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Gazans Flocking to Learn Hebrew So They Can Work in Israel

Al Monitor reports how more and more Gazans are learning Hebrew, in the hope of working in Israel.

Israel announced Oct. 20 that it will increase the number of work permits available to Palestinians in the Gaza Strip from 7,000 to 10,000

The Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories said in a Facebook post that the decision was made after a security assessment that all of the recent measures announced by Israel depend on stability in the Gaza Strip being maintained.

From 2007 until late 2019, Israel prevented all Gazan workers from entering its territories. The ban has ended but even in 2020, only 0.1% of Gazans who held an Israeli work permit were allowed to enter Israel, according to a 2020 report by the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics.

Before Hamas took control of the Gaza Strip in 2007, Palestinian workers inside Israel stood at 120,000.

Tens of thousands of unemployed Palestinians eagerly seek work in Israel amid the high unemployment rates in the Gaza Strip — that reached 48% in the first quarter of 2021 — made worse by the Israeli blockade imposed since 2006 and the Palestinian Authority’s decision to stop hiring Gazans following the internal split in 2007.

In light of the difficult conditions in the besieged enclave, thousands of unemployed Gazans applied for permits to work inside Israel.

Most of these workers do not speak Hebrew, which is not taught in the Palestinian curriculum. The Hebrew language is only taught as an elective course in some Palestinian universities. Many Gazans are now seeking to learn Hebrew in specialized language centers in the Strip.

Al-Monitor visited the Nafah Training, Language and Translation Center, which offers Hebrew courses for Gazan workers and merchants taught by Palestinian former prisoners who learned Hebrew while in Israeli jails. 

Falet believes that it is important for Gazans to learn Hebrew to participate in trade and business relations as well as medical transfers between Israel and Gaza.

Note how despite being constantly subjected to rocket fire and other terrorism emanating from the Strip, Israel is constantly endeavoring to make life easier for the average Gazan, by enabling more to enter Israel for work and medical care. Speaking of the latter, we have a fresh-off-the-press reminder as to why Israel has to limit the amount of Gazans entering:

Police and the Shin Bet arrested a 29-year-old Palestinian from the Gaza Strip who was staying in Israel illegally, on suspicion of setting fire to Sukkot and buses in Ramla.

The young Palestinian, Suleiman Kasab, is originally a resident of Khan Yunis. He entered Israel in January 2020 with humanitarian approval as an escort for his mother, who is suffering from a serious illness. After the treatment ended, he used the permit to stay in Israel.

But back to the Al Monitor report, which reminds us just how the so-called second intifada really messed things up for the average palestinian Arab:

Many Gazans do know some Hebrew. Before the second Palestinian intifada in 2000, more than 40,000 workers from Gaza were fluent in Hebrew, a language they acquired while working in Israel in various fields.

And despite the haters and palestinian Arab leadership constantly complaining about Israel, many Gazans just want to work here – including in the so-called “West Bank” aka Judea and Samaria:

“I came to learn business terminology in Hebrew. I work at a sewing factory with my father who has a permit to work inside Israel,” Tanani told Al-Monitor. “I have to learn Hebrew to communicate with merchants in Israel. My father’s business is registered for import and export from Israel, and our work focuses on the city of Tel Aviv. I applied for a work permit and I expect to be accepted.”

Hatem Moqbel, a contractor from Gaza City who operates in Israel, is also taking the course. Moqbel told Al-Monitor that he wants to learn how to read and write in Hebrew, which he has spoken since he was 12 years old. 

Moqbel seeks to establish a contracting business have his son, who studied civil engineering in Gaza, run it. He said he will manage the business from inside Israel, so he needs to learn how to read and write in Hebrew in order to sign documents.

Louay Ayesh, 17, who lives in Gaza City, is also student at the center. He told Al-Monitor that he is seeking to learn Hebrew even though he is not allowed to enter Israel because of his age. He added that his father owns a sewing factory, has a work permit inside Israel and knows the language.

Ahlam Abu Gholi from al-Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza City is also learning Hebrew at the Nafeh center. He told Al-Monitor, “I expect the residents of Gaza to obtain additional incentives, such as being allowed to live and work in the West Bank. That is why I am learning Hebrew.”

This means Gazans even want to theoretically work in the construction of new communities in Judea and Samaria, which we are constantly being told are “obstacles to peace.”

About the author

Picture of David Lange

David Lange

A law school graduate, David Lange transitioned from work in the oil and hi-tech industries into fulltime Israel advocacy. He is a respected commentator and Middle East analyst who has often been cited by the mainstream media
Picture of David Lange

David Lange

A law school graduate, David Lange transitioned from work in the oil and hi-tech industries into fulltime Israel advocacy. He is a respected commentator and Middle East analyst who has often been cited by the mainstream media
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