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Dear
Sikkuy Friends,
I hope
you will have a moment to read this article off the Web about the publication of The
Sikkuy Report 2003-4 in Hebrew.
The Report
monitors inequality between Jewish and Arab citizens of Israel as
reflected in distribution of government resources, budgets etc. It
is posted on our website (www.sikkuy.org.il) in Hebrew and will
soon be released and posted in Arabic and English.
We look forward to your
comments.
Regards,
Carl
Gann-Perkal Director of Resource Development Sikkuy (carl@sikkuy.org.il)
P.S.
Sikkuy's
Co-Executive Directors will be in Chicago (Nov. 5-9) where they have been
invited to speak at the annual conference of The Independent Sector.
They will continue on to Baltimore/D.C. (Nov. 10) and New York (Nov.
11-12). Ali and Shuli will be happy to meet with any of our friends
in those areas. If you would like to set something up, please let me
know.
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THE
SIKKUY REPORT 2003-4 RELEASED AT
TEL AVIV PRESS CONFERENCE

Sikkuy's
Co-Executive Directors, Ali Haider and Shuli Dichter, and staff meeting with journalists to
present the Report's findings at a Tel Aviv news conference on September
27th.

Monday, September 27,
2004 Survey: 45 percent of Arab
families live below poverty line
By Haaretz Service
Forty-five
percent of Arab families in Israel are defined as poor, compared to 15
percent of families in the Jewish sector, according to statistics
published on Monday by Sikkuy, a Jewish-Arab association for the
advancement of civic equality in Israel.
In its report, the
association claimed that "the government has not yet taken concrete and
substantial steps toward correcting the continuing historical injustice
caused to the Arab citizens."
The Sikkuy report is largely based on
information from the Central Bureau of Statistics, gathered between 2000
and 2001.
The report contrasts with the recommendations for the
improvement of the Israeli Arab's social conditions, as put forward by the
Or Committee, which probed the clashes between security forces and rioters
at the end of September 2000 that left 13 Israeli Arabs
dead.
According to the association, welfare allowances in Israel do
not considerably alleviate the economic conditions of Israeli Arabs. It
also claims that income supplements lift around 50 percent of poor Jews
above the poverty line, whereas only one fifth of poor Arabs manage to
cross the line.
'Arab sector education 20
years behind'
Sikkuy
strongly criticized the distribution of resources in the education system,
claiming that the level of education the Arab sector benefited from in
2002 was equivalent to that in the Jewish sector of 20 years
ago.
It furthermore stated that although the rate of those with
college or university education among Jews was double than that among
Arabs, the gap was gradually closing.
The Arab sector was also
discriminated on the level of the healthcare services it receives, the
report claimed. While the infant death rate among Jews stood at 3.5 for
every 1000 births in 2003, that of the Arab sector was at 8.4.
Also, while in Arab towns there was one specialized clinic for
every 29,500 citizens, the Jewish towns had one clinic for every 15,500
citizens.
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