and Judaism is an official religion in egypt.
Regarding today's events the history is a backdrop, the situation is that Palestinians have 224 hostages, and Israel wants them back, if hamas gave the hostages back and turned themselves in then it would stop, but that won't happen, so we may end up in ww3 because hamas went over board
Jews living in muslim country far better in European country throughout history, they were massacred in europe but thrive in Muslim nations for centuries until the creation of Zionist.
Hello? Lebanon. Syria. Jordan has a small but safe Christian community. Iraq was better for Christians before neocons wrecked their country, and it’s slowly springing back to life. Etc.
fuaad Mohamoud Part-2 I do completely agree with you about pre revolution Iran. If Democracy spreads to Iran that will be a huge improvement for all the Middle East. What do you think? P.S. the Persian people are fantastic!
If living in Israel means living under occupation, then occupation is a PARADISE. The Israeli Arabs have the same rights as the Israeli Jews, and they actually have less commitments then the Israeli Jews. The Israeli Arabs aren’t obligated to serve in the army, and although they can choose to do national service instead (for 1/2 years) they usually choose not to. they get much more scholarships to university then the Israeli Jews. They are accepted to the the universities much easily then others. They are doctors, managers, scientists, parliament members. They live in a prospering, vibrant and democratic country. They should thank god everyday when they wake up that they live in Israel and that they don’t live under the Palestinian Authority, which would have made their life miserable and would have made this country just like any other non-democratic, violent and poor Country in the Middle East.
The experiences shared primarily express systemic discrimination, which is probably correlated to the existing conflict. And such discrimination is usually very hard to pin point. As a minority myself, I feel similarly discriminated in my own country but without the larger context of an existing armed conflict that is generally divided along ethnic and religious lines.
i want to ask you a question as a minority, when you walk on the pavement, someone walks the opposite direction and before passing by each other you catch the person looking at you for a second and then keeps walking. do you think he looked at you because youre a minority or was it because you were just another random stranger in the street and the look had no hidden meaning?
@@shimonbiton2163 I suppose it would depend on the neighbourhood I am in. If it is a monoethnic neighbourhood, it could be the former, although probably more due to curiousity rather than malevolence.
@@bobkee bob , did you group and its allies repeatedly try to genocide the majority? Did the group enslave the majority for 1400 years as dhimmi? Thats the context here .
Arab Muslims are not accustomed to living as a minority . The Jews have learned to accommodate itself and thrive as a minority but that is a unique skill most people don’t have 😊
@@romamak2367 haha what a joke it's the root, if u occupy my country damn well u are the major problem, can u live in the same house with a person that stole it from u
@@hamzahamim1863 1. There was never such a country named Palestine, so my guess you are referring to the land, not the country. 2. Jews have always lived in this land, but as a minority for almost 2000 years. 3. Many Jews started to come to this land at the end of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th century but, they either bought the land from the Ottomans or used an Ottoman law where if you build a house with a roof on top of it, you cannot demolish it. 4. The British had divided the land for both Arabs and Jews depending on the majority in that area. Jews have accepted the offer. Arabs started a war, if you start a war and you lose then prepare to lose some of your territories. That's how it worked for thousands of years in every war. As for the west bank, Arabs were offered a state 3 times but they refused. And another fact, west bank, and Gaza were under Jordan and Egypt before 67, but they never fought for their freedom against Jordan and Egypt, why's that? I guess you know the answer. There are no Palestinians, there are arabs.
@@rimaelayoubi1294 Occupation is what Mapuches in Chile experience. Occupation is the holding/controlling of an area by a *foreign* military force so given that 1) this is not the case and 2) all the answers they gave are unrelated to this concept I agree that they should look up what occupation means.
@@eleSDSU and if the Zionist regime isnt a foreign controlling of an area force then what is it? Maybe u should check what occupation is first or comprehend it.
i don't know the language so occupation, i can't visit other arab countries so occupation, i'm in the minority so occupation, i build houses illegally so occupation, i live in a jewish state so occupation. what a foul word.. the palestinians have exhausted the meaning of the word.
Thats hardly aggression, watch the videos of all of the antisemitic attacks happening in America and other Western countries in the past 2 weeks a 500% rise in antisemitic attacks that's aggression.
@@sunnyvegas2778 So I come with rebuttal then. He always lets people speak unless they start to drift away with the answer. Both of you, provide time stamps where is he being aggressive or biased.
@@Puleczech 10:50 man splaing to the women that she is wrong about her college experience just cuz he works at a college, 8:20 when he says "I havent seen anything like that". its not HIS role to share HIS experience, he should be just be asking questions. 9:16. he says "thats racism", he is deflecting from the question, he is 2nd guessing their definition of "occupation", its NOT his role to comment on their experience, just ask. This is literally the "ask project" not "ask and I challenge your answers project". Did you not see the video???
@@sunnyvegas2778 That 10:50 is obviously hitting at his field, that's why he feels the need to add to it. She states something as being "well known", he cannot just stay there silent if he is convinced from his own working experience it is in fact the other way round. She does not give any real rebuttal to what he said and even then he does not push her any further. This is absolutely obvious and completely normal. Sorry, but the fact you see that as "man splaining" seems in fact strongly biased to me. 8:20 is just him trying to understand what is she trying to say. I do agree it is not his role to share his experience in general, but he is not sharing his point of view for the sake of sharing it, he just tries to push her forward with the explanation. After she explains herself, he acknowledges it is a good example - hardly an outcome of "aggression" or "bias" on his part. 9:16 what do you mean "their definition" of occupation? If they describe something that virtually any member of any minority in any UNOCCUPIED country can share as well, then it just cannot be used as a valid argument for an actual occupation, can it? He has definitely a room to improve with his interviews but I feel like if they answered just "Yes" to a question "Are you living under occupation?" you would take it as an evidence without probing any further?
Listen, I deeply feel their stories. But there is a BIG difference between what they are describing (discrimination and differences) and occupation. Big difference.
If i take ur whole house and I allow you to live with me with restrictions and under my laws and everything under my permission, for about 75 years. So you are very used to it, would you call it discrimination or occupation? It is discrimination if you go live in a foreign country but an occupation in your own land
But discrimination is a direct result of an occupation, you'd feel the result and not the process. Let's say your country gets occupied, you'd get badly treated by the occupier and you'd feel discriminated against.
@@shadrothefederalmarshal4780lets say you never actually had a country and then you attacked people for who they are massacring them. A little discrimination seems just fine
I live in Germany and decide to live and work in Germany. I do not expect to change the national anthem or change there culture around me. I need to intigrate and be thankful!!! Nonsense being occupied!!!
Both come hand in hand. They cannot express those type of views in all honesty, imagine someone in university claiming Israel is just an Illigal occupation mentioning things like Nakba and Yinon plan, future in the drain.
Sadly, many Israelis do believe some of these ideas. The percentages that can't sympathize with the other side are growing in Israel and Palestine. We need to stop it
@@bedoe9684 Palashtina it is Rome empire named israel Judah kingdom after they conquer us Jews 2000 years ago they changed the name of the land from Israel Judah kingdom to Syria palashtina and exile us Jews by force you fakestine islamNazim Arabs are invaders from Egypt and arbia and turkey
The first guy said: "I'm free here"
You translated it as: "That's what I think"
He was the only one, probably was scared to say the truth but all the rest saud they just feel it it's all around u, so what's one from ten?
@@rimaelayoubi1294 Yeah....all those who couldn't say anything more than a "feeling" or "bigotry", using the same logic African-Americans in the US are living under occupation.
@@eleSDSU African Americans r Americans, their skin complexion doesn't change the fact of whom they r besides when america was created those people came in along after all how old is america? Those Palestinians had their parents and grandparents living on that land long before the Zionist regime evr existed and they were forced on taking Israeli passports or else leave as 70 thousand Palestinians were terrorized out of their homeland in 1948.
@@rimaelayoubi1294 but there was a people who complained so he wasnt scared he just have a different opinion...
@@theanoiders9931 maybe I don't say no, I just that becz I had many colleagues when I was in uni that were Palestinians holding Israeli passports and despite the fact they were in Europe, it was obvious that they were afraid to express their opinion regarding the occupation openly and some even admitted that.
My Son went to the Technion University in Haifa. For those of you who do not know, The Techion is considered the M.I.T. of the Middle East. We are Jewish. My son was required to achieve a minimum score of 80% on the entrance exam. An Arab is required only to achieve 60% on the same entrance exam. Why you may ask? Because the Israeli government wants to create an Arab middle class.
When my son applied to stay in the dorm he had two roommates. One Jewish and one Muslim. He told me that this was done on purpose by the University to help Jews and Arabs realize we are all human beings.
4 million natives controlled by Israel can't vote for the state that actually controls them. 2 million can't move to 50% of cities in the country because of their native status even though they have citizenship.
Then they proceed to impose a law that says Arabs are 2nd class
very civilized approach
The 60% requirement is more like misguided affirmative action similar to what is there in the United States or India. Affirmative action should only be based on economic conditions and not based on any other parameters. Just imagine if you are a Jew born in an extremely abusive, financially poor family where the father or mother or both parents are alcoholics and exhibit all forms of abusive behavior with constant arguments about money. You don't fare well in that environment, are in constant trauma and your cognitive ability is affected, but you may get 70% in the entrance exam. Now, the state inadvertently ends up abusing you by saying, you don't qualify but a economically better off Arab who manages to get 60% gets in? These kind of affirmative action initiatives ends up creating more problems, is abusive and breeds resentment.
Another Arab Israeli young woman was explaining that at university the Arabs would get more time at the exams because this was not their native language. Regarding the small signs of racism, I think they exist everywhere in the World (against Arabs but also against Jews and against non-Moslims by some Muslim people)
The first guy is a bit mistranslated: he is saying “I am free here” not “that’s what I think”
Im leaving in Israel 30 years, im not a jewish, im never heard that im Goy, or i cant work in any jewish places bcs im not Jewish. Everybody kind to me, and im kind to everyone. Thank you Israel.
BOT
Not one of them knows what the word occupation means.
The guy says something really clever: It is a crisis of trust ... I totally agree ... and all should be brothers and sisters
That isn't exactly realistic under the circumstances though is it?
Brother Stephan, like you said: we should all be brothers and sisters! And some of the people living on that land do what they can to live in peace. But here is a question for you: If someone forces themselves into your family home and exterminates those, who lived in some of the rooms and over years pushes the rest of your family to various corners of the home and takes the home ownership papers from you and puts fences around those small areas in your home, where your family ends up having to survive, what would you see them as? Who would you perceive their leaders as???
Thank you for your answer and peace be upon you, brother
@@yunison21 especially since the killing has already gone both ways.
I don't want to say who's at fault here since I think there's plenty of blame to go around. But it is worth knowing that the Jews were immediately attacked by all neighboring countries as soon as they arrived. If that hadn't happened they may well not even be militarized. There might be no wall or no soldiers. And your Arab neighbors were perfectly willing to annex you, which I would like to point out Israel hasn't done.
They're not evil and neither are you. The situation is what it is mostly because of the British, the Nazis, and the poor treatment of Jews throughout Europe in general, as well as the immediate hostility by all of the neighbors of both Israel and Palestine.
@@johnrollex680 You sound nice and all. But you are forgetting that between "the Jews were immediately attacked by all neighboring countries" AND "as soon as they arrived", there was the time of forceful, militarized expulsion of the citizen of Palestine, who lived on those lands for centuries! Some - not all - of our Jewish brothers prefer to conveniently forget to mention this period of bloodshed - yes, that was the time of nothing less than "ethnic cleansing" not only by forcing people to move, but by mass murdering those of the the locals, who refused to give up the land they inherited from their ancestors - the land which they loved and took care of for many many centuries!
WHY do you highlight the neighboring countries attacks and MAKE IT SOUND LIKE "the poor Jews came after WW2 holocaust and instead of being helped, they were attacked"? WHY are you "forgetting" that Palestinians (Muslims and Christians and Jews and Druze and Beduins and many other aboriginal locals) were not asked if they wanted to give the better and bigger parts of their lands to newcomers? Instead they were murdered in case they didn't want to make room to foreigners merely on the grounds that "God promised the land to those foreign Jews"? As if a clear decree from God exists to prove any of that nonsense!
If you didn't know this, which is very hard to believe, please do some reading, man!
I am wishing you peace! Which is impossible without wishing the whole humanity peace! if you understand this logic, then start by acknowledging facts (that, what took place and for what there is ample proof). Again, Peace be upon you!
@@yunison21 my understanding (and correct me if I'm wrong), is that violence broke out on both sides immediately following the UN resolution.
Now I really have no idea what the plan was that the Jews were going to implement. However they didn't really get a choice in the matter seeing as how when they arrived Palestine was already in the midst of a civil war, and then immediately following it they got invaded.
I think that it's fair to say the Jews were in a rather bad situation. I don't know if you've ever seen pictures of the Holocaust, but they aren't pretty. It doesn't mean that the Palestinians weren't also in a bad situation. Both can be true at the same time. And in fact that's how I view the situation.
It's also worth noting that the Israeli parliament condemned the deir yassin massacre specifically. And it seems that that specific incident is shrouded in so much propaganda and politics that we may never know what really happened. Apparently the survivors were interviewed and said that there were rapes, but then a survivor came forward and said before God that it didn't happen, and Israel refuses to release photographic evidence of the incident. Additionally none of the people involved were convicted, which I'm certainly not here to defend.
You also have the issue of settlements which really have no legal, or even much of a strategic justification. It seems the primary motivation is just that netanyahu is catering to the Zionist base.
but if you want me to say that Palestinians are 100% in the right and everything they do is justified, and that this whole situation is Israel's fault and it would be simple for them to just leave, obviously that's ridiculous. To me it's a complex issue. I understand if you don't feel that way.
The beduin girl is radiating so much positive energy man. We need more such people
Because she had no critique of Israel... no trust me.. that's the actual reason you like her.
Yes, what a gorgeous person she was
@@mastereppsreturns6586I have no problems with critique. I have a problem with hate and racism. What is your "critique" of israel, and what is your critique of hamas my friend? Show your real face.
@@MrPainfulTruthIsrael is the problem, she didn’t feel the occupation because she throw the Palestinian identity and she’s Israeli but also Arab (israel is a jewish state) just because there are arabs doesn’t mean that they love them, there’s occupation in the West Bank, we don’t want to end the occupation by becoming “Israelis”
@@fira3reoUntill the 60s the Arabs refused call themselves Palestinians, even Arafat said there are no Palestinian people but it's an act to destroy Israel. what Abu Mazen gave you? And how is it occupation if the PA rules there?
Londoner here, only just discovered your channel. Love your questions and the people answering. I understand so much more from you talking to real people than I do from reading the big press. Keep up the good work.
then wake your European friends the fuck up because the hate to Israel need to fucking stop ! you are all gone insane about stuff u have ZERO knowledge about !
I've been following Corey since long time, and I've watched most of his videos. His problem that he always has an answer in his head before asking and is always looking forward to people acknowledging that. I am not claiming that he does edit the videos or mislead the truth, but the way he asks the questions and argues with people, always makes me thinking: Do you want to find out the answer, or you already have yours and want to change People's mind.
I disagree, because if they felt bad inside, and their life was misrable, you would feel unambiguous hate( as an emotion) or very unambiguous opinion. Because when you suppress somebody, then he wants to express himself.
I kind of agree. I can understand that he starts with a very blunt question to sort take people by surprise and perhaps get a more honest answer; but when he keeps stressing people out, it makes them either retreat or become defensive. I think he's not as unbiased as he thinks he is (true for everyone to some degree). He reminds me very much of older educated white liberal South-Africans.
Nevertheless, I appreciate his work and find it very interesting.
@@izielisakov3264 but they are helpless too, they have been born into it, these discriminations due to occupation (like the last guy said) they experienced them all their lives. when you feel like you can't change it no matter what, you just learn to live with it.
He doesn’t come up with the questions themselves.
👍🏼
15:15 The guy is correct. In 2016, 7 out of 1,081 requests were approved for citizenship. So yes, you're 'allowed', but you're not really allowed.
Little known fact Israel offered citizenship to all of east Jerusalem after 67, most refused it. This is saying it take so long to apply yet he’s lived there his whole life and hasn’t even tried......
That’s how citizenship works in every country
@@deflexion3677 I am not criticizing the policy - I am simply saying that the guy is correct. It's not as easy as 'getting the citizenship' when only 7 out 1000 are approved. That's the difference between laws and practicality. It's like the citizens of the USSR on paper had way more rights than any modern democracy, but in practice, none of it was actually enforced or applied so day to day - they didn't. But politicians in the USSR would point to their document and say 'LOOK LEGALLY WE HAVE SO MANY MORE RIGHTS THAN YOU'. But as Justice Scalia described it - it's a 'paper guarantee'. It doesn't mean anything in practical terms - it's for politicians to point to in order to score points. What Israel is doing may or may not be the right thing to do (I am not knowledgeable enough on the subject to comment), but based on pure numbers, he is correct that while he is "allowed" to get citizenship, in practical terms, he is not.
@@deflexion3677 I am pretty in most countries most applications are accepted...not less than 1%
@@kisa4748 you're just stupid and dont know reality... takes 15+ years to get citizenship in Europe, Canada, America and Australia
By the way the first man said he's free and you didn't translate it
@Sunny Fruit I think the translator as a gender
He thought he said "hoshev" (think) and not "hofshi" (free) because coreys hebrew is not 100%
@@noam8080 he have a translator don't he?
@@yechielyogev For Arabic. The Hebrew is him.
זה למה לפעמים גיל מרגיז אותי אבל לפעמים הוא יוצא תותח
What they are describing is more so living as a minority rather than living in an occupation.
You are right. But they are in the minority due to the occupation in the first place.
Black Americans have similar complaints. A lot of disparity in treatment is due to a significantly higher crime reate in the black community. Might be the same in Arab neighborhoods.
These people are the minority of Arabs granted Citizenship and isnt indicative of the majority of Arabs living within your borders
They would not be the minority if you include Gaza and the West Bank. It’s about 6-7 Million each of Jews and Arabs each then. I believe that is why Israel is focused on ethnically cleansing those areas. Because if they were all to get votes then they would not be minorities anymore and it could not be a Jewish state.
@@trevoraugustus2249 considering the exponential growth of the Palestinian territories, I don't think ethnic cleansing is the goal. Israel has been providing Gaza with free electricity and water. They provided healthcare & jobs. Everything Palestinian government failed to provide.
" Like you are talking to me now"
That really is the answer. Great, great upload, Corey.
Thanks for doing what you do.
I live under the occupation. I am occupied every day: work, home, traffic, people...
Amen
I am afrcan. I wonder african jew fit in its crazy
@@alilifa7160 I'm from Ethiopia and I have to say that we are like everyone else, even though there is sometimes racism from the police...
@@yl4984 Correct
Good one
When the one Arab guy talks about how the nation-state law is a precursor to worse -- he speaks eloquently, by the way -- the interviewer kind of scoffs. I think that's an unfortunate reaction. If you really wanted to understand the issues here you'd ask how the nation-state law makes Arab Israeli's feel -- some of whom have lived there for decades and served in the military. That law says, by the way, that he right to exercise national self-determination" in Israel is "unique to the Jewish people," which just sends a bad signal. It was an unnecessary law designed to put people in their places -- like the confederate statues in the US South.
Essentially every Nation in the MENA has such.
@@maracohen5930 lmao what?
@@maevadim4548 They all have Nation State Laws.
@@maracohen5930 ofc they do, but weren't you referring to the segregation policies?
@@maevadim4548 Nope. The Arab Nation States have been ethnically cleansing their minority Peoples for years. I was in eastern Turkey in 1988, just in time to see Kurds streaming across the Border, as Saddam Hussein was busily killing them off. In 1948 the Jordanians ethnically cleansed Jews from areas of Israeli Territory they captured during the Arab League Invasion. Arab segregation is imposed upon themselves. Arab Palestinians have demonstrated that their autonomous governance bodies will not stop them from suicide bombs, random attacks upon Israelis. So controlled entry into heavily Israeli Areas is necessary. Arab Israelis with full citizenship are not controlled at all. They are Israelis.
They can't even lie, she is in the middle of a mall with lots of arabs around her and yet she says she lives under occupation
what does her being in a mall have to do wiht anything!!!!! it doesnt change the fact that Israeli mark Palestinian houses with a red mark so their houses can be attacked and burned? The only two people that have done this before are isis and the nazis. What does that say about Israel?
Watch the video bellow explains the brutal conditions that Palestinians citizens of Israel have to live under. Never given a permit to build. Isreal haven’t given Palestinians in lud building permits in 10 years? Israel destroys Palestinians houses whenever they please even though they pay the same taxes to the Jewish citizens. Rubbish thrown in their areas and is never collected for their area. Meanwhile they Isreal is building tons of jewish only neighbourhoods that are servised perfectly. There are countless of ways Isreal discriminates against the Palestinian from not giving them the insurance so they can open businesses to the mayor who doesn’t give servises to the Palestinians even though they pay the same taxes.
I know many Palestinians citizens of Israel and they have told me the horrific stories of how they’re treated. It’s ugly it’s brutal and it’s beyond heartbreaking.
Please no one believes your lies anymore. The mask has fallen everyone can see Israel for the terrorist it is. Here’s a little video that shows you a little glimpse of hell Palestinian citizens of Israel have to live in the worst democracy in the Middle East.
th-cam.com/video/MpW409WOgwE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=ECUe8uYVHvAPTVgU
th-cam.com/video/8RVoPZPKxLY/w-d-xo.htmlsi=p0I5FQsNacabVFjb
@@LeilaHilalwhy isnt israel deporting all of the occupied migrants, back to freedom in their 22 countries?
To the lady at 9:00
I've been randomly checked at the airport and bus stops and I am clearly Jewish.
Unfortunately when it’s actually your land and an occupier is stopping you for a check instead of someone from your land it’ll feel much fn worse
@@hudakarimi9642 what does that have to do with Israel?
@@uriel7203its an occupation
This is a very interesting exercise. We need more of this in any/ all conflict zones. I admire this gentleman’s courage.
This "Question man" has been so helpful in letting me see and understand what people are feeling. Thank you. Y
The woman saying houses are going to be demolished bcoz they were built without permit , that's why she feels she is under occupation is the most ignorant thing I've heard
Supposedly the thing is they cant get a permit. So you either don't build at all or build illegally
I am an Israely Jew and I love my Arab brothers and hope the politicians and media will get out of our lives soon so we can live in peace together.
Literally shut up
So glad to hear you say that .
My grandfarther was A ISRAELIE JEW and spoke highly of the Arabs and had many Arab friends and unfortunitly the media will often say there is hatred between the two cultures and yes it exists but not everyone has them views and I Am so glad that you are willing to speak your feelings .
❤ peace is what this world needs
Well media are trouble makers. It looks like a lot of people have been influenced though. How'd you reverse that.
Sadley most of them don't love you back.
@@slsstar100 yea cry about it boo, because we have ALL the right in the world to hate what the zionists have done to our families and OUR land. But dont you worry because freedom is soon to be, we wont ever forgive what your people have done, and you, clearly, are not the victims. Peace.
Very interesting, loved it. However I don’t think anyone here really understood the meaning of the word “occupation”.
Occupation..?!
Who occupied what?
The Jews their own country? What an impertinence, meantime the British Had occupied England and the Russians occupied not only Königsberg, Chechnia, the Krim and half of Poland, but Moscow too!! Terrible..!
And the local arabs who appeared abruptly after the 6 day war as 'palestinian people'... just miraculous!
It’s racism because they were occupied. They wont treat palastnians badly if it was still Palastine.
Alexander Huzau it was their country 1500 ago !!! Not anymore !!! This is occupation ! People lived there and Jews came from other parts of the world and took other people’s lands. I don’t care if your grandfather lived there 2000 ago or else give the Americas to the natives
@@desertfalcon2786 By the Arab system of accounting, the only event that bestows ownership is the Arab conquest of the 7th century. The only local population that matters is the Arab population.
I speak Hebrew and before this video I didn’t know that’s the word for it. In Hebrew we use the same word we use to say “conquer”
LOOOOL she is talking about higher education? For Arabs in Israel it is much easier to get accepted to study in the University than for other people.
Right! They pass the exams in lower marks than Israelis
It’s our version of affirmative action. I’m glad they are educating themselves. Usually education has an adverse relationship to crime and violence.
That is total BS. You can opine or lie all you want but the educational statistics tell the true story of discrimination against the Palestinians.
@@AR-ml9eo Can you share those numbers? Because the ones I've seen agree with what xBlackRey is saying.
Because we have minorities law.
If there is last place in certain class in university, the minority will get the place instead of the jew which is the majority most of the time, it's partly our will to moderate them and make them integrated
People don't understand the term occupation. Their answers do not match the question at all.
It's quite funny that if you had a group of 100 people half Arab half Jewish dressed in similar clothing you would have great difficulty telling them apart. Learn to live together Humans of Earth!
fr it seems like religion is the only difference otherwise they seem genetically very similar
הראשון אמר "אני חופשי פה"
ולא "אני חושב ככה"
over here I said "eat shit" in case you don't understand
@@dimamourad5542 enjoy your shit
המראיין אמר שהוא מלמד או קשור לאוניברסיטת ת"א אז זה לא מפתיע שיש לו תרגום סלקטיבי
@Yuval Ski You have a wild imagination
What does this say?
6:15 Btw, I went to Haifa University. We had 2 Arabs in class, and despite multiple efforts to communicate with them, they preferred to be with themselves.
I had to laugh when he explained how rude the people are to them at Social Services. I'm a Jew living in Jerusalem and there is absolutely no discrimination . . . they treat everyone equally badly. They must just hate their jobs!
Yes typical government workers every where in the world and yes in the U.S.A as well...
I visited Israel from the UAE and noticed that Israelis can be pretty rude with each other. So, I didn't take it personally as an Arab; it seems to be their style.
@@saadalameri living in a perpetual state of war makes you be on your high alert all the time and to be honest its just a posture that they put up but once you know them a little bit better they are warm people
@@intsccents Yup, in Spain as well.
Israeli's are not know for their customers service, but that's to anyone.
Having said that, the DMV in the U.S. also treats everyone equally like trash. Although there are a few sweet people here and there, they're the exception to the rule.
The lovely girl said they are living under occupation yet she's studying at university to become an engineer....
well people can live under occupation and be educated it happens all around the world duhh
@@orange7916
You don't get the point. You can call it what you like, but there's no lack of opportunity. If it is occupation it's not really oppressive.
@@vivaldesque occupation is occupation no matter what degree it is and you are so contradictive in your opinions first you said they are not living under occupation and now you are saying it is occupation but less oppressive .you probably never been the oppressed one and would never understand how it feels to be oppressed
@@orange7916
I disagree. In this video they interviewed Arab Israelis. They are not living in Gaza or the West Bank, but in Israel itself. I don't believe this is an occupation at all. Many Arab Israelis recognize that their situation is not bad, and are quite happy in Israel. Gaza and The West Bank have autonomy and self rule. The main problem now is the blockade of Gaza due to the election of Hamas. Second, Israel has been building settlements in disputed territories. Otherwise, I don't believe that the term occupation is appropriate.
@@vivaldesque i wonder how the arabs actually identify as israeli or palestinian ,in terms of their history ,culture and heritage they are palestinian , from your reply it tells me that you actually acknowledge israel as a country so there is no point in this argument and i personnaly think palestinian and israeli should live as one nation without one goverment/religion having full control of the administration
Corey What you do is great, and so important.
But you can't (shouldnt) interrupt everybody you interview, and expose what you think, when you are interviewing them. It is really pushy, uncomfortable for them and doesnt put you in a good light. They actually have a lot of very relevant points and the more comfortable people are around you, the more they will be willing to share what they feel with you*.
Keep doing what you do, From a global citizen :)
if somebody says something which is factually wrong than he will tell them and it goes both ways
When did it shut them down instead of facilitating a clear answer to his focused question - he is surveying - it is not a feeling fest nor it is meant to be eg, How do you experience occupation - "I feel the occupation in the air' - should he focus her or let her waffle on?
@@skpn123yeah it’s an interview of their opinion. Normal self respecting people don’t act like Corey
Unfortunately normal people like you have no idea at all - He is surveying views on a topic - it is his role to keep the replies on 'track' of the research question - otherwise the research is completely invalid - Don't try to pass Survey 101 anytime soon - Perhaps read up and educate yourself - have a good day @@saltybrackishfresh
@@skpn123you can continue to cope for your bias in every way possible and never reach a conclusion. This is not how a good-faith conversation takes place. And without good faith there is no logic . This is propaganda and it’s sad to watch ppl fall for it so hard. I’m Jewish and I have studied this conflict for quite a while. Corey often incorrectly translates their langauge to sound more aggressive (examples on basically every video and in the comment section)
And lacks empathy for non jews
I feel that when you talk to the Arabs, you have sort of a biased demeanor to the Israeli side, although I love your videos, feels like you have an upset sort of undertone in some of the things they say, I feel like you should listen more on how they feel and not shove in your pro Israeli rhetoric. Idk maybe I’m just taking it the wrong way, love the vids tho
Yeh , that what i felt too
Yeah... I get that... yet sometimes it’s just that he’s correcting them because the answer is not logical.. some of the answers talk about fucked up racism, but not occupation, while saying- “this is the reason I feel that I am under occupation ״... This is a very important distinction.
As a non-arab non-israeli foreigner, agreed. He is not always pro-israel, but he almost always lacks tact and does not consider how his thoughts will be received by who he is talking to.
He's playing devil's advocate which is a means to explore why they have that opinion.
@@gareth9213 challenging people with an opposing viewpoint is often good, but the manner in which he does so makes people feel more tense and defensive
Do you get free healthcare?
- yes
- do you get affordable education?
- yes
- do you live under occupation?
- yes, I can feel it in the air
Are your children killed?
-yes
Did the government of israel kick you from Israel
-yes
Did Idf soldiers monitor you everyday?
-yes.
yes an occupier can afford all those accommodations for free but yet he still an occupier , Peace on you :)
@@merouanekhodja924 you are missing the point 😂
When you're from the privileged occupying cast you couldn't understand.
@@fleursdelilas9487 fascinant 🥱, maintenant va ouvrir un livre
0:35 honey, you can't go to other arab countries not because of "israeli occupation" but because your fellow arab nations do not dignify the country you're living in as a nation. blame it on them rather than your homeland (ie if you even are loyal to it).
@@user-3w9jf4r5qz is it not natural that you would have grudge against me if I were to be thrust upon your inhabited land? Europeans and other foreigners living in the midst of a region you do not fit into !?
For the record, there are 14 Arab-Israeli seats in the Knesset.
Yeah and there are special lisence plates for palestinians and Israelis to act upon segregation policies against the arabs.
@@maevadim4548 OK, you obviously do not realize there are nearly 2 million Arabs/Palestinians who are Israeli citizens. Those are the people interviewed in this video. They are *citizens" of Israel, and their license plates are the same.
@@mathrodite nope, I meant arab Israeli citizens, educate yourself.
@@maevadim4548 All civilian Israel license plates are yellow and have Hebrew and Arabic inscriptions. This applies to all Israelis, Jews, Arabs, Christians, Bedouin, Druse, etc. Again, I have the sense you are not distinguishing between Palestinian Arabs who are Israeli citizens and those who are not.
@@mathrodite You are definitely right!
It seems like some of the interviewed are confusing occupation with discrimination.
I'm surprised that you are the only one that noticed this
as the last guy said , it is discrimination due to the occupation
Occupation already happened and is still happening and with more occupation there will be more discrimination isreal is trying to keep a good image other than that they woulda loved to kill every palastinen "snake" as they say
@@rambohamze2430 That is NOT Israel's policy.
I'm very surprised to that discrimination is happening because the Israeli law against that expet the kosher thing that I believe should change
If you build anything anywhere in the known universe without a permit you will have to take it down.
My mom’s neighbor, who is Jewish tried to add a room onto his own house that he owned and didn’t have the right permits. The gov comes with a crane, no warning and no questions and just took it down for him. It makes no difference if you are Jewish, Christian, Muslim or from outer space the Israeli gov will not wait for a court battle over this issue. They will take it down that’s it. Because the Arabs are breaking the law they then blame Israel.
There are a lot of shady builders in Israel.
Everyone remembers the synagogue collapse from 2 years ago in Givat Zeev.
That was because they moved into the building before they had the permits and it hadn’t been inspected. Many people were injured and 3 died.
How absolutely ridiculous to blame improper and illegal building on a fabricated occupation.
Imagine if everyone just was allowed to build illegally anywhere. I mean just imagine the liability, fighting, the destruction of important sites, how can anyone be so stupid to think it’s a form of oppression. It’s just the law and it’s for everyone’s safety and well being.
Can arabs get permits? I heard even druze in the north suffered from not getting any
the second lady seemed to just throw phrases not related to each other, so she felt she was under occupation because there were some houses under the threat of demolition and that other countries didn't want to accept her... That's what brainwashing is: repeating phrases with no real arguments... then I kept listening and it didn't get better "something is wrong in the air"? I felt that when I was told not to show my shoulders and knees in Arab countries, so I left. And you can also lose a job in Arab countries, for showing a map with Israel on it, or mentioning Jews, especially in positive context.
Neither the interviewer nor the interviewees ― understand the term "occupation".
Just one example ― the guy who wasn't allowed to work in a kosher restaurant ― wouldn't be allowed to work there ― even if it would be Palestine; it's just part of their religion. There are always collisions between cultures; a totally separate issue.
Actually that's not true. He can't light the fire - but he CAN cook. There are kosher restaurants in NYC where non-Jews are partners and work there.
MrAccident I would say as Native Americans we are under occupation, so they are in Israel
The state of compromise arguably effects the perception of all and certainly those who do worse out of those compromises of whether it's an occupation or nor.
MrAccident an ideology that can discriminate can cry “it’s my religion” and then cry when others discriminate based on non theists ideologies.
Is it rasism to fire white worker from restaurant because it turns to be a Japanese restaurant and the owner wants the workers to look japanese? No, it's just a style.
I don’t like the tone of his voice. I smell passive-aggressive.
He gets really upset when the answer is "Yes".
@@sasino4569 yeah))
i think hes canadian
They talked about discrimination which is different than occupation, but I think he should have realized that he has a communication problem here and find a better way to ask the question. Some Arabic could have helped, plus more Hebrew.
@@sasino4569 because to say yes is profoundly stupid and duplicitous
“I’m under occupation because I feel it in the air because a security guy looked at me funny once” is basically their case
6:43 He’s literally at Haifa University complaining he’s a “second class citizen” when he clearly, is NOT. Arabs have all the same rights, responsibilities and access as Jews and Christians in Israel!
No they dont, theres is a law that determines that israel is a JEWISH state and only jewish people can exercise self determination. So theyre literally second class citzens
“It feels like Something wrong in the air but I act like it’s normal”
@@MrMajsterixx who said they hate her? Most jews dont care
@@MrMajsterixx she's in a military base of United States stupid
@@MrMajsterixx their... country? you know the israelis are the settlers right? it’s her country.
@@MrMajsterixx They are the ones in HER country.
@@abeerarif8112 the other way around.
Someone has to explain to them the definition of the word occupation.
well for them in Arabic Israel is a synonym
for occupation - once you understand it everything makes logic. the occupation in Corey's sence is Israelis' fabrication.
Exactly
The word occupation is a substitute word for Israel for people who don’t accept/recognize Israel as a state of the Jewish people.
The irony is that they complain about the nation state law but every Arabic state has such clause of arabic nation state in their constructions excluding native people like Kurds, Amazighs, Coptes, Subsahaian Africans in Sudan (they killed 2 Millons of them)..
These Arabs have Israeli citizenship. The Palestinians in West Bank are MOST CERTAINLY UNDER OCCUPATION according to every measure of international law. These silly videos are for PRO ISRAEL folks that are so ignorant they can't point to West Bank or Gaza on a map.
How about being able to speak your mind without being tortured to death or jailed without trial for life....like in other arab countries...
Fess 007 your facts are way off
Fess 007 as an arab, im going to have to disagree with you because first, why would israel train thier enimies? Seceond, saddam hussain was never in the CIA and, no, he was not appointed since America never had any colonies, third, the british did not appoint anyone in saudi arabia.
Lol? Seriously? Basically systemically killing so many Palestinians breaking their homes , uprooting their houses and what not.
lol what ? you get 10 years for throwing a rock on IDF when they come destroy your house to build new settlements for new comers from the east
not occupation loooooooooool "without being tortured to death or jailed without trial for life" what ? there are hundreds in jail from 13 to 90 for defending their land, learn before you speak or you wanna be a clown ?
Well I don't know if you've noticed but authoritarian countries tend to always have lower crime rates than countries that aren't. I'm really sorry we couldn't comply with your wishes Mr. Snowflake but it is how the world must be. It is harsh but it is the only thing that works.
"I live under occupation, because when I meet a Jew I feel something wrong in the air". "I live under occupation because I build a house without a licence and they want to demolish it". "I live under occupation because I can't travel to Arab countries because they are at war (although jewish israelies also can't)". "... because there are some differences between Arab people and Jewish people, but I don't have anything on my mind". "because I have to speak hebrew to assimilate - like in any country of the world". "You feel it but I can't specifically tell you". "I don't think we live under ocupation, Jews and Arabs live together in Israel; maybe is different in the West Bank". Okay that's fair. " - I live under occupation. - As a citizen? - Yes. - With all the righs?. - Yes. - Why? - Because I'm Arab."
Those are the arab of inside , they are melted in israel and theu have chosen to live that humiliation.
There are 3 types of palestinians
The Palestinians of the inside
The Palestinians of the west bank (under occupation)
The Palestinians in gaza ( under siege )
@@hannibalbarca8411 for me arguements like yours are more 'separatists' than what actually happens in Israel, and quite racist. Arabs inside Israel live assimilated in israelie society; of course there are cultural problems, as in many countries. But your ideology is quite harmful. Idealistic. As most pro-palestinian to be honest.
@@brunosm.l2267
What is belfore declaration ?
I honestly have no stake in the topic but it seems pretty obvious the interviewer is leading with his responses to their answers.
He is a colonist trying to justify the human tragedy that he is involved in. A European brainwashed into thinking he is native to the Middle East.
@@blackalien6873 only in America 🙄
@@blackalien6873 no he has a lot of videos where people send in their questions and he asks them to Israelis. He has other videos saying "did Israel steal the land off palestine" and in that video he poses questions which would support Palestine. So clearly if he is asking why they stole land off palestine he's not a hard supporter of israel
@@alexanderzerka8477 There is a world apart between neutrality and leading questions. He is an Israeli in Israel. Nobody thinks he is neutral. However, he could at least let their answers flow naturally, instead of pushing them in the direction he wants them to go.
@@alexanderzerka8477 I'd counter that when he asks Israelis loaded questions, inflammatory statements, he preps them before in order for them to be not completely offended. Numerous videos, including the one you mention, come off that way.
And he does cherry pick, as far-right politics seems to have taken over the knesset you never see anyone with that type of view being interviewed. At least I haven't seen it on the channel..
The first one said he is free in Israel
Just one and what about other
@@Rumour_no_more I remember him as being older. He knows!!! the younger ones?? Please.
@Jordan. Do you live under occupation or they. They knew what kind of discrimination they face on daily basis
He does not dare to something else!
@ItsJxrdanz you can't just still something from someone and offer some of it to him
I didn't hear 1 answer regarding occupation. None
Mostly, they bring up micro-agressions and the fact that there is a law defining the main ethnicity of the country. Then the interviewer starts feeding the interview subjects his opiinion. Very biased.
@@ulrichnielsen7237 you have no clue, eh?
@@ulrichnielsen7237 ok buddy
All answers are related to occupation. When you aren’t free in your own land because it’s been occupied and the occupier micromanages you life, yes it is due to occupation.
You won’t. Cuz u know..🔫💣
I hope that the Israeli officials are watching these videos and taking note of what they could change in order that Arab citizens and residents lose the feeling of 2nd class status.
The last person was very loud and clear and he said. "It is discrimination due to occupation"
Its litterly israel area.
@@אוריהשבת I agree, it's israel area, because it's an occupaion.
@@red-sv2qf no, i talk about the israeli arabs who live outside judea. Like most of them
@@אוריהשבת bruh
@@אוריהשבת you don't have an area guys that's Palestine. The occupied Land.
The last guy who spoke made some very good points. And he is a real hottie, I'm not gonna lie:)
Gorgeous 😻
13:31 I have to stand in a traffic jam at the evening when its Ramadan. Am I under muslim occupation?
@Robert Pearce - What the hell is a "Christian country?" That is a religion not a nationality. I sure as hell wouldn't want to live under any religious dictatorship. So called 'Christianity' has killed more people than any other religion. That's one reason I'm an atheist.
@Yass Tomi They are a minority living in a democratic country, where the government is elected by the majority. they do have equal representation rights in the parliament. In fact, the biggest Arab party is the third largest party in the Knesset right now.
Moreover, by your logic, native Americans should govern the united states cause the European settlers took their lands, the Celts and Druids should govern the great Britain cause the Romans, then the Anglo Saxons, then Nordic people out of Scandinavia destroyed their homes and religion and then took their lands, Gauls should govern France cause the Franks outnumbered and assimilated them, and last but definitely not least, ancient Egyptians and Berbers should govern all of north Africa, cause Arab tribes out of what is today Saudi Arabia conquered all those places by force during a period of 60 years starting in 649 AD. :D
@Sonny Burnett what does it have to do with my comment?
@Art Fe People kill people... we do not need the cloak of religion to kill..in the absence of religion we find another reason.
Bozonini what a shallow idiot!! I'n Catholic and live in the UAE, i don't mind that, but if the country is going to categorize me and my rights as a citizen based on my religion!? Then yes that's bigotry and discrimination especially, if i'm the land' owner
The girl that didn't want to show face is an example why interviews like this must be done in language they can't express themselves completely. When they keep going in English she can't give perfect example, once she changed language, she talks without hesitation. This is what might happen in today's world a lot of media conveyed messages to the world in English and from reporters understanding & interpretation. Maybe some sentiments are lost and therefore western people/world in general become hateful and resent a certain group of people
The incels who think they have the right to control other peoples lives will sadly ignore your intelligent comment
@@absoluteballs incel doesnt mean anything anymore, just a buzzword to throw at people u disagree with
6:50 this guy is such a sweetheart.
@@estherayala1721 where did you hear that?
implying a man cant be discriminated against because his ID is the right color is wild. the fact that his ID has to be a certain color to make sure he can use roads or access areas tells you clearly there is an occupation
Sorry out of topic but thought to share
In India ruling political party BJP have spread so much hatred towards minorites especially Muslims thru hate propaganda by MADE-UP claims, misinformation, disinformation.
A Muslim life is even cheaper than a dog's one.
Govt arrested many journalists, activists, scholars just bcoz they were speaking TRUTH.
Here Muslims are being mob lynched and brutally murdered in POGROMs (not riots) and when relative of victims go to file FIR (complaints) then police arrests them only instead of attackers.
@@SaddamHussain-we9ec Modhi’s government is as corrupt as Netanyahu’s and as intent on dehumanizing Muslim minority groups. I hope we see justice in both of these countries
Best comment
@Moljo yes. there are thriving christian communities in egypt, syria, turkey, ethiopia, jordan, iran, and many of the arab countries, lebanon in particular. prior to the US invasion of iraq the same could be said there. where persecution occurs its extremist groups and not state sanctioned violence. there is NOTHING comparable to israel’s ethnic genocide against palestinians. so anyway eat shit
that isn't true. he's claiming discrimination because he's got a permit of permanent residency but not citizenship. he's an east jerusalemite so his situation is a lot more different to the others in the video. he's not claiming that his id has to be a certain colour to access certain roads etc. hes basically pissed off at israel being a jewish country and being inconvenienced for 1 day a year when his commute becomes 30 mins instead of 5 mins. it's a bit like living in saudi arabia and getting pissed off that alcohol is illegal and punishable by lashings there just because you want a beer once in a while. you live in a country that has a certain culture, you respect that culture - that is the social contract. another example is that polygamy isn't legal in the uk and polygamist marriages arent recognised here either but they are in pakistan - are you seriously gonna claim occupation because you chose to take on 3 wives in another country where it was ok and now have decided to move to another country where the law doesn't deem it legal?
These people don't even know what "occupation" means! Living in a first world country and complaining, playing the victim. Shameful.
Wow, that last guy was interesting, thank you for sharing his words with us Corey
Ask all those same people what's better? Living under "occupation" in Israel or living in Syria or Iraq? Where are they the most free to enjoy their lives?
@@ahmadismail4620 #1 I'm not Israeli. #2 I'm not Jewish.
But I'd be curious how the Arabs would've responded if the choice was Israel or Dubai.
They have a country, their country I'd palestine y should they live in another? Or maybe we should ask them how about living in Gaza or the West bank? ☺
Both Arabs and Jews recognize this breach in trust and how it needs to be addressed. For me personally, I am Jewish. I live in the West Bank. I enjoy very much talking to Arabs that work in the supermarket and other places. I always find that they are very nice. It makes me sad because I see the humanity in the conflict. There are many good people just living their lives, trying to provide for their families. I wish there was a solution to the problem but so far there has been little progress toward peace. I am humble enough to say I don't have the answer.
Lol for the arabs you even are the problem because you are a "settler", but people often focus on the consequence rather than the cause...Israeli occupied the West Bank and Gaza for military control, to prevent terror attack, I remember watching a documentary abou the 2002 terrorist attack at a hotel during Pessah, and a member of Shabak said he's been tracking down the terror cell that caused it but could not reach them and kill them because they were from Area A, which is strictly under Palestinian Authority, so Israeli weren't allowed, that was caused the "Operation Defensive Shield"....and I think Israeli govnmt allowed people to settle in the West Bank for security reasons (control the border) but also religious reasons, to secure access and reapply the sovereignity on the Holysite in Hebron, I was born to a Muslim father and a Christian mother, and I find disappoiinting, that Jews can't go pray on Temple Mount without the Army and they're only allow to visit the Patriarch Cave like several times a year, it's a disgrace for me!!
you are the problem you must leave the west bank
So you posted it 3 years ago. What you see today peace are war.
@@anissadiraa5310The disgrace is that jews stole the land of Palestine in the first place, Palestine would have allowed jews to visit holy sites if it wasn't for the war
@@cincoy3679it is worse today. The fact is the problem is the hatred taught in Palestinian society of the Yahud… every Yahud in the land is considered a settler and so there is no compromise. Until Palestinian society starts teaching towards peace and coexistence with Israel we will not see any changes.
Interesting. Now we can ask Jewish in Arab countries if they feel like they are under occupation or discrimination ... oh wait
The Jewish in Arab countries belong their , bah the Israelis stolen the land which never belonged to them, just established by the British
Iranians are not Arabs mate
@user-wj6dt5bq3w go ask them
I love how your logic is not to deny there are no crimes but to point out you’re not the only one making a crime
@@User-laiejwo5381 there has been no crimes committed by Israel
The patience of these people is incredible
Wtf! They described non issues, I have more problems in my own country and I’m a Citizen of my country and in the majority! They should try living under arabs, they’d have zero rights!
they have a prisperous life in israel😂
@@michaelchrist4620 the love from Israel is amazing.
it's not patience, it's fear
@@cbz1312 fair
to be honest, they don't feel OCCUPATION, they feel DISCRIMINATION.
That is a BIG difference, not good either of them, BUT natural. In hungary gypsies are discriminated also, in US black people etc. No connection to appartheid, no connection to "occupation", only a natural thing against minorities.
Big difference: the Palestinians were there before the Jewish forced migration into their territory.
@@matiasbrachini8741 Jews were there long before the Arabs invaded their territory.
@nature giver Just because you supposedly contributed more in taxes does not mean you are entitled to anything. There's a pattern here: "money buys rights and loyalty". That's not the way it works.
@@matiasbrachini8741 go tell it to the UN. Not the jews are responsible for Israels existance, but UN itself. Jews only defended what they GOT from international community, Palestinians went against it, and they lost it. Sad story, but true and not the jew's mistake
Yeah dude racism is so casual, why even bother ?
Lmao
The interviewer is totally biased. That being said, I must say I'm neither jewish nor arab. Let them answer whatever they want.
Maybe he's frustrated by all these whiny liars
He is not.
I want everyone to understand - if this person would ask a Jew, a repatriant from Russia or Ukraine he would get the same list of problems:
1. when you look for job - in particular types of job whey ask you if you served in IDF, and most older repatrians did not serve.
2. Any non-religious, and not-keeping-kosher chef (Jewish or not Jewish) probably would no be able to work in a glat-kosher restaurant, because where are alot of rules, and mistakes cannot be made.
3. And yes, Russian Jews could also say they there are not enough Russians in the government.
There is about 1,500,000 Russian speaking Jews in Israel. probably much more since the Ukrainian war. About 2,000,000 Arabs.
There is a lot of benefits that only Arabs receive in Israel and not Jews: 1. free education
2. free health care.
3. Arabs often build housing without permits
4. there is Arnona (some type of housing tax) that is a real burden for everyone, and in my city is about 800 shekel a month. In Arab municipalities they pay at least 60% less of this tax.
5. Muslims can get married in Israel, atheists (most Russians are) or non-Jews (also plenty) need to go abroad to get married.
6. Arabic is the second official language of Israel, Russian language is obviously not.
7. There are tons of public schools in every city that teach only in Arabic. You cannot find public schools that teach in Russian or in English, or in any other language. BTW, all the Arabs in the video speak with a heavy accent, some hardly can speak Hebrew. Because, although they were born in Israel, they learned in Arabic schools. It's a choice, they could choose Hebrew school, no one forces them to attend Arabic school.
Finally, when my family came to Israel from Soviel Union, we totally felt like second type citizens, my parents (an engineer and a pianist) worked as cleaners for a decade.
What I am saying here - as a Russian speaking person I could feel discriminated in Israel but I am not. Because I am not constantly looking for the signs of being discriminated. We build this country together! Post Soviet community brought lots of incredible positive things to Israel. We mad it better. Just like any other nation here in Israel.
The question was simple - "Do you think that you are under occupation?" Their reasons are laughable! This is not occupation. Google what other nations under occupation go thru. As a Russian Jew I can explain to you how it was during Nazi occupation.
And that nice Arab student from Haifa University rightfully complains that "there is no trust between Arabs and Jews, just like there is no trust between religious Jews and non-religious Jews in Israel". He is right.
As a nation - up until recently we were not very united. It has changed because of the recent war.
Maybe after Oct 7 this your man understood better why it's hard for Jews and Christians to trust Muslim community.
We have t*rror at*aks every few weeks, carried out by Arabs. It has been like this since I remember it, and I remember it since 1991 when I came to Israel. At the same time we absolutely adore Arab citizens who serve in IDF for example or, who simply supports Israel - their country that gives them so much.
what about the fact that Israeli mark Palestinian houses with a red mark so their houses can be attacked and burned? The only two people that have done this before are isis and the nazis. What does that say about Israel?
Watch the video bellow explains the brutal conditions that Palestinians citizens of Israel have to live under. Never given a permit to build. Isreal haven’t given Palestinians in lud building permits in 10 years? Israel destroys Palestinians houses whenever they please even though they pay the same taxes to the Jewish citizens. Rubbish thrown in their areas and is never collected for their area. Meanwhile they Isreal is building tons of jewish only neighbourhoods that are servised perfectly. There are countless of ways Isreal discriminates against the Palestinian from not giving them the insurance so they can open businesses to the mayor who doesn’t give servises to the Palestinians even though they pay the same taxes.
I know many Palestinians citizens of Israel and they have told me the horrific stories of how they’re treated. It’s ugly it’s brutal and it’s beyond heartbreaking.
Please no one believes your lies anymore. The mask has fallen everyone can see Israel for the terrorist it is. Here’s a little video that shows you a little glimpse of hell Palestinian citizens of Israel have to live in the worst democracy in the Middle East.
th-cam.com/video/MpW409WOgwE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=ECUe8uYVHvAPTVgU
th-cam.com/video/8RVoPZPKxLY/w-d-xo.htmlsi=p0I5FQsNacabVFjb
Agreed with most comments on here that occupation and discrimination may have cause and effect but they are not the same question. The lady that the interviewer hostily silenced was closer to answering the question. The lack of peace due to the occupation DOES limit her travel to other Arab countries. The guy talking about universities being a place of dialogue and that conversation and acknowledgement is a good start. The interviewer immediately pushed back emphasizing that there is no discrimination. I also don’t understand why you didn’t let people speak in their preferred language off the bat since you clearly have English, Hebrew, and the ability to translate from Arabic. The reason this is important is that when people don’t speak in their preferred language they sound to others like they are less intelligent/eloquent. Also the interviewer keeps asking people if they feel oppressed and if he doesn’t agree he pushes back with generalims like I work in Tel Aviv uni and I see “a lot” of Arabs. I think these conversations are important and this dialogue is a good start just giving heartfelt constructive criticism to the interviewer. But keep up the good work these conversations need to happen. I’m an Israeli Jew btw (that is the lens I come from).
Can you as an israeli je ws as you claim to be , travel all over the lovely middle east ? Perhaps visit all the je wish communities in gaza , saudi ar abia , iraq, egypt , algeria etc?
Well said.
They can speak freely, I can't even voice my opinion about them.
bullshit.
The Palestinians are not welcome anywhere in the Arab world, there's reasons for it, i know this is a late reply you probably wouldn't read or maybe you no longer alive, who knows after china's virus in 2020 :) but all in all there's a long history of Palestinian people destabilizing Arab countries around the world, through extremism and Terrorism, so ye that's why they can't travel there.
If two fish are fighting in a river an Englishman must have passed by...
( Native Americans)
That is not how it goes. It is an eskimo passed by.
@@kevingonzalez3673 Naeem’s version makes more sense
@@Fantabiscuit Syas who?
@@kevingonzalez3673 ..oh god
You are making up your own narrative don't tell lies.
A suggestion: if you take upon yourself to translate the things your interviewees are saying - do it correctly, and in an objective way. When a person gives you a statement which you didn't like - you still should translate his exact words and show the things the way they really are. For example, the first guy. Seems like he wanted to voice a certain opinion, and you decided to leave it out - change his words. If it was a simple mistake, and by no means you were trying to turn the statement to something it wasn't - please consider finding a real professional translator, someone who'll do it better than you.
what was changed?
He didn't change anything, i speak both languages
@@KS-wk6thliar, first upvoted comment. Trash bot
@@b7otato bot is whoever let you near a computer.
What was wrong in the translation???
For me, the most impactful aspect is not the answers themselves but the look in their eyes as they are choosing their words carefully. I noticed that the Jewish Israelis throughout this video series always have direct, often thoughtful answers. I may not always agree, but I honestly admire that sense of privilege and courage to speak clearly on a topic. The Palestinians in the occupied lands also give direct, unapologetic answers. Although their positions are often harsh, and again I don't always agree, I can appreciate their feelings of pain and the deep wounds that drive their reality. But these Arab Israelis, somehow somewhere in the middle, have that cautious, guarded look that I have seen so many times in the eyes of minorities in the West.
Thats the look of having to defend a feeling you have with facts/experiences. Its the confrontation with the delusion, instant confusion and chaos ensues. Happens when u ask a minority in the west to provide examples of experienced oppression.
That land is not 'occupied' please look up factual history.
That’s the look of living under a totalitarian regime. Specifically, a Muslim theocracy that throws its dissidents off of rooftops.
@@zzz-nu2reare u Marxist? All those bs of opressor is so typical of those woke people.
@@zzz-nu2re Go and ask a Christian how he feels in a Muslims majority country. Also, if I may ask, how exactly are they oppressed?
Complains about Israel while starting a sentence with the words “When I vote..”
in Israel we say
שאלה יהיו הצרות
“May those be the troubles”
The votes mean nothing when you're always a minority
@@hansfrankfurter2903 So what it's like being a Republican in California, you aren't represented. That doesn't mean you're occupied.
Wow they all need to check the definition of "occupation".
Same to you
Yeah, its when a foreign people (jews from Europe and America) comes and takes your god-given land where the blood of your blood has been living for centuries.
agee,
Occupation=Zionism
eat shit
להפסיד במלחמה בגלל גרידיות זה לא כיבוש ,
זה הפסד.
לאכול את החרא שלי איכר התחת איכר זקן
@@dimamourad5542 מה?
@@dimamourad5542 ehki ya jaban,
Ma t'chaf
לא מבין איך כמעט אף אחד לא מדבר על זה. תקפתם אותנו, קיבלתם בראש. מה ציפיתם? שאחרי זה נחזיר לכם את מה שהאום רצו לתת לכם?
@@galzeidman הם אפילו לא דיברו על כיבוש כמשהו מעשי אלא כ"הרגשה" רובם התבלבלו בין כיבוש לאפליה
I don't know about you guys, I don't see occupation only discrimination
As a Jewish Israeli it saddens me to hear these stories. I do not doubt their truth. I think the Arab Israeli population is a going to become a bigger problem unless as many as possible of these, many of them relatively simple examples of discrimination, are put right. Having said that, it will take a long time no matter what for Arabs to feel fully Israeli.
Unfortunately Islam will never surrender to non Muslims. Muslims in Europe also play the victim card. Let’s not forget how Islam conquered so many countries.
At least don't segregate the living quarters. Discrimination is everywhere but if is toned down, the Arab won't feel that worse off.
@@arsenal_84they can and live wherever they want
@@arsenal_84when he says Arab district in Jerusalem it means that Arabs just tend to live there. Towns or districts where they tend to live and group up. It's not like they limited to live only there.
@@arsenal_84 That's the name of the places there. It's their names before 1948.. we don't segregate the living quarters
the interviewer should shut up and them talk. Let the comment section be for debate.
The commenter should make his own videos 🤭
"they will leave everybody and check your mother, because you're special"
the difference really is there. you must think along the lines of what the young man said about the clerks. if you are a jew, there are 20 booths open and when you are arab there are only 2. and when you ask about that, you either get no answer or a silly answer. if a jew immigrates into Israel, they would have no problem getting citizenship. if an arab wants to do that, he will be looking at years of waiting, obstructions being put up etc etc. all legal, but the difference is obvious.
I wonder why
BTW that's not all true, an Iranian Jew tried to migrate no too long ago and was denied
I don’t think you listened well. The 20 booths were not for Jews, they were for residents of Jerusalem. This man does not have citizenship in Jerusalem. The 2 booths were for I believe international affairs. He even said that if he were a Palestinian with citizenship he’d be allowed to go to the 20 booths.
No, he is a resident of Jerusalem without Israeli Citizenship. @@kermkerm
and he hasn't been allowed citizenship, despite living in Jerusalem all his life.
As someone who had been born under soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia in early 80’ I have to say I see many similarities. This all is about people. Unfortunately politics and common sense can’t cooperate anywhere in the world. Peace to all. ✌️🤞
As a black person, living in the UK, I can say I also see the similarities.
@@tamsinwood2 Are you living under occupation? I really think you guys (like the guys in the video) confuse between occupation and feeling like a stranger in a country. Occupation is a whole different thing.
Also I'm really sorry that that student feels like a victim of racism since she was checked by a security guard and a Jew wasn't (though he should have been), but hey, I've never heard of a Jew trying to stab someone in a bus station, or blow himself up. I have especially never heard of a phenomenon where thousands of people were killed by those things.
I find it ridiculously hypocritical how a security guard who lightly discriminated someone bothers people more than the actual terror victims who are the reason he does it.
@@kfirlevy7635 No, I'm not living under occupation. Hence, I said that I see the SIMILIARITIES. It's all about "othering" and excluding people who often look visibly different. I do not condone terrorism, but unfortunately I can understand people's desperation. It's like Nelson Mandela in South Africa or the IRA in Ireland. You can only oppress people for so long before they rise up and fight back. The optics are that the "David" in this situation are the Palastinians and the "Goliath" is the Isreali state.
What similarities do you see? the only form of discrimination I can think of in Israel is that Arabs might get checked by security guards more, but that's because security guards have to check them more often because 99.9% of terror attacks (and terror attacks happen regularly in Israel), are committed by Arabs, and many of them are on buses.
While security could be tighter on Arabs can feel discriminating towards them, it's not racism, it's perfect pragmatism.
@@kfirlevy7635 Occupation is not a different thing, this is what occupation is after 75 years looks like. Egypt was occupied as well, occupation does not mean stopping daily life, it means your people who lived there are now controlled by some goverment that came from some other place and established itself as the ruler by force
The cook guy getting fired because he's not Jewish is not because of occupation. It's because they became a religious, Kosher food joint. If I was working for a restaurant that became Halal, they would do the same to me.
If I worked as a cook for a burger place and they switched to a new style of food that I am not qualified for, they would do the same.
Reply
@han1218 when it comes to Glatt Kosher laws , many Russians/Ukranians would too be fired, maybe some Ethiopians too.
I actually think that Israeli-Arabs are VERY much Israeli. They just don't stop complaining when they have NOTHING to complain about.. 😁
Lol, I'm Israeli jew and that's true. Complaining is part of the Israeli culture
That just means they are real Israelis 😂
100%
True xD
True!
I don't think your rather aggressive way of asking questions is promoting thoughtful answers. Rather, you make people nervous and defensive. You have the power of providing context* and standing behind the camera whereas the interviewees are in a vulnerable position. You express your own opinions and judgements while interviewing, reminiscent of a teacher interviewing a student. Thanks for your endeavour to bring voices from 'the street', but we all need to be cautious when interpreting information like this.
* Posing and framing questions. Choosing who to ask, who to show and in what order. The choice of words in the translation, the comments you give in the subtitles.
The first guy said : "i'm free here"
but your translated it as : "That's what i thing"
It says everything about the interviewer
Bingo!
In Arabic saying “I am free” in such contexts basically means something along the lines of “that’s what I think” or “that’s what I want”. So the translation is not really inaccurate.
@@Criticalmass96 But he said it in Hebrew not in Arabic are you stupid?
@@RONzilber If he's an Arabic native speaker there's a good chance he's using native language expressions in his second language. It happens.
@@Criticalmass96 i speak arabic and no "i am free" and "that's what i think" is not same thing...are you stupid in no language is "i am free" and "that's what i think" means the same including the english i am writing in
Let me be clear on one thing: if it was an occupation, then you could not even have this conversation in the steets of Israel.
That's y the first guy was afraid to say it is abd the lady in the uni had herself not shown☺
@@rimaelayoubi1294 Wow, you are able to read minds? very impressive....
@@eleSDSU some things r obvious, u don't need to read minds to understand it, tell me why would she be hiding herself then?
@@rimaelayoubi1294 hahaha you were talking about knowing what the first guy was tginking and now changed to a different person. You are just a brainwashed uninformed person. Listen to the last interview again, you need it.
@@eleSDSU I m being practical and said my reasons, I heard everything very well and it was obvious that despite the "Israeli" passports they still feel they r under occupation, not surprised with the apartheid roads and second class citizen descrimination
I can’t believe how mild the discrimination is considering what’s going on.
Have you interviewed Jews living in Muslim nations to see how they are treated?
Well Before 1948(creation of israel) here in egypt it was good...We payed 72 million last year to renovate the synagogues left and Judaism is an official religion in egypt.
Regarding today's events the history is a backdrop, the situation is that Palestinians have 224 hostages, and Israel wants them back, if hamas gave the hostages back and turned themselves in then it would stop, but that won't happen, so we may end up in ww3 because hamas went over board
hamas offered civilan hostages for food and fuel ...israel said no@@5thElement0560
Jews living in muslim country far better in European country throughout history, they were massacred in europe but thrive in Muslim nations for centuries until the creation of Zionist.
Thank you so much for your excellent interviews.
Ask Jewish or Christians how they live in Arab countries. Oh wait, you would would have to find ones who were not kicked out or murdered!
Typical 10-year old comment.
Matias Brachini
Name one Democratic Arab country, let alone for minorities? Yah, bye bye!
Solving Politics
I heard Saudi Arabia, Yemen and Afghanistan treat their minorities very well...
Hello? Lebanon. Syria. Jordan has a small but safe Christian community. Iraq was better for Christians before neocons wrecked their country, and it’s slowly springing back to life. Etc.
fuaad Mohamoud
Part-2 I do completely agree with you about pre revolution Iran. If Democracy spreads to Iran that will be a huge improvement for all the Middle East. What do you think?
P.S. the Persian people are fantastic!
If living in Israel means living under occupation, then occupation is a PARADISE. The Israeli Arabs have the same rights as the Israeli Jews, and they actually have less commitments then the Israeli Jews. The Israeli Arabs aren’t obligated to serve in the army, and although they can choose to do national service instead (for 1/2 years) they usually choose not to. they get much more scholarships to university then the Israeli Jews. They are accepted to the the universities much easily then others. They are doctors, managers, scientists, parliament members. They live in a prospering, vibrant and democratic country. They should thank god everyday when they wake up that they live in Israel and that they don’t live under the Palestinian Authority, which would have made their life miserable and would have made this country just like any other non-democratic, violent and poor Country in the Middle East.
The experiences shared primarily express systemic discrimination, which is probably correlated to the existing conflict. And such discrimination is usually very hard to pin point. As a minority myself, I feel similarly discriminated in my own country but without the larger context of an existing armed conflict that is generally divided along ethnic and religious lines.
i want to ask you a question as a minority,
when you walk on the pavement, someone walks the opposite direction and before passing by each other you catch the person looking at you for a second and then keeps walking.
do you think he looked at you because youre a minority or was it because you were just another random stranger in the street and the look had no hidden meaning?
@@shimonbiton2163 I suppose it would depend on the neighbourhood I am in. If it is a monoethnic neighbourhood, it could be the former, although probably more due to curiousity rather than malevolence.
Yes
af
@@bobkee bob , did you group and its allies repeatedly try to genocide the majority? Did the group enslave the majority for 1400 years as dhimmi? Thats the context here .
Arab Muslims are not accustomed to living as a minority . The Jews have learned to accommodate itself and thrive as a minority but that is a unique skill most people don’t have 😊
Just by the tone of the voice of the interviewer, obviously he's so biased. It's like his annoyed the whole time. Just saying..
Me too , and especially that stupid question" how is that an occupation", dude it's a f-ing one like hello .
@@hamzahamim1863 Because most of the issues that people said are not related to occupation
@@romamak2367 haha what a joke it's the root, if u occupy my country damn well u are the major problem, can u live in the same house with a person that stole it from u
@@hamzahamim1863 1. There was never such a country named Palestine, so my guess you are referring to the land, not the country. 2. Jews have always lived in this land, but as a minority for almost 2000 years. 3. Many Jews started to come to this land at the end of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th century but, they either bought the land from the Ottomans or used an Ottoman law where if you build a house with a roof on top of it, you cannot demolish it. 4. The British had divided the land for both Arabs and Jews depending on the majority in that area. Jews have accepted the offer. Arabs started a war, if you start a war and you lose then prepare to lose some of your territories. That's how it worked for thousands of years in every war. As for the west bank, Arabs were offered a state 3 times but they refused. And another fact, west bank, and Gaza were under Jordan and Egypt before 67, but they never fought for their freedom against Jordan and Egypt, why's that? I guess you know the answer. There are no Palestinians, there are arabs.
@@romamak2367 damn hit him w the facts
These people are using stupid excuses for "occupation".
Tell us what occupation is?
@@rimaelayoubi1294 Occupation is what Mapuches in Chile experience. Occupation is the holding/controlling of an area by a *foreign* military force so given that 1) this is not the case and 2) all the answers they gave are unrelated to this concept I agree that they should look up what occupation means.
@@eleSDSU and if the Zionist regime isnt a foreign controlling of an area force then what is it? Maybe u should check what occupation is first or comprehend it.
@@rimaelayoubi1294 it's not foreign, it's native. That makes our sovereignty and not occupation.
@@eleSDSU lol native and 70 years old with internationally illegal settlements, lol@native yaya
i don't know the language so occupation, i can't visit other arab countries so occupation, i'm in the minority so occupation, i build houses illegally so occupation, i live in a jewish state so occupation. what a foul word.. the palestinians have exhausted the meaning of the word.
I stole the land and kick the majority of the Palestinians from their homes and still I am not occupation !! What the hill the so called Israel?
I'm a non-Jew, non-Arab Israeli. They're describing discrimination that I am also experiencing, not occupation.
all of what they say has nothing to do with occupation
This guy is so aggressive and biased . Especially when someone doesnt agree with perceived notion.
Thats hardly aggression, watch the videos of all of the antisemitic attacks happening in America and other Western countries in the past 2 weeks a 500% rise in antisemitic attacks that's aggression.
@@rob2549 that’s not a rebuttal.... you’re not refuting the original claim, try again
@@sunnyvegas2778 So I come with rebuttal then. He always lets people speak unless they start to drift away with the answer. Both of you, provide time stamps where is he being aggressive or biased.
@@Puleczech 10:50 man splaing to the women that she is wrong about her college experience just cuz he works at a college, 8:20 when he says "I havent seen anything like that". its not HIS role to share HIS experience, he should be just be asking questions. 9:16. he says "thats racism", he is deflecting from the question, he is 2nd guessing their definition of "occupation", its NOT his role to comment on their experience, just ask. This is literally the "ask project" not "ask and I challenge your answers project". Did you not see the video???
@@sunnyvegas2778 That 10:50 is obviously hitting at his field, that's why he feels the need to add to it. She states something as being "well known", he cannot just stay there silent if he is convinced from his own working experience it is in fact the other way round. She does not give any real rebuttal to what he said and even then he does not push her any further. This is absolutely obvious and completely normal. Sorry, but the fact you see that as "man splaining" seems in fact strongly biased to me.
8:20 is just him trying to understand what is she trying to say. I do agree it is not his role to share his experience in general, but he is not sharing his point of view for the sake of sharing it, he just tries to push her forward with the explanation. After she explains herself, he acknowledges it is a good example - hardly an outcome of "aggression" or "bias" on his part.
9:16 what do you mean "their definition" of occupation? If they describe something that virtually any member of any minority in any UNOCCUPIED country can share as well, then it just cannot be used as a valid argument for an actual occupation, can it?
He has definitely a room to improve with his interviews but I feel like if they answered just "Yes" to a question "Are you living under occupation?" you would take it as an evidence without probing any further?
Listen, I deeply feel their stories. But there is a BIG difference between what they are describing (discrimination and differences) and occupation. Big difference.
If i take ur whole house and I allow you to live with me with restrictions and under my laws and everything under my permission, for about 75 years. So you are very used to it, would you call it discrimination or occupation? It is discrimination if you go live in a foreign country but an occupation in your own land
They are occupied because arabs is the real home owner
But discrimination is a direct result of an occupation, you'd feel the result and not the process.
Let's say your country gets occupied, you'd get badly treated by the occupier and you'd feel discriminated against.
@@shadrothefederalmarshal4780lets say you never actually had a country and then you attacked people for who they are massacring them. A little discrimination seems just fine
I live in Germany and decide to live and work in Germany. I do not expect to change the national anthem or change there culture around me. I need to intigrate and be thankful!!! Nonsense being occupied!!!
Most of the reasons the interviewed people gave have nothing to do with "occupation" but with "discrimination", the two things are a bit different
Both come hand in hand. They cannot express those type of views in all honesty, imagine someone in university claiming Israel is just an Illigal occupation mentioning things like Nakba and Yinon plan, future in the drain.
Tell them to Come to America. It's better here. We have work and we make money. Yes we have problems but still, America is good. God bless America 🇺🇸
The guy at 2:00 killed you with his honest and smart answers
He was just going on about hypothetical shit. He didn’t kill him. He was literally laughing. Go back to your social justice campaign of China
@@kimjongun5172 what are u trying to say lol
hhhhhh
@@kimjongun5172 what the fuck does that even mean?
Sadly, many Israelis do believe some of these ideas. The percentages that can't sympathize with the other side are growing in Israel and Palestine. We need to stop it
I see social and political issues that needs to be recognized but it's not occupation/ apartheid.
it is apartheid. Look into property siezures of Shiekh Jarrah refugee camp for Israeli illegal settlements. That is apartheid and occupation
@@bedoe9684 Do you even know about the history of Sheikh Jarrakh? That’s the worst example you could provide
@@bedoe9684
Palashtina it is Rome empire named israel Judah kingdom after they conquer us Jews 2000 years ago they changed the name of the land from Israel Judah kingdom to Syria palashtina and exile us Jews by force you fakestine islamNazim Arabs are invaders from Egypt and arbia and turkey
@@yustesuif you still can’t recognize occupation throughout a whole country , ur blind
@@hudakarimi9642 As I live there I still fail to see occupation sorry
this guy knows who to ask..
This Jewish interviewer is biased both in his questioning and tone.
No he’s not, cuz I’m Israeli and I think he is biased to the other side (sympathise Palestinians).
@@hagitaleinikov8643 no he is unbiased, he changes no one's minds, he only wants the ones who say the most random things to explain their answers
@@absoluteballs How is it wrong for someone to say something random to explain themselves? lmfao
I am non-Semitic neither Jew nor Arab and I do not see what you're talking about.