1999-07-30 Mayor Muhammad Abou Foul of Jatt |
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By Donald H. Harrison San Diego, CA (special) -- Dr. Mohammad Abou Foul, an orthopedic surgeon who also is mayor of the Arab village of Jatt, describes himself as a pioneer of Arab-Jewish exchange programs and as a man with a vision of turning Jatt into a center of tourism and archeology.
Thirty years ago, Abou Foul attended a Jewish high school in Hadera because there were no such educational opportunities then in his village. He said he learned much about Jewish culture and also studied the Tanach and the Talmud. "To see the dominant Jewish society and the recessive Arab society was hard," Abou Foul said. In the late 1960s, however, an Arab member of the Knesset named Mohammad Watteb developed a program to take a half dozen boys from Arab villages and have them live for a month on a Jewish kibbutz. "He told us, 'we must live together' and 'if you want to make a good life, you must know them and learn,' Abou Foul recalled. The first night staying on the kibbutz "all the guys were afraid, but after three weeks we were all friends," he said. "It was good, a good meeting." As an orthopedic surgeon, Abou Foul serves both Arab and Jewish patients at a hospital in Haifa. A member of the Arab Union party, he voted for fellow Arabs for the Knesset and for Ehud Barak for prime minister during the recent elections. "More than 95 percent of the Arabs voted for Barak," he said. "We had two reasons: equality between Arabs and Jews in Israel and two, the peace. The two things go together." Abou Foul, who serves as a leader of the bloc of 64 Arab mayors in Israel's council of local authorities, described relations between citizens of his village and the nearby kibbutzim and moshavim as quite good. "There are agricultural workers from our village who go there to work," he noted. Addtionally, he said, Jatt and two nearby Arab villages cooperate to
treat and recycle waste water. "I think the kibutzim will buy from us,
and in the future there will be other kinds of cooperation," he said. "We
plan a regional shopping center and we hope also to build a center for
sports."
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