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‘Wonder Woman’ urges calm in Israeli civil rights fight

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Hollywood star Gal Gadot has leapt to defend a fellow actress who was chided by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for challenging his party’s treatment of Arab citizens.

‘Wonder Woman’ urges calm in Israeli civil rights fight
Israeli actress and model Gal Gadot

Netanyahu and his Likud party have been accused of using scare tactics and demonizing Israel’s Arab population ahead of April 9 elections in a bid to motivate their right-wing base.

“Love your neighbor as yourself,” Israeli-born Gadot wrote on Instagram late Sunday after popular Israeli model and television actress Rotem Sela received online abuse from the public and a personal reprimand from Netanyahu.

“This isn’t a matter of right or left. Jew or Arab. Secular or religious. It’s a matter of dialogue, of dialogue for peace and security and of our tolerance of one towards the other,” the Wonder Woman star posted.

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Sela fired off an angry Instagram post late Saturday after watching right-wing firebrand culture minister Miri Regev on television. Regev stated the Likud’s line, warning voters in the April election not to choose its main opponents because if elected it would form an alliance with Israeli Arab parties in parliament—a highly unlikely scenario.

“When the hell will someone in this government convey to the public that Israel is a state of all its citizens and that all people were created equal? Even the Arabs—believe it or not—are human beings, and the Druze and the gays, by the way, and the lesbians and—shock— leftists,” Sela wrote.

Netanyahu answered with an Instagram message of his own, addressed to “Dear Rotem.”

“Israel is not a state of all its citizens. According to the basic nationality law we passed, Israel is the nation-state of the Jewish people—and only it,” he wrote referring to a deeply controversial law passed last year declaring Israel the nation-state of the Jewish people and downgrading Arabic’s status as an official language.

Israeli Arabs make up around 17.5 percent of the population but would be extremely unlikely to be part of any coalition government after elections.

Netanyahu has continually warned that his opponents will receive the support of Arab parties and that they will make significant concessions to the Palestinians.

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin, himself a former Likud lawmaker, took a swipe at the politicians on Monday.

“Lately, when political thinking is turning all reason on its head, we hear entirely unacceptable remarks about Arab citizens of Israel,” he said in a speech marking 40 years since Israel and Egypt signed a peace treaty. 

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