Passed last month, the divisive law turns non-Jewish citizens of occupied
Palestine into second-class citizens, further marginalizing some 1.8 million
Palestinians with Israeli citizenship and other minorities.
The protesters marched through the streets of the city on Saturday night calling
for the law's cancellation.
"This is amazing. This is the first time I remember Jews and Palestinians
fighting together for something. This is a really big moment for people that
believe in democracy and equality," an unidentified demonstrator told Al Jazeera.
A Jewish participant agreed, saying all citizens should be equal under the law.
"We, a lot of Israelis, believe that they (minorities) are entitled to be equal
to us," protester Dan Meiri said. "It is the Jewish state but the people that
live here are entitled to be equal to us across the board in education, in the
army, in the universities, in the parliament - all over."
The measure, pushed through last month by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
declares the right to national self-determination is uniquely Jewish.
The law states that Hebrew is the official language of Israel, downgrading the
status of Arabic. Previously, both Hebrew and Arabic were official languages.
The "nation-state bill" also establishes Israeli settlements in the occupied
Palestinian territories as a "national value" that the state must encourage.
"This law is against us, against the Arabic language, against peace, against our
future in this land. We are the real people of this land," said demonstrator
Omar Sultan.
Last week, thousands from the Druze minority protested against the law under the
motto, "Equal rights for all citizens."
The Druze are an Arabic-speaking group with their own distinct religious and
cultural traditions. They make up two percent of Israel's 8.8 million
population, and are found mainly in the northern regions of Galilee and Carmel.
The Druze have had special status since the 1950s when they were drafted into
the military, unlike Israel's Muslim and Christian populations.
Netanyahu has repeatedly defended the contentious law passed on July 19.
"We will keep ensuring civil rights in Israel's democracy but the majority also
has rights and the majority decides," he said a week before it passed.
"An absolute majority wants to ensure our state's Jewish character for
generations to come."
Source: Tasnim