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PARALLEL LIVES

Is­rael and Cat­alo­nia, al­though very dif­fer­ent in many as­pects, have shared some com­mon foes through­out his­tory, and nowa­days share im­por­tant op­por­tu­ni­ties for a bet­ter fu­ture.

The Jew­ish peo­ple have suf­fered im­pris­on­ment, pun­ish­ment and death at the hands of dif­fer­ent ex­e­cu­tion­ers, start­ing in the an­cient Egypt­ian and Roman em­pires. For ex­am­ple, one mil­lion Jews were killed in the wars they waged against the Ro­mans to gain au­ton­omy. The re­pres­sion con­tin­ued through me­dieval times, with mul­ti­ple ac­counts of syn­a­gogues being de­stroyed and mas­sacres tar­get­ing Jews in dif­fer­ent Eu­ro­pean coun­tries, with the key sup­port of the Span­ish in­qui­si­tion. The an­ti­semitism reached an all-time high in the 20th cen­tury in Nazi Ger­many, which stripped Jews of their rights not only as cit­i­zens, but also as human be­ings.

Fas­cism has also tar­geted Cata­lans. Thou­sands of Cata­lans had to go into exile, threat­ened by Franco’s fas­cism. One of them was Lluís Com­pa­nys, who was caught and handed over by the Nazis, and who be­came the only de­mo­c­ra­t­i­cally elected pres­i­dent in Eu­rope to be ex­e­cuted dur­ing the 20th cen­tury. A decade be­fore that, Primo de Rivera had per­pe­trated his own mil­i­tary coup which sup­pressed Cata­lan in­sti­tu­tions and pro­hib­ited the Cata­lan lan­guage. The fa­mous ar­chi­tect An­toni Gaudí, for ex­am­ple, was de­tained and mis­treated at the age of 72 for speak­ing Cata­lan in front of the po­lice. There are nu­mer­ous ac­counts of re­pres­sion against Cata­lan cul­ture and in­sti­tu­tions from the Mid­dle Ages on. In the 15th cen­tury, the first bible in Cata­lan was sup­pressed and burned. In the 18th cen­tury, Fe­lipe V de Borbón burned dif­fer­ent towns across the Cata­lans Coun­tries, dis­solved their local gov­ern­ments, and banned the Cata­lan lan­guage. Lan­guage bans con­tin­ued over the years, both in Spain and France, in­clud­ing most of the 20th cen­tury. Re­pres­sion has con­tin­ued dur­ing the 21st cen­tury, in­clud­ing the ban on Cata­lan in the Span­ish par­lia­ment, bla­tant fis­cal plun­der­ing by the state, and the im­pris­on­ment of elected rep­re­sen­ta­tives and po­lit­i­cal ac­tivists. The fact that 9 out of the last 11 Cata­lan pres­i­dents have been pros­e­cuted, ex­iled or ex­e­cuted by the Span­ish gov­ern­ment is telling.

Hence, both Is­rael and Cat­alo­nia have a long his­tory of per­se­cu­tion and strug­gle for sur­vival, and are nowa­days sur­rounded by states that ei­ther wish their dis­ap­pear­ance as a state (in the case of Is­rael), or for Cat­alo­nia never to be­come one. These are im­por­tant grounds for mu­tual sol­i­dar­ity.

There are also note­wor­thy eco­nomic and de­mo­graphic sim­i­lar­i­ties and op­por­tu­ni­ties for col­lab­o­ra­tion. Is­rael and Cat­alo­nia are both Mediter­ranean na­tions with a rel­a­tively sim­i­lar pop­u­la­tion (9.2 vs 7.6 mil­lion). Their eco­nomic struc­ture has a sim­i­lar bal­ance of ser­vices (71% vs 79% of GDP), in­dus­try (26.5% vs 20%) and agri­cul­ture (2.5% vs 1%). Both na­tions lack nat­ural re­sources and large multi­na­tional cor­po­ra­tions, so that en­tre­pre­neur­ship plays a key role in the de­vel­op­ment of their economies. Some 99.5% of Is­raeli com­pa­nies have less than 100 em­ploy­ees, and they ac­count for one third of total em­ploy­ment. Sim­i­larly, in Cat­alo­nia 95% have less than 250 em­ploy­ees, mak­ing up 41% of total em­ploy­ment. Hence, both na­tions de­pend heav­ily on SMEs, which must often re­sort to al­liances to gain bar­gain­ing power and scale. This calls for part­ner­ships be­tween com­pa­nies from both places. Fur­ther­more, Cat­alo­nia has over 1,000 high-growth star­tups, and en­tre­pre­neurs re­cently named Barcelona as the third best city in Eu­rope to cre­ate a startup. In turn, Is­rael has more than 6,000 ac­tive star­tups, mak­ing it the world leader in star­tups per capita.

To sum up, Is­rael and Cat­alo­nia share im­por­tant threats and com­mon foes that call for mu­tual sol­i­dar­ity. The two so­ci­eties and economies also de­pict com­mon fea­tures and op­por­tu­ni­ties that con­sti­tute pow­er­ful grounds for col­lab­o­ra­tion.

Au­thor’s orig­i­nal title: Is­rael and Cat­alo­nia, par­al­lel lives

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