logo
Palestinian citizens denied access to missile shelters, exposing internal apartheid in Israel

Palestinian citizens denied access to missile shelters, exposing internal apartheid in Israel

DaysofPal – As sirens blared across Israel and missiles streaked through the night sky, most residents instinctively sought cover. But for many Palestinian citizens of Israel, the scramble for safety ended not at the door of a shelter but in front of it, turned away by neighbors and locked out by systems meant to protect them.
The recent wave of Iranian missile strikes has laid bare longstanding disparities that leave Palestinian citizens, roughly 21 percent of the population, especially vulnerable during times of crisis.
Turned away at the door
Samar al-Rashed, a 29-year-old single mother living near Acre, was one of many to experience this exclusion firsthand. When air raid sirens pierced the night, she grabbed her five-year-old daughter, Jihan, and rushed toward their building's bomb shelter.
'I didn't have time to pack anything,' she said. 'Just water, our phones, and my daughter's hand in mine.'
But at the shelter entrance, another resident heard her speaking Arabic and physically blocked their way.
'I was stunned,' she recalled. 'I speak Hebrew fluently. I tried to explain. But he looked at me with contempt and just said, 'Not for you.''
Terrified, Samar returned to her apartment and watched from the balcony as missiles lit up the sky. 'It felt like the end of the world,' she said. 'And still, even under attack, we're treated as a threat, not as people.'
A system built unequally
Though Palestinian citizens of Israel hold Israeli passports, their treatment often falls far short of full equality. Structural discrimination has left many communities underdeveloped, underfunded, and underprotected.
Reports have long highlighted severe disparities in infrastructure. A 2022 audit by the State Comptroller found that more than 70 percent of homes in Palestinian communities lacked a reinforced safe space, compared to just a quarter of homes in Jewish areas. Funding for civil defense in Arab towns and villages lags significantly behind that of their Jewish counterparts.
This isn't just a matter of neglected planning; it has deadly consequences.
In mixed cities, such as Lydd (Lod), where Jewish and Palestinian citizens live side by side, shelter access remains unequal. Yara Srour, a 22-year-old nursing student from the neglected al-Mahatta neighborhood, recounted trying to find safety for her family during one of the heaviest nights of bombardment.
'We went to the new part of Lydd, where there are proper shelters,' she said. 'But they wouldn't let us in. Jews from poorer areas were also turned away. It was only for the 'new residents,' mostly middle-class Jewish families.'
Yara's mother, who suffers from chronic knee pain, struggled to walk. 'We were begging, knocking on doors,' she said. 'People just looked through the peephole. No one helped. Meanwhile, the sky was burning.'
No protection, no recourse
In Haifa, 33-year-old mobile phone technician Mohammed Dabdoob shared a similar experience. After closing his shop amid missile alerts, he rushed to a nearby shelter, only to find it locked.
'I tried the code. It didn't work. I banged on the door and called in Hebrew. No one opened,' he said.
Seconds later, a missile landed nearby, shattering windows and sending glass flying.
'There was smoke and screaming. It felt like a nightmare, like the Beirut port explosion,' he said, describing how he hid behind a parked car until the danger passed.
When the shelter door eventually opened and people emerged, Mohammed stood silently, watching.
'There's no real safety for us,' he said. 'Not from the missiles, and not from the people who are supposed to be our neighbors.'
Citizenship in name only
The state's failure to ensure equal protection during wartime reflects a broader pattern of marginalization. Palestinian citizens are often treated with suspicion, policed more harshly during periods of unrest, and sometimes even criminalized for online posts or political expression.
'The state expects our loyalty in war,' said Mohammed. 'But when it's time to protect us, we're invisible.'
After witnessing the violence and being denied access to shelter, Samar moved with her daughter to her parents' home in the Galilee village of Daburiyya, where a reinforced room offered some degree of safety. But she is now considering fleeing to Jordan.
'I wanted to protect Jihan. She doesn't know this world yet,' she said. 'But I also didn't want to leave my land. That's the dilemma for us: survive or stay and suffer.'
Following the attacks, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared that 'Iran's missiles target all of Israel, Jews and Arabs alike.' Yet the disparity in protection and response leaves Palestinian citizens unconvinced.
While Palestinians were detained for online reactions or symbols of solidarity, online calls for violence against them went largely unaddressed. Many feel their citizenship is conditional, offered in form but denied in substance.
For Yara, who dreams of becoming a nurse, the contradiction is painful.
'I want to help people,' she said. 'But how can I serve a country that won't protect my mother?'
Shortlink for this post: https://daysofpalestine.ps/?p=64901
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Anas al-Sharif Killed After Refusing Israeli Offer of Safe Passage from Gaza
Anas al-Sharif Killed After Refusing Israeli Offer of Safe Passage from Gaza

Days of Palestine

time16 hours ago

  • Days of Palestine

Anas al-Sharif Killed After Refusing Israeli Offer of Safe Passage from Gaza

DaysofPal – Four days before he was assassinated, Palestinian journalist Anas al-Sharif was offered safe passage out of Gaza on the condition that he stop reporting; his brother revealed this week. In an interview with journalist Ahmed Jalal, published on Wednesday, Mohamed al-Sharif said the offer extended not only to Anas but also to his wife, children, and the rest of his family. 'It was the latest of several offers he had received,' Mohamed explained. But Anas refused. 'I will never abandon my people while they are living in this situation,' he told his brother. 'Either I live to witness the end of the war, or be martyred. Other than that, I have no option or decision. Whatever God has destined will happen.' Despite knowing Israel was preparing a full-scale invasion of Gaza City, Anas chose to stay. A Voice Israel Tried to Silence Anas's final post on X reflected his defiance and sense of duty. 'The occupation is now openly threatening a full-scale invasion of Gaza. For 22 months, the city has been bleeding under relentless bombardment … If this madness does not end, Gaza will be reduced to ruins, its people's voices silenced, their faces erased, and history will remember you as silent witnesses to a genocide you chose not to stop. Silence is complicity.' The threats against Anas were not new. Since December 2023, he has been documenting the Israeli army's targeting of displacement centers, UNRWA schools, hospitals, and densely populated civilian neighborhoods. That same month, Israel bombed his family home, killing his father. Soon after, Israeli intelligence and media committees launched a campaign of incitement against him, labeling him a 'terrorist.' Anas dismissed the accusations as deliberate attempts to silence him. 'My message is clear: I will not be silent. I will not stop. My voice will remain a witness to every crime until this war stops,' he wrote defiantly. International watchdogs took notice. In late July 2025, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) warned of 'direct threats and public incitement' against Anas after videos and statements circulated online naming him and questioning his work. Friends say Anas remained fully aware of the danger he faced but refused to abandon his mission of reporting from Gaza. To the very end, he saw it as his duty to his people and to the truth. On Sunday evening, August 10, 2025, Israeli occupation forces assassinated Anas al-Sharif along with five others by targeting a journalists' tent near al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City. Shortlink for this post:

Prominent Economists, Including Nobel Winners, Urge Israel to Halt Gaza Starvation Policies
Prominent Economists, Including Nobel Winners, Urge Israel to Halt Gaza Starvation Policies

Days of Palestine

time16 hours ago

  • Days of Palestine

Prominent Economists, Including Nobel Winners, Urge Israel to Halt Gaza Starvation Policies

DaysofPal – Twenty-three prominent economics professors from top universities in the United States and Europe, including several Nobel laureates, have urged the Israeli government to immediately stop policies that worsen hunger in the Gaza Strip. The signatories include Nobel laureates Daron Acemoglu, Angus Deaton, Peter Diamond, Esther Duflo, Claudia Goldin, Eric Maskin, Roger Myerson, Edmund Phelps, Christopher Pissarides, and Joseph Stiglitz. In a letter to the Israeli government, the economists expressed 'urgent concern about the widespread hunger in Gaza and the Israeli government's plan to gather civilians in a so-called 'humanitarian city.'' They demanded an immediate halt to any policies that exacerbate hunger and called for the resumption of adequate food and medical aid. The letter also urged Israel to abandon plans to confine civilians to camps, cancel proposals aimed at controlling the population, and issue an official statement affirming its commitment to human rights and international law. The economists emphasized that Israel must work in good faith toward a ceasefire, the release of prisoners, and measures to improve the humanitarian situation. 'Israel's treatment of civilians as a burden to be controlled, rather than as people with a right to live in humane conditions, is unconscionable,' the letter stated. It warned that only by taking these steps could Israel prevent widespread hunger, preserve its democratic character, and secure its long-term economic prospects. The signatories also called on Western leaders to ensure the effective implementation of these measures. The economists cited data from the United Nations World Food Program, noting that nearly a third of Gaza's 2.1 million residents had gone multiple days without food in recent weeks, while the prices of basic commodities had increased tenfold compared to three months ago. They condemned the proposed 'humanitarian city,' saying it would confine hundreds of thousands of Gazans to a limited area, depriving them of freedom of movement and basic dignity. The letter came amid ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza, which, with American support, has included killings, starvation, destruction, and forced displacement since October 7, 2023. More than 9,000 Palestinians are still missing, 61,776 have been killed, 154,906 have been injured, and hundreds of thousands have been displaced. Famine has also killed many Palestinians, including dozens of children. Shortlink for this post:

Israeli Intelligence Chief Admits to 'Necessary' Killing of 50k Palestinians
Israeli Intelligence Chief Admits to 'Necessary' Killing of 50k Palestinians

Days of Palestine

timea day ago

  • Days of Palestine

Israeli Intelligence Chief Admits to 'Necessary' Killing of 50k Palestinians

DaysofPal- Aharon Haliva, the former head of the Israeli army's Intelligence Directorate during the October 7 attacks, has admitted in closed recordings that Israeli forces deliberately sought the killing of 50,000 Palestinians as a message of deterrence to future generations. The shocking revelations, reported by Israeli Channel 12, highlight the scale of intentional civilian targeting during the ongoing war in Gaza. Haliva, who resigned months after the surprise Hamas-led assault, acknowledged his failure in carrying out his responsibilities that day. He justified the staggering Palestinian death toll, stating, 'The fact that there are 50,000 dead in Gaza was necessary and required for future generations. To say to them: you humiliated us and killed us, but this is the price. I said after October 7 that it was necessary to kill 50 Palestinians for every Israeli killed, children, women, it doesn't matter. This had to be done as a message for the future.' The former intelligence chief described the collapse of Israeli military command on the morning of the attack, admitting that the Gaza Division had been completely subdued, leaving the army powerless. He also criticized the Israeli military establishment for underestimating Hamas's capabilities, dismissing warnings of an above-ground attack. 'We mocked the idea. We thought: why would they build tunnels if they were planning to come above ground? We underestimated them, and paid the price,' he said. Haliva went on to slam what he called Israeli 'strategic arrogance,' claiming the state had long been blinded by its belief in its military and intelligence superiority. 'We believed we were invincible, with Shin Bet, Mossad, Aman, surveillance, and one of the strongest armies in the world. We thought our enemy was deterred and could be pacified with Qatari money,' he admitted. The revelations also shed light on internal Israeli political divisions. Haliva described Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as 'very cowardly and a failure,' and former Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi as suffering from 'delusions of grandeur.' He called for a formal inquiry into the October 7 failures and accused the Shin Bet of a complete intelligence collapse, saying they failed to secure even the smallest warning despite vast resources. He further criticized far-right ministers Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, saying they 'know nothing about security, don't read intelligence reports, and were not even aware Hamas had elite forces. Now they claim there is no famine in Gaza. What intelligence are these people even reading?' Haliva's confessions provide one of the clearest indications yet that Israeli military campaign in Gaza, which has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians, was not merely a response to Hamas's October 7 attack but also a deliberate strategy of mass killing designed to impose collective punishment and instill generational trauma. Shortlink for this post:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store