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LARRY DERFNER ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT AP/EYAL WARS HAVSKY In Honor of National Nurses Week May 6 - May 12 The Greater Detroit Chapter of Hadassah Nurses Council Recognizes and Supports Our Colleagues in Israel. Right-wing leader Binyamin Netanyahu speaks to the press in Jerusalem. I f I talked to, say, 200 [Israeli Arabs] while the fighting was going on in Lebanon, I'd say 50, 60, even 70 percent of them said they weren't going to vote for [Shimon] Peres. But now, little by little, they're coming back," said Sa'il Iraqi. Mr. Iraqi, a 42-year-old social worker and Peres supporter, was sitting in front of his apartment building in Tira, an Israeli Arab town of some 17,000 people in cen- tral Israel. It was the second day after the cease-fire in Lebanon, and the beginning of the Moslem holiday Id al-Adha. Over the three days of the hol- iday, numerous Labor Party min- isters and Knesset members would be visiting Arab villages and cities around the country, ty- ing to rebuild support for Prime Minister Shimon Peres in the May 29 election. Israeli Arab voters are crucial to Mr. Peres' chances although they account for about 12 percent of the total electorate. Until Op- eration Grapes of Wrath, Mr. Peres seemed certain to get about 90 percent of the Israeli Arab vote. But the sight of hundreds of thou- sands of Lebanese Arabs fleeing Israeli bombs, and especially the spectacle of 100 Lebanese Arab refugees in Kana being killed by stray Israeli mortars, turned masses of Israeli Arabs tem- porarily against Mr. Peres. Even in Tira, where the Labor Party is strong, public school stu- dents left classes to join the na- tionwide Israeli Arab strike. In Nazareth, the largest of Is- raeli Arab cities, some demon- strators scuffled with police. During Mr. Peres' speech to the Knesset, in which he defended Operation Grapes of Wrath, Is- raeli Arab lawmakers hollered in- vective at him. "Baby-killer" was the epithet shouted by Taleb a- Sana'a of the Arab Democratic Party. Many Israeli Arabs swore they would not vote for Mr. Peres. Neither would they vote for Benjamin Netanyahu, whose right-wing politics and support- ers put him beyond the pale for all but a few Israeli Arabs. Instead they vowed to go to the polls, vote for an Arab party in the Knesset election, and leave the prime min- ister's ballot blank. But now the war is over. "Is- raeli Arabs have short memories. In another week or two they'll forget about it," said Ahmed Abd el-Hai, 38, a Tira salesman and Peres supporter. "Israeli Arabs understand they have no choice but to vote for Peres because a blank ballot, in effect, is a vote for Netanyahu," said Sameh Iraqi, 41, who heads Labor's campaign in Tira. (Iraqi is also Sa'il Iraqi's cousin. Tira, like all Israeli Arab towns and villages, is populated mainly by a few large hamulot, or ex- tended families. Each hamulah often votes as a bloc for a partic- ular party, and the Iraqi hamu- lah has traditionally gone with Labor.) Experts on Israeli Arab politics agree with this assessment. Shmuel Toledano, a former Arab Affairs Adviser to the Prime Min- ister, wrote in Ha'aretz : 'There is BATTLE page 76