Changing the demographics According to Mel Frykberg, the Israeli government is attempting to Judaise East Jerusalem and maintain a Jewish majority against the
demographic threat of a higher Palestinian birth rate. Despite the rapid growth of the Jewish population since 1967, its relative size has decreased due to a higher growth rate among the Arab population. The Jewish population dropped from 74% in 1967 to 66% in 2005. Researchers at the Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies called this "a contradiction between the reality in Jerusalem and the declared government policy of maintaining the Jewish majority in Jerusalem since the city's reunification." To reverse this trend, they suggested expanding Jerusalem's border to the west (meaning the addition of Jewish population centres) or removing Arab neighbourhoods from the city's municipal area.
Revocation or denying of residency rights Some of how the Israeli government is "Judaizing Jerusalem," according to Leilani Farha, are via the revocation of residency rights,
absentee property laws, and tax policies. Palestinians residing outside Jerusalem for seven or more years can lose their Jerusalem residency status. According to UN figures, in 2006, at least 1,360 Palestinians had their ID cards revoked. Three days after the end of the Six-Day War, the
Moroccan Quarter in the Old City was demolished by the Israeli army to improve access to the Western Wall.
Building Jewish settlements The Israeli government has sought to increase the Jewish population by establishing Jewish neighbourhoods, viewed by the International Community and Left-Wing Parties and NGOs within Israel as illegal
Israeli settlements, in and around Jerusalem. Redrawing Jerusalem's municipal boundaries has incorporated such neighbourhoods. Over roughly three decades, from 1967 to 1995, of 76,151 housing units built in Jerusalem, 64,867 (88%) were allocated for Jewish residents, with 59% of these units built in East Jerusalem as new Jewish settlements. Yiftachel writes that by 2001, Judaization in Jerusalem had entailed the incorporation of of surrounding land into the city's boundaries and the construction of 8 settlements in East Jerusalem housing a total of 206,000 Jewish settlers. In an essay he coauthored with Haim Yaacobi, they write that "Israel would like the Palestinian residents of Jerusalem to see Judaization as 'inevitable,' a fact to be accepted passively as part of the modern development of the metropolis." Plans are underway to construct a new Israeli settlement in the last piece of open land linking East Jerusalem to the West Bank that will house about 45,000 residents on a land area larger than
Tel Aviv, the second-largest Israeli city. According to
Al Ghad, a
Jordanian newspaper, the Israeli government elected in 2009 is soliciting tenders for the biggest settlement plans in
West Bank. These plans have been described by the Palestinian Information Minister
Mustafa Barghouti as "an announcement against peace and against the Palestinian state and it means the Israeli government is not a partner for peace." This settlement is considered by Palestinians as one method by which to Judaize the city. Rubenberg also cites settlement construction as an example of the Judaization of Jerusalem, citing in particular the construction of bypass roads that connect
Israeli settlements in East Jerusalem with those in the West Bank to create a newly expanded Jerusalem metropolis integrally linked with Israel proper.
West Bank barrier from Jerusalem. Surrounding Arab villages, who traditionally have close cultural and economic connections with Jerusalem, are cut off from the city by the
Israeli West Bank barrier. The efforts of fundamentalist Jewish groups who enjoyed government backing in attempts to take over Palestinian homes in the
Muslim and
Christian Quarters of the
Old City between 1993 and 2000 are cited by Rubenberg as one example of the Judaization of Jerusalem.
Meron Benvenisti writes that these groups succeeded in taking over several buildings, "but only after receiving massive assistance from the government to, among other things, finance an extensive system of armed guards to protect them day and night, and hire armed guards for their children anytime they go out into the streets." Not only the homes of Palestinian residents are targeted, but also those of absent refugees. Alterations of the
Absentee Property Law to enable the confiscation of 'enemy' property while hindering Palestinian reclamation of property in West Jerusalem and reserving as much territory as possible for Jewish use while obstructing Palestinian construction, in addition to punitive demolition of residences, have all played a role in the Judaization of Jerusalem. It is calculated that about 35% of East Jerusalem is used by Israelis, while 80% of the land is denied use by Palestinians as a result of restrictive zoning measures.
Demolition of Palestinian homes Jeff Halper, an
anthropologist and director of the
Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD), describes the Judaization of the city as one of the effects of settlement growth and
house demolitions in
East Jerusalem, describing it as being aimed at "eliminat[ing] the idea that there is an East Jerusalem, to create one unified, Jewish Jerusalem." In March 2009, defending its planned demolitions against Palestinian houses in the Bustan area of Silwan that would leave 1,500 people homeless, Jerusalem authorities said the houses were built illegally, without zoning and construction permits. Palestinians and
human rights organizations countered that "Israel makes it almost impossible for Palestinians to get the requisite permits, as a part of the policy to Judaise the eastern part of the city."
Replacing Arabic place names with Hebrew names Another major aspect of Israel's effort to Judaize Jerusalem was to replace the
Arabic names of streets, quarters and historical sites with
Hebrew names. The
Jordanian newspaper
al-Ra'i published a list of such names and accused the Israeli government of changing the Arab names systematically to erase Arab heritage in Jerusalem and prevent the reassertion of Arab sovereignty over the city. The newspaper also claimed the new names had nothing to do with the old names and sometimes attributed a Jewish patrimony when in fact there was no such relation. One example it cited was the site named
Solomon's Stables by the Israeli government, which the newspaper claimed was not built in
Solomon's time but at the time of the
Roman emperor Hadrian. ==Discussing Israeli government policy==