Momentum Builds For Potential Israel-Pakistan Normalization
Israel hosted an unlikely guest – Pakistanis – last month, marking a leap toward diplomatic normalization.
As the latest step toward bringing the Jewish state and the Muslim-majority nation closer, a delegation led by Nasim Ashraf, Pakistan’s former Minister of State for Human Development, the delegatiom met with Israeli President Isaac Herzog on Sept. 23.
The delegation was hosted by Sharaka, an NGO fostering Israeli-Arab cooperation formed in the wake of the Abraham Accords, in cooperation with the American Muslim and Multifaith Women’s Empowerment Council (AMMWEC).
In a statement, Sharaka said it was “honored to be leading efforts to build bridges of dialogue and understanding between Pakistan and Israel.”
“Hopefully, this interaction will lead to normalization and warm ties between the countries one day,” Dan Feferman, director of communications and global affairs at Sharaka told Zenger News. “Israel and Pakistan both need brave individuals to visit Israel and see the country more than anything.
“Israel has no animosity towards Pakistan, as our guests saw firsthand,” he added.
Sharaka’s co-founder, Amit Deri pointed to Israel’s innovation as a way to strengthen the bond. “So much of Israel’s innovation, especially in water and agriculture technology, can benefit the Pakistani people, especially as they suffer horrible flooding,” he said.
Members of the delegation also emphasized the importance of Israel’s technology in fostering normalization.
Ashraf also highlighted the importance of Israel’s technology in the normalization equation, telling Zenger News that he was “very impressed by the progress made by Israel in all kinds of technology, and Israel deserves to be called the world’s number-one ‘start-up nation.
“Many countries, Pakistan included, could benefit from Israeli technologies, especially in agriculture, water reuse, high-tech and health care,” Ashraf added.
Sibti Arif, a Pakistani journalist living in Dubai, who was part of the delegation, noted told Zenger News that “Israel is purifying sewage water, distilling water from air, and creating a host of e-commerce and entrepreneurial opportunities.
“It seems that the sky is the limit for them.”
Arif said that there are many Pakistanis who believe a normalized relationship with Israel will reap “economic and diplomatic benefits. “I believe that establishing business ties between the Pakistani expat community and Israel will help to create trust between Israel and Pakistan, which could improve relations between the countries,” he said.
According to Sharaka, they are receiving messages of support from members and social media about how to get involved with normalization efforts.
The visit follows several recent contacts between Israel and Pakistan, including Herzog acknowledging that a group of Pakistani expatriates had visited Israel in May, crediting the Abraham Accords for making it possible.
Although rarely seen, reconciliatory moves have been going on between both the countries since 2005, when Pakistan’s then President Parvez Musharraf broke new ground as he was the first leader of a Muslim nation, that had no diplomatic relations with Israel, to meet publicly with Jewish Leaders.
“This was an amazing experience because we haven’t had a group of Pakistani leaders in Israel ever in such scope and that all stemmed from the Abraham Accords, meaning Jew and Muslim can dwell together in the region,” Herzog said at the World Economic Forum in Davos.
A British-Pakistani aide to then-Prime Minister Imran Khan visited Israel in 2020 and met with the head of the Mossad. That same year, Saudi Arabia reportedly pressured Pakistan to join the Abraham Accords.
A Pakistani cleric and politician Maulana Muhammad Khan Sherani, who advised the lawmakers on Islamic law as the Chairman of Pakistan’s Council of Islamic Ideology, publicly supported normalizing ties with Israel, even stating that Israel’s existence as the homeland of the Jews was written in the Quran.
Produced in association with Jewish News Syndicate.
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