Jerusalem bookseller a 'foreigner' in homeland

Israeli officials have told Munther Fahmi that, after 16 years running his bookshop in the grounds of East Jerusalem's 19th-century hotel the American Colony, he is no longer welcome in Israel.

Munther Fahmi in his bookshop in East Jerusalem. Despite his high-profile connections, Mr Fahmi's days in the city of his birth may be numbered.
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JERUSALEM // In a city full of venerable institutions, Munther Fahmi's bookshop is as revered as any.

He counts among his customers Tony Blair, Kofi Annan and Jimmy Carter and Uma Thurman. And in a city riven by political and social tensions, Mr Fahmi's bookshop has been a place for dialogue between Palestinians and Israelis, with well-known writers and scholars from both sides of the divide regularly invited to give readings and talk about their work.

Despite his high-profile connections, Mr Fahmi's days in the city of his birth may be numbered.

Israeli officials have told him that, after 16 years running his bookshop in the grounds of East Jerusalem's 19th-century hotel the American Colony, he is no longer welcome in Israel.

Two months ago he exhausted his legal options when Israel's high court refused to overturn the decision to deport him. His only hope now rests with a governmental committee to which he has appealed on humanitarian grounds.

Mr Fahmi, 57, is far from hopeful. "My lawyer tells me applications from Palestinians are almost never accepted."

The holder of an American passport for many years, Mr Fahmi said he was staying on a tourist visa that expired on April 3. "If the committee rejects my case, I will be sent packing on a plane at very short notice."

Mr Fahmi is one of thousands of Palestinians who over the past four decades have fallen foul of an Israeli policy stripping them of their right to live in Jerusalem, said Dalia Kerstein, the director of Hamoked, an Israeli human-rights group.

Although Israel annexed East Jerusalem in 1967, in violation of international law, most of its Palestinian population received only Israeli residency permits, not citizenship.

According to Israeli figures, more than 13,000 Palestinians - their current population is 260,000 in East Jerusalem - have had their residency revoked since then.

Ms Kerstein said the number of revocations had risen sharply in recent years, with more than 4,500 Palestinians losing residency in 2008 alone, the last year for which complete figures are available.

Israeli law stipulates that Palestinians in Jerusalem can be stripped of residency if they spent at least seven years abroad - defined as including the Palestinian territories of the West Bank and Gaza - or acquired a foreign passport.

"There is clearly a policy to push Palestinians out of Jerusalem and Israel to reduce what is called here the Palestinian demographic threat," said Ms Kerstein. "It's really a case of ethnic cleansing."

Last week Hamoked and another human-rights group, the Association of Civil Rights in Israel (Acri), petitoned Israel's Supreme Court to overturn the policy, arguing that it contravened international law.

Oded Feller, a lawyer for Acri, said Palestinians in East Jerusalem were effectively "prisoners", punished by Israel if they took part in the bigger world.

"The problem for people like Munther is that the Israeli government and the courts treat them as though they are immigrants, ignoring the fact that as the city's native residents they have an inalienable right to live here," Ms Kerstein said.

Like most other Palestinians in East Jerusalem, Mr Fahmi's family declined Israeli citizenship in 1967. "We are Palestinians and Israel is occupying us. Why would we take citizenship and give a stamp of legitimacy to our occupation?"

But that decision left him and like-minded Palestinians in Jerusalem in a precarious position.

Mr Fahmi's residency was revoked - without his knowledge - during a long period spent in the United States, starting in 1975 when he left to study. He gained his US passport after marrying an American woman and raising a family.

He decided to settle back in Jerusalem in 1995, after the signing of the Oslo accords. "I had seen Yasser Arafat [the Palestinian leader] and Yitzhak Rabin [Israel's prime minister] shake hands in front of the White House. Naively, I thought it heralded a new era of reconciliation."

For the past 16 years, he has been forced to exit and enter the country every few months on a tourist visa.

Mr Fahmi learnt the full significance of his loss of residency 18 months ago, when interior ministry officials told him that, according to a new policy, he would no longer be automatically issued tourist visas.

Now, he has been told, he can spend only three months a year in Israel, including Jerusalem. In his appeal to the humanitarian committee, he has said he needs to be in Jerusalem to care for his 76-year-old mother, who is bedridden.

"Is there any other country where the native population is treated like this in its homeland?" he said.

The policy to withhold tourist visas to Palestinians with foreign passports has been patchily implemented, said Ms Kerstein, following objections from US and European embassies.

Mr Fahmi appeared a surprising choice for enforcement, given his influential supporters. A petition has attracted more than 2,000 signatures, including those of the British novelist Ian McEwan, who won this year's Jerusalem Prize for literature, the historian Eric Hobsbawn, and Simon Sebag Montefiore, whose book Jerusalem: The Biography has been a bestseller.

Mr Fahmi hopes backing from many Israelis and diaspora Jews, including Israel's two most famous novelists, Amos Oz and David Grossman, may forestall his deportation.

"I hope the authorities will take note that many of my supporters are people who describe themselves as friends of Israel," he said.

Mr Grossman told Reuters news agency last week that the Israeli government's actions were "a scandal".

Rashid Khalidi, a professor of Middle East history at Columbia University in New York, who has also signed the petition, said Mr Fahmi's case highlighted Israel's determination to maintain a clear Jewish majority in Jerusalem.

A formula devised by an Israeli government committee in 1973 fixed the percentage ratio of Jewish Israelis to Palestinians in the city at 73 to 27. But higher birth rates among Palestinians have seen their proportion swell to a little more than a third of the city's total population.

"There isn't a family I know in East Jerusalem that doesn't have someone affected by this revocation policy," said Mr Khalidi. "It's systematic."