Israeli-Arab schools strike in solidarity with Christian students

Israeli-Arab schools strike in solidarity with Christian students
All Arab schools in Israel on Monday joined the on-going strike by Christian students in protest at the discriminatory allocation of funding to non-Jewish schools.
2 min read
07 September, 2015
Schoolchildren protested the plans to cut funding to Christian schools in Israel [Getty]

Hundreds of thousands of students and teachers supported parents were on strike Monday after they joined an ongoing protest by Christian schools began at the start of the academic year.  

Arab schools accuse the Israeli government of discrimination in funding non Jewish schools. 

On Sunday, hundreds of Arabs in Israel gathered  outside the prime minister's office in Jerusalem to protest against the slashing of funds for Christian schools.

Christian school administrators accuse Israel of cutting their funding as a tactic to pressure them to join the Israeli public school system - a move they say would interfere with the schools' Christian values and high academic achievements.

Palestinian lawmakers joined students, parents and principals at Sunday's demonstration, waving flags and holding banners with slogans such as "Christian schools are not for sale."

Some 33,000 students in 47 schools have been on strike since the school year began on 1 September. Protesters complain Israel continues to fully fund large private school networks that cater to ultra-Orthodox Jews while it slashes the Christians' budget.

Christians are currently less than two percent of the population of Israel and the Palestinian territories

"This is discrimination, and you know we pay all our dues and as citizens of this country, we are law-obeying citizens and we deserve equal rights," said Ibrahim Fakhouri, a parent from the Arab city of Nazareth.

Christians make up a small part of Israel's 20 percent Palestinian minority. In the birthplace of Christianity, Palestinian Christians are currently less than two percent of the population of Israel and the Palestinian territories. There are about 150,000 Palestinian Christian citizens of Israel and about 50,000 Palestinian Christians spread out in east Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

Although they have not experienced the violent persecution that has decimated Christian communities elsewhere in the region, the population has gradually shrunk over the decades as Christians have fled conflict or sought better opportunities abroad.

Under a longstanding arrangement, Christian schools and other private schools that manage their own affairs receive partial government funding, with the remainder of their budgets covered by either donations or tuition. The government funds cover roughly three-quarters of private schools' standard costs, but the state has been cutting back on other supplementary funding.

The protesting Christian schools say this public funding has been systematically cut in recent years to their elementary schools. To compensate, schools raised tuition fees - a burden for the Palestinian community whose average income is generally lower than the national average.

"We, all the Arab Christian schools, are demanding equality. There is no equality for our schools," said Ragheed Massad, a student from Nazareth.