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Opinion

The JNF must go back to its roots

May 24, 2012 14:47
2 min read

As with so many diaspora Jews for more than 100 years, a Jewish National Fund blue collection box stood in my home as I was growing up, and I have one still.

I loved the box because it symbolised that all Jews were part of the land of Israel; that our money went towards caring for the people and the land on which they lived. Jewish values drove the JNF as it made the green-inked line of the 1949 demarcation borders a real green line of trees - the JNF did not plant on land that it or the state did not own.

On a rabbinic mission in the 1990s, I saw for myself the remarkable environmental work carried out by the JNF: water treatment and recycling, fish farming in the desert, pioneering methods of cultivation, and I was impressed. But my feelings have changed.

The JNF calls itself Israel's leading humanitarian and environmental charity but, in developing the Negev, it is ignoring the local Bedouin community and dispossessing its members from their ancestral lands.