Latest Editions

How a New Israeli Law Affects Migrant Workers

Play
Download

Child of a migrant worker in Israel (photo: Albert Sabaté)


by Albert Sabaté

On a recent Saturday in south Tel Aviv, hundreds of children and their mothers gathered in Levinski Park. In a festive spurt of face painting, hula hooping and music organized by human rights groups, migrants called attention to their complicated legal status.

Under Israeli law, work permits prohibit migrants from marrying or having kids. So this Spring, Israel began deporting migrant mothers and their children. They deported 10 women and 11 children before the Supreme Court ordered the expulsions to stop.

But then in May, the Israeli parliament passed a bill that human rights advocates call the “slavery bill.” It gives the Ministry of Interior the power to restrict where caregivers can find work, and how many jobs they can get before they need to return home.

The Israeli government is implementing what we call the revolving door policy,” said Sigal Rozen from the Hotline for Migrant Workers. “They keep on bringing new workers constantly, deporting those who know their rights and demand more money. One of the ways to minimize the rights of the worker and to keep revolving door policy is by restricting them more and more.

Ami Pacheco came legally to Israel from the Philippines to work as a caregiver for the elderly. A year after she arrived she became pregnant with her daughter, Alainah, who at this moment is spinning on the merry-go-round in a Snow White costume. Because Pacheco had a child, she automatically lost her work visa.

“Jewish people want Jewish people,” Pacheco said. “Foreign children are not allowed to stay here. Because of their culture. It’s religious culture. They don’t want to mix their race to other foreign workers.”

Government officials say they are being sensitive, but ultimately the state’s identity trumps everything else.

“The decision of the Israeli government is connected to the Jewish character, we shouldn’t be ashamed of that, that Israel is a Jewish country,” said Roi Lachmanovitch, a spokesperson for Interior Minister Eli Yishai.

Shirly Arieli, who works with a group called Israeli Children, said really heartbreaking to see the children live with this every day.
“They were born here, they were raised here,” Arieli said. “They are completely Israeli. Most children don’t speak their language of origin. They might understand it but they respond to their parents in Hebrew. Everything is exactly like their other Israeli classmates, except that they live with this constant fear.”

Lachmanovitch said the problem is that their parents use the children as a safety insurance to be here in Israel. “They use the children and say to the authorities. We have children, please don’t send us back.”

Pacheco now has a second child. She stays home, literally hiding, taking care of her kids, as well as the children of her three Filipina housemates. She says she rarely leaves her home. She goes to the market to stock up on food only once a week. Israeli human rights groups are fighting the government’s deportation policies.

“People get really scared of what will happen to the Jewish nation in Israel,” Arieli said. “A country which is such a young country built up entirely of refugees fleeing persecution and building this tiny country out of nothing. It’s amazing to me that most people who are against this they don’t see that. We, almost everyone here who is Israeli has grandparents who were fleeing something, from different parts of the world.”

Ami Pacheco said sometimes she misses her family in Philippines.

“Comparing Israel to Philippines, it’s better to have a job in Israel here than in the Philippines. Because of that, we have to sacrifice. Be away from our family,” she said.

Shabbat, the day of rest in Judaism, also becomes a day of rest for the many migrant workers who fear being deported. Pacheco and her peers can get out for some much needed fresh air for themselves and the kids.

“When it’s Shabbat, Friday and Saturday, immigration is not active,” Pacheco said. “It’s very safe during Shabbat. That’s why we’re doing our best to take our children out on Shabbat, to the park to make them enjoy. We have a picnic, with my friends, that is my rest day also in our work.”

Still, Pacheco keeps a close eye on her little Snow White. She knows this is no fairy tale and that a happy ending isn’t guaranteed.


During the broadcast on June 17, 2011, this report was featured alongside an interview with Kathleen Newland, co-Founder of the Migration Policy Institute in Washington, DC. You can listen to our interview with Newland here.

Discussion

7 comments for “How a New Israeli Law Affects Migrant Workers”

  • Anonymous

    A foreign worker arrives in Israel for employment, gets pregnant, gets pregnant again. Where’s the guy who got her pregnant? Why do the Jews bear any responsibility for her and her children? 

    Shirly Arieli tries to argue a completely vile analogy that somehow this Filipina economic migrant with her anchor babies are in any way comparable to the Jews escaping a Christian Europe that butchered and oppressed them for centuries and an Arab-Muslim world that murdered, oppressed and expelled the Jews. How dare she.

    Albert Sabaté – I get your attempt to tear at the heartstrings of your public radio demographic with the photographs. I also get The World is co-produced by the BBC. I get it.

    Now get this: Israel is the *only* country where Jews can go if things if you goyim get out of hand. The Filipina and her family can be economic migrants and go to a Christian country.

  • http://profiles.yahoo.com/u/SYIQSP76FTLY4L5QAN4EB5NS7M Richard

    I don’t get the notion that Israel must bear extreme scrutiny and suffer repeated, absurd accusations without any comparison to the rest of the real world. Israel is here attacked once again. But where is a similar examination of Saudi Arabia? Of Iran? Of Sudan? Of  countless other countries – including the U.S. – an examination of the laws and practices in other nations much less hospitable to outsiders? This is agenda-driven reporting rather than a serious, objective look at the treatment of foreign citizens working outside their native lands. Like I said, this is agenda-driven, anti-Israel propaganda, not serious journalism.

  • http://profiles.yahoo.com/u/SYIQSP76FTLY4L5QAN4EB5NS7M Richard

    I don’t get the notion that Israel must bear extreme scrutiny and suffer repeated, absurd accusations without any comparison to the rest of the real world. Israel is here attacked once again. But where is a similar examination of Saudi Arabia? Of Iran? Of Sudan? Of  countless other countries – including the U.S. – an examination of the laws and practices in other nations much less hospitable to outsiders? This is agenda-driven reporting rather than a serious, objective look at the treatment of foreign citizens working outside their native lands. Like I said, this is agenda-driven, anti-Israel propaganda, not serious journalism.

  • Adrienne Tedeschi

    How funny that the Jewish person above compares Israel to Saudi Arabia and Iran as a defense of its recent politically endorsed discrimination against and persecution of  non-Jewish migrant workers in Israel on work visas.  As for the US, our legal migrants are allowed to procreate and marry.  We are also a country that was born of  people fleeing religious persecution and we haven’t forgotten it.  We grant citizenship to those born on our soil.    I am neither Jewish nor Muslim nor Christian, but I know persecution and hypocrisy when I see it.

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1282417375 Asher B. Garber

      I didn’t read the above comment as a defense to Israeli practice. I saw it as questioning the motivation of this article that, not surprisingly, doesn’t really quote any government officials, lawmakers, or even the human rights organization that is hosting the picnic for the workers. The law is controversial– within Israel– because, see, it’s an open society. As opposed to Syria and Iran and Saudi Arabia, where workers are nailed, literally, with cruelty.

      No one’s making excuses by asking, “Why Israel?”

      • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_5PUH5K3RFFQR2VK6MTBTKE7PBM Dale

        Asher, I doubt that this article is anti-Israeli. It is mentioning a series of controversial facts. It should not be news that immigrants from all over the world encounter “discrimination” in whatever country they decide to live. What makes this article interesting is the policy of not permitting foreign workers marry or have children in the interest of maintaining “the Jewish and Democratic” state of Israel. To my knowledge, Israel is the only free country that does this. We know the plight of foreign workers in Saudi Arabia and the UAE (just to name a few). But we also know these places are not free, nor democratic. The producers of “The World” are probably highlighting this precisely because it is happening in a free country. If this also happened in Canada, I’m confident there would be a report on it as well.

  • bgrggfe

    You can find many Burberry Outlet Store Online now with the google website search ,so that you can buy some Cheap Burberry Bags directly from the website,you needn’t go aboard now if burberry store are not exist in your local city.And 
    the Burberry Bags On Sale with a incredible price ,you should be happy with them.