World ON TH n LTA Forgotten Citizens from page 17 Kirnawi, a Ben-Gurion University graduate student, and Kher Albaz, the director of social services for the government-recog- nized village of Segev Shalom. Albaz, who had three mothers and 21 siblings growing up in Tel Sheva, organized the meeting with Imam Heniya to educate the report- ers about Bedouin life and culture and the reason this patriarch holds a more accept- ing view of women's roles in the changing Bedouin society. Inside, the walls seemed too close for a home for eight people. Sounds of food preparation rattled from the kitchen downstairs. White terrazzo stairs led to the second floor. The imam removed his shoes before entering the entertaining room, which featured brightly colored floor cush- ions and textiles separated by cushioned armrests. Thus began Bedouin hospitality, totally unscripted. Imam Heniya's 24-year-old son, Islam, a Ben-Gurion University pharmacy graduate, brought several rounds of chai tea, fruits, vegetables and other snacks, finishing with a shot of Arabic coffee. The room was transformed from a sitting area for note taking into a circus for the senses as Islam individually spiced each tiny cup of tea before serving the guests. A 'Failed' Initiative Set up by the Israeli government in 1968, Tel Sheva is known to the Bedouin as a failure. The Western community planners who built it did not take into account the large size of Bedouin families when they developed the 170-square-foot homes (the size of a small studio apartment). Next to housing, education is the top concern of Bedouin leaders such as Albaz and Imam Heniya. After putting six children through school and BGU, and with six other children at home working toward higher education, Imam Heniya said: "In Tel Sheva, the qual- Who Are The Israeli Bedouin? T he Bedouin population of Israel accounts for one- quarter of the people in the Negev Desert. Of the country's almost 160,000 Bedouin, 80 percent are under the age of 18. The Bedouin are scattered through- out the country; each tribe descends from a different ancestor. The Bedouin are Sunni Muslim Arabs. They also are 18 August 9 • 2007 ity of education in the schools is very low. The teachers are not qualified enough to prepare the kids for their academic future. "The person in charge of education in Tel Sheva never went to school. I person- ally, as a religious person, believe in educa- tion. Education is very essential in our lives these days." Imam Heniya went to college on a soccer scholarship. After a sports injury took him out of competition, he was bedridden, and he began to study the Koran. Appointed the imam of Tel Sheva by its people, he acts as a spiritual counselor. For his forward- thinking approach of sending his children to the university, he is a role model. "It is a known perception that if you have many kids, you can't send them to school; and I am here to change that',' said Imam Heniya, who studied and is practic- ing holistic medicine to make extra money for his family. The outlook for childhood education is not totally grim. In the Abu Basra region, Bet Qrinat grade school opened last September. It enrolled 130 children and can hold 500. The challenging curriculum includes five units of computer science, chemistry and environmental science. Soon physics will be on the curriculum, which is developed by the Israeli Ministry of Education and also covers math and computers (taught in Hebrew, not Arabic), four units of English, and religious studies covering the Bible and the Koran. Other schools are nearby, although transportation is a problem for families. Albaz, who developed social services for the Bedouin as his first job out of college, said many appearances are deceiving in Tel Sheva and the other recognized villages. "In some ways, this is a developed town; in other aspects, it is underdeveloped." There is only one main road into and out of Tel Sheva, and Albaz said the main palm-tree-lined streets give an illusion of a high quality of life. Deeper into the village are piles of asbestos-laced construction rubble, dirty diapers, foodstuffs, animal carcasses and mountains of uncollected garbage. Israel officially has allocated funds for the recognized villages to receive such basic municipal services as sewage, gar- bage collection, electricity and police; but few residents have seen garbage trucks or police. In one village, 15 large garbage con- tainers sat in a remote area with garbage scattered around them. From the outside, many of the legal buildings within the recognized villages appear to have modern amenities. Inside, the toilets are merely holes to deposit human waste straight into the ground. Grim Outlook Things are worse in the unrecognized, illegal villages. Residents of Unbatim suf- fer from serious toxic exposure because streams of raw human waste have flowed through the area for more than 40 years. Dead sheep, cows and other bloated and maggot-infested carcasses bake in the sun in Unbatim while children pass by. The 45 unrecognized villages depend on 11 primary health care facilities. They operate on generators that are shut off when the clinics close, making it impos- sible to store vaccines and anything else requiring refrigeration. The Regional Council for the Unrecognized Bedouin Villages of the Negev and two civil rights groups petitioned the Israel High Court of Israeli citizens. In the Negev, the Bedouin are not completely nomadic, as are some tribes in Egypt and other Middle Eastern countries. For more than 250 years, long before the modern state of Israel was born, the Negev Bedouin have roamed the area in search of grazing land for camels and sheep. An agrarian lifestyle and the change of the seasons keep the Bedouin mov- ing to areas of sustainability for their flocks. They travel with a supply of water and with temporary shelters, such as tents, tethered to form shacks. The Bedouin of northern Israel are mixed tribes of Negev Bedouin who have relocated with their animals and Syrian Bedouin. A limited number of Bedouin live in the central part of the country. According to research, they either broke from traditional tribes to lead an urban life or followed their animals to the area. The government recognizes seven official Bedouin villages in the Negev: Rahat (population 45,000, accord- ing to the estimates of Ben-Gurion University researchers); Tel Sheva (population 12,000); Segev Shalom (6,500); Hura (10,000); Lakiya (8,000); Keseifa (10,000); and Aro'er (12,000). The average Bedouin family has 11 children, down several years ago from 16.2 children per household. Polygamy was a traditional part of Bedouin cul- ture but was outlawed by Israel. Since the establishment of modern Israel as a nation in 1948, Bedouin have fought for the right to own land. Because of the Bedouin's semi-nomad- ic lifestyle, their historical "ownership" of the land came from spoken agree- ments with the Ottoman Empire. Few Bedouin felt the need to get land titles in writing. When Israel was reborn in 1948, the land went to the Jewish people. A Bedouin woman walks through the back streets of Tel Sheva in traditional garb despite soaring desert temperatures. The mountain of garbage towers three times her height and is a reminder of government services allocated but not delivered. Marcy J. Levinson is a staff writer for our Jewish Renaissance Media sister paper, the Atlanta Jewish Times.