
Palestinian women passing an Israeli police checkpoint in Jerusalem, October 8, 2015.
photo: Menahem Kahana/AFP/Getty Images
TEL AVIV (JTA)–Nearly half of Jewish Israelis want to expel Arabs from the country.
That’s one of several findings from a new survey of Israeli attitudes on religion, politics and Jewish identity conducted by the U.S.-based Pew Research Center.
Coming just three years after Pew’s much-discussed study of Jewish-Americans, the Israel study depicts a country divided by religion and ethnicity, where Jews of opposing religious outlooks rarely associate and marriages that cross the Jewish-Arab divide almost never happen.
Israel is 81% Jewish and 19% non-Jewish, according to the survey. Among the Jews, half are secular. The other half is divided among traditional (29%), religious Zionists (13%) and haredi Orthodox (9%).
The study, released Tuesday morning, is based on 5,600 interviews with Israelis conducted between October, 2014 and May, 2015. It has a margin of error of 2.9% on questions asked of Jews and 5.6% for those asked of Muslims. Many of the findings confirm commonly held views about Israel, but here are six that might surprise you.
1. Nearly half of Jewish Israelis want Israel to be Arab-free.












