October 2012 Yisraela Goldblum Fund poll

In mid-September 2012 a poll surveying Israeli attitudes was commissioned by the Yisraela Goldblum Fund and conducted on the eve of Rosh Hashanah by the polling agency Dialog, The results were first presented to the public by Haaretz journalist Gideon Levy on October 23, 2012, under the headline:'Survey: Most Israeli Jews would support apartheid regime in Israel.' In the wake of a controversy, Haaretz emended this to 'Survey: Most Israeli Jews wouldn't give Palestinians vote if West Bank was annexed', stating that the original headline 'did not accurately reflect the findings of the Dialog poll'.[1] According to Haaretz, in the poll, 58% of respondents said Israel practiced apartheid against the Palestinians,[2] and a third said Israeli Arabs should be denied the vote in Israel.[3] Both the poll and Haaretz's presentation of its results have been challenged.

Polling agency

Dialog is run by Prof. Camil Fuchs, Haaretz's in-house pollster,[4] and head of the Department of Statistics at Tel Aviv University's School of Mathematical Sciences. According to Haaretz, the questionnaire was written by a group of academic, peace, political and civil rights activists.[1] The group consisted of the former director general of the Foreign Ministry and Israel ambassador to Turkey Alon Liel,[5] who is married to New Israel Fund Israel's Executive Director Rachel Liel; former ambassador to South Africa Ilan Baruch,[6] member of the New Israel Fund International Council;[7] former chief of education in the IDF Mordechai Bar-On, member of the New Israel Fund International Council;[7] and human rights lawyer Michael Sfard, legal counsel to several recipients of grants from the New Israel Fund, including Yesh Din, Breaking the Silence, Sheikh Jarrah Solidarity Movement.[8][9]

The questionnaire consisted of 17 questions put to a sampling group of 503 interviewees, differentiated in terms of secular, traditional, religious, ultra-Orthodox and Russian.[1][10] The margin of error was 4.3[11] Though originally reported as connected to the poll, the New Israel Fund quickly dissociated itself from the survey.[12]

The poll results were first published in Haaretz by Gideon Levy, initially with the following headline:’ Survey: Most Israeli Jews would support apartheid regime in Israel.’ Levy’s presentation stirred headlines round the world,[13] and was repeated [14] or taken up rapidly by several newspapers that same day, including The Independent,[15] Sydney Morning Herald[16] the Daily Telegraph,[17] and the Christian Science Monitor.[18] AFP excluded the word ‘apartheid’ and headlined its report ‘Israelis approve discrimination if West Bank is annexed’.[19] The following day, the Huffington Post.[20] the government-funded Russian news service, RT,[21] and The Guardian reported on Haaretz's poll, the latter placing the word ‘apartheid’ in inverted commas.[22]

Within several hours of the Haaretz article, HonestReporting published a detailed critique of Levy’s presentation of the poll evidence.[23] which, as the controversy developed, Haaretz published a correction to five days later, changing the headline to ‘Survey: Most Israeli Jews wouldn't give Palestinians vote if West Bank was annexed,’ [24]

Gideon Levy's presentation

Levy made the following points:-

Analysing the results in terms of confessional groups, Levy gave the following confessional breakdown of the poll results:-

Ultra Orthodox Israelis:-

Religious Israelis:-

Secular Israelis:-

In a companion op-ed, Levy wrote he expected that the New Israel Fund, which has links to the Yisraeli Goldblum foundation, would be attacked for commissioning the survey. Levy noted that the results stated what was Israelis already knew.[25]

Responses

That afternoon HonestReporting gave a detailed critique of what it called Levy’s skewing of the poll data.[26] On October 23, the Times of Israel also reported on problems with the poll.[27]

Haaretz reported that the survey conductors said that perhaps the term "apartheid" was not clear enough to some interviewees.[1] Later in a press release Amiram Goldblum, who commissioned the poll stood by Haaretz’s version, stating that “A large part of the Jewish population (58%) accepts the application of the term ‘apartheid’ to the current state of affairs in Israel.” Goldblum also acknowledged there were problems with the questions and methodology used.[28]

Meretz leader Zehava Gal-On said that “It is not surprising that following four years of Netanyahu’s government, most Israeli citizens support apartheid”, and Jamal Zahalka, leader of Balad, said that Israel belonged to "the same family" as South Africa's apartheid regime.[9]

The conductors of the survey and critics of the poll suggested it was unclear what respondents understood with "apartheid", and that since a plurality of respondents opposed annexing the West Bank, it shouldn't be concluded that most Israelis support apartheid. Some critics said a question in the poll on apartheid was complex and problematically formulated.[9]

Maurice Ostroff, a past chairman of the Israel South Africa Chamber of Commerce and a pro-Israel commentator, said that the results of the poll reveals that a vast majority of Israelis are not racists, and that the level of racism in Israel is lower than in most Western countries and in the Arab world. He cited an Amnesty International study titled “Choice and prejudice – discrimination against Muslims in Europe”, which found that public opinion in several European countries reflects Islamophobic views combined with racist attitudes. Another poll, he wrote, found that three-quarters of Qataris would object to a non-Muslim neighbor.[29]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Gideon Levy , 'Survey: Most Israeli Jews would support apartheid regime in Israel,’ at Haaretz, 23 October 2012
  2. Israeli poll finds majority would be in favour of 'apartheid' policies (The Guardian, October 23, 2012)
  3. The new Israeli apartheid: Poll reveals widespread Jewish support for policy of discrimination against Arab minority (The Independent, October 23, 2012)
  4. ‘Camil Fuchs,’ at Haaretz, 5 September 2006.
  5. http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/MFAArchive/2000_2009/2001/4/Dr%2520Alon%2520Liel
  6. http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/veteran-diplomat-s-rebuke-of-netanyahu-lieberman-strikes-chord-with-colleagues-1.346790
  7. 1 2 New Israel Fund International Council
  8. Democracy in Recession: On accountability and ‘price tag’ politics in Israel
  9. 1 2 3 Elhanan Miller, 'Haaretz changes tack on major story that alleged widespread ‘apartheid’ attitudes in Israel,' at The Times of Israel, October 30, 2012.
  10. Geoffrey Alderman, ‘Facts behind a skewed survey,’ at Jewish Chronicle. November 2, 2012
  11. Elhanan Miller, 'Haaretz changes tack on major story that alleged widespread ‘apartheid’ attitudes in Israel,' at The Times of Israel, October 30, 2012,
  12. Shany Mor, ‘Apartheid’ poll: Errors that traveled round the world,’ at Haaretz, 29 October 2012: ‘The New Israel Fund, beleaguered target of a recent right-wing witch-hunt, has distanced itself from the survey, with which it was erroneously credited with commissioning.’
  13. Shany Mor,‘Apartheid’ poll: Errors that traveled round the world,’ at Haaretz, 29 October 2012
  14. Gideon Levy, 'Israelis Support Anti-Arab Discrimination: Poll. Most Favor Apartheid-Style Rules Favoring Jews,' at The Forward, 23 October 2012.
  15. Catrina Stewart, 'The new Israeli apartheid: Poll reveals widespread Jewish support for policy of discrimination against Arab minority,' at The Independent, 23 October 2012
  16. Ruth Pollard, [ 'Israelis back discrimination against Arabs: poll,’ ] at Sydney Morning Herald, 24 October 2012
  17. Adrian Blomfield, 'Israelis favour discrimination against Arabs - poll,' at Daily Telegraph, 23 October 2012
  18. Christa Case Bryant, Momentum builds for Gaza to secede, Israel and West Bank to become one,' at Christian Science Monitor, 24 October 2012.
  19. AFP, Israelis approve discrimination if West Bank annexed: poll,’ at AFP, 23 October 2012.
  20. 'Israeli Jews Believe The Country Already Practices Apartheid Against Its Arabs, Survey Shows,' at the Huffington Post, 24 October 2012
  21. ‘Israel an apartheid state? A majority of Jews say yes,’ at RT, 24 October 2012
  22. Guardian Reporter, Poll shows majority Israelis falour “apartheid” policies,’ at The Guardian, 24 October 2012.
  23. Simon Plosker, ‘Ha’aretz Creates Non-Existent Apartheid State,’ at HonestReporting, pp.1-2, 23 October 2012. p.2.
  24. Gideon Levy, Most Israeli Jews wouldn't give Palestinians vote if West Bank was annexed,’ at Haaretz, 23 October 2012: CLARIFICATION: The original headline for this piece, 'Most Israelis support an apartheid regime in Israel,' did not accurately reflect the findings of the Dialog poll. The question to which most respondents answered in the negative did not relate to the current situation, but to a hypothetical situation in the future: 'If Israel annexes territories in Judea and Samaria, should 2.5 million Palestinians be given the right to vote for the Knesset?' .’
  25. Gideon Levy ‘Apartheid without shame or guilt,’ at Haaretz, 23 October 2012.
  26. Simon Plosker, ‘Ha’aretz Creates Non-Existent Apartheid State,’ at HonestReporting, pp.1-2, 23 October 2012.
  27. Fisher, Gabe (23 October 2012). "Controversial survey ostensibly highlights widespread anti-Arab attitudes in Israel". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 2 December 2012.
  28. 'Haaretz changes tack on major story that alleged widespread ‘apartheid’ attitudes in Israel,' at The Times of Israel, October 30, 2012. Miller adds: “It is, however, not clear what these respondents understand by the term as this question did not require clarification”.'
  29. The flip side of the Israel apartheid poll. Maurice Ostroff. The Times of Israel. Nov 13, 2012

References

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