Arab-Israeli Supreme court justice under fire over “Hatikvah”
JTA
Published February 29, 2012
Supreme Court Judge Salim Joubran on Tuesday remained silent during the singing of “Hatikva” at the end of a ceremony swearing in new Supreme Court President Asher Grunis.
The anthem, called “The Hope” in English, refers to a two-thousand year longing to return to the land of Israel and includes lines such as “A Jewish soul still yearns.”
David Rotem of the Yisrael Beiteinu party, chairman of the Knesset’s Yaakov Neeman to Constitution, Law and Justice Committee, said he would work to remove Joubran from his chair, including complaining to Justice Minister Yaakov Neeman.
Deputy Prime Minister Moshe Ya’alon of the Likud Party on Wednesday defended Joubran’s right to remain silent during the national anthem, saying his conduct was respectful and that as a non-Jew he should not be forced to sing it.
Ghaleb Majadale of the Labor Party, who in 2007 was the first Muslim ever appointed to the Cabinet, also came under criticism after he said in a newspaper interview that he would not sing the national anthem because it was written for Jews only, though he said he respects it by standing up.