Uri Davis was born in
Jerusalem and grew up in and was educated in
Kfar Shmaryahu. His parents were Jewish immigrants who had come to
Mandatory Palestine during the
Fifth Aliyah. His mother Blanka was from
Czechoslovakia and his father Joseph was from the
United Kingdom. Davis describes himself as a Palestinian Hebrew.[4] During the 1961–1963 period he worked on
Kibbutz Erez as an alternative form of national service to military conscription. Subsequently, he received a BA in Philosophy and Arabic from the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1968), a Masters in Philosophy from the same institution (1970) and from
The New School for Social Research,
New York City an MA in Anthropology (1973) and a PhD in Anthropology (1976).[5][6]
Davis wrote a series of books and articles that classify the State of Israel as an apartheid state, alleging that Israel's policies towards Palestinians, including Palestinian citizens of Israel, are comparable to South Africa's
apartheid policies: Israel: An Apartheid State (1987), Apartheid Israel: A Critical Reading of the Draft Permanent Agreement, known as the "Geneva Accords" (2003),[10] and Apartheid Israel: Possibilities for the Struggle Within (2003).
In an interview to
Irish Times in 2002 Davis said: "I am an anti-militarist and recognise the right to use force in certain instances, in armed resistance, which is legal in international law. It allows armed resistance, the targeting of the opposite party in uniform."[11]
Until 2009 Davis was Observer Member of the
Palestine National Council.[10]
In 2009, Davis was successful in his bid for a seat on Fatah's Revolutionary Council, a legislative body of the Movement, placing 31st from among more than 600 candidates running for position in the 128-member body. He is the first person of Jewish origin to be elected to such a high-ranking position.[13] He was re-elected in 2016, taking the 29th place.[14]
2008 marriage and conversion to Islam
Davis met Miyassar Abu Ali, a Palestinian, in Ramallah in 2006. They signed their Certificate of Marriage ('Aqd al-Zawaj) there in 2008, after Davis converted to Islam at their marriage.[15][16]
Selected bibliography
Dissent & Ideology in Israel: Resistance to the Draft 1948-1973 (as co-editor, with Martin Blatt and Paul Kleinbaum) (1975)
ISBN0-903729-07-5
Documents from Israel, 1967-73: Readings for a Critique of Zionism (as co-editor, with Norton Mezvinsky) (1975)
ISBN0-903729-09-1
Israel & the Palestinians (as co-editor, with Andrew Mack and Nira Yuval-Davis) (1975)
ISBN0-903729-13-X
Israel: Utopia Incorporated - A Study of Class, State and Corporate Kin Control (1977)
ISBN0-905762-12-6
Deir al-Asad: The Destiny of an Arab Village in Galilee, in Palestinian Arabs in Israel: Two Case Studies, Ithaca Press, London 1977, (as co-editor, with Hasan Amun, and Nasr Dakhlallah San´Allah)
ISBN0-903729-32-6
The Jewish National Fund (with Walter Lehn) (1988)
ISBN0-7103-0053-0
The State of Palestine (Jerusalem Study Series) (1991)
ISBN0-86372-135-4
Crossing the Border: an autobiography of an Anti-Zionist Palestinian Jew (1995)
ISBN1-86102-002-3
Citizenship and the State: A Comparative Study of Citizenship Legislation in Israel, Jordan, Palestine, Syria and Lebanon (London, 1997)
ISBN0-86372-218-0
Citizenship and the State in the Middle East: Approaches and Applications (as co-editor) (Syracuse, New York, 2000)
ISBN0-8156-2829-3
Apartheid Israel: Possibilities for the Struggle Within (2004)
ISBN1-84277-339-9
^Davis, Uri (March–May 2004).
"Apartheid Israel: a critical reading of the Geneva Accords". Peace News (2454). Archived from
the original on 2008-07-23. Retrieved 2008-07-13. Uri Davis, though registered as a 'Jew' on his Israeli ID card, is an atheist, and hence reluctant to define himself as a 'Jew' (except in the tribal sense of the term). He suggests he is referred to as 'an anti-Zionist Palestinian Hebrew, born in Jerusalem in 1943, and a dual citizen of the State of Israel and the UK'.