owes to the circumstances of its birth, which saw the state expropriate some 300 acres of land, much of it from landowners in Nazareth and sur- rounding villages, to create the new city. The move led to a shortage of land for the rapidly growing local Arab population. These days in northern Israel, many Jewish Israelis, particularly younger ones, leave home for the center of the country, where the vast major- ity of Israelis live and where jobs are more plentiful. This includes tens of thousands of immigrants from the former Soviet Union who were settled in northern Israel in the 1990s. In Nazareth Ilit, Russian-speaking Israelis comprise 60 percent of the city's population, though their number is dwindling. New Makeup On Nov. 11, a new list of Arab candi- dates hopes to capitalize on the votes of the city's growing number of Arab residents. "Nazareth Ilit is already a mixed Arab-Jewish city and no longer a Jewish city," says Salim Khoury, a former city council member who again is running for office. He wants to establish Arabic-speaking schools so local Arab residents will feel more connected here. Relations between the city's Jewish and Arab residents are mostly smooth, although some Jewish residents have resisted selling apart- ments to Arabs. Dan Rabinowitz, an anthropolo- gist at Tel Aviv University, moved to Nazareth flit for a year to observe the changes here for his book, Overlooking Nazareth. He says he was taken aback by how threatened some of the city's Jewish residents felt by the notion of Arab neighbors. "It made even the most liberal, secular, modernized Israelis into something that is much more extreme, exclusive and generally intolerant:' he says. On the streets of Nazareth Ilit, Jewish residents expressed a range of viewpoints. "I have an Arab neighbor across the hall and I have no problems with her:' says a woman who asked that her name be withheld. "But I would prefer they stay where they came from. It's better if each group lives separately" Eliezer Gershoni, 86, who has lived in the city since 1965, is about to sell his house on Zippori Street. Most of the small houses on the street with private gardens, like his, have been sold to Arab families. He says it will be hard to find a Jewish buyer. Gershoni faults the government for not investing more in the Galilee, both in Arab and Jewish communities. He says the government should have been investing in Israel proper rather than diverting resources to Jewish settle- ments in the West Bank. Do you have a Beaumont doctor? For one near you, call 800.633.7377 or visit www.beaumonthospitals.com Beaumont A Longer Look Geremy Forman, who teaches and researches the historical, legal, and geographical dimensions of the Israeli land regime at Tel Aviv University and the University of Haifa, says he is trou- bled by the Israeli paradigm of Arabs and Jews living separately. "I think it is mistaken to see con- tinued ethno-national segregation as a solution to the difficulties surround- ing Jewish-Arab relations in Israel;' Forman says. "In my mind, residential segregation has always been part of the problem. It perpetuates stereo- types, prevents real understanding, and facilitates discriminatory gov- ernment and Jewish Agency policies that make genuine Jewish-Arab rap- prochement in the country difficult to imagine:' Even when Jews and Arabs do live together in cities like Nazareth Ilit, there is little mixing between the groups. "For the Arabs here, the city is like a hotel, a place they sleep, but their daily life is not here says Orna Joseph, the municipality's spokeswoman. "On some level, it is an example of coexistence, but there is a lot of sus- picion even though I would like to say everything is ideal;' she says. "There is a fear that their 15 percent could turn into 20, 30, even 50 percent, God forbid, and that then they'd take over:" The Abdubais hardly view their family's decision to live in a pleasant, affordable neighborhood as part of any plan to "take over." But they do worry that their generally good rela- tions with their Jewish neighbors, who constitute about half the population of their "mixed" building, could sour during times of heightened political tension. "There are outbursts here and there Saher says. "But what will happen during times when we are really in different camps?" O Celebrating 62 Years in Business 265 S. Old Woodward Birmingham 248-642-2555 Hours; 0-40 ■ La beauto a sa legende DR. BARRY AuSTER & STAFF WELCOME JENNIFER JANIGA, M.D. TO THE OFFICE OF OAKLAND AESTHETIC DERMATOLOGY 31420 NORTHWESTERN HWY., STE. 150, FARMINGTON HILLS Dr. Janiga is a board certified dermatologist specializing in medical and surgical dermatology. Dr. Janiga is skilled in cosmetic procedures such as: • Botox • Filler injections • Leg vein treatments TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT, PLEASE CALL 248-538-0109 November 6 . 2008 A29