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Opinion

As the tide changes in Jerusalem, will the city's Arab population participate in mayoral elections?

Lior Schillat argues East Jerusalem's Arabs have gradually been separating from their West Bank counterparts

June 15, 2018 15:58
Jerusalem residents speaking at Damascus Gate in May 2018
2 min read

The American Embassy’s relocation to Jerusalem last month aroused worldwide interest and while the implications of the move were debated at length, few understand or appreciate the complexities of this 3,000-year-old city.

With more than 880,000 residents, Jerusalem is Israel’s largest city, constitutes 10 per cent of Israel’s population, and is home to two large national groups – Jews and Arabs.

Nearly 38 per cent of Jerusalem is Arab, making it the largest Arab community in Israel, four times larger than the second-largest Arab city of Nazareth.

Despite an undercurrent of tension, and despite waxing and waning waves of violence and severe terror attacks, we have identified some evidence of a changing tide amongst Jerusalem’s Arab population.