| Jewish-Arab Brotherhood אחווה יהודית-ערבית  الأخوة اليهودية العربية | |
|---|---|
| Leader | Elias Nakhleh | 
| Founded | 22 October 1968 | 
| Dissolved | 1969 | 
| Split from | Progress and Development | 
| Merged into | Cooperation and Brotherhood | 
| Ideology | Israeli Arab interests | 
| Most MKs | 1 (1968–1969) | 
| Fewest MKs | 1 (1968–1969) | 
Jewish–Arab Brotherhood (Hebrew: אחווה יהודית-ערבית, Ahva Yehudit-Aravit; Arabic: الأخوة اليهودية العربية) was a short-lived, one-man political party in Israel.
Background
The party was formed on 22 October 1968, during the sixth Knesset, when Elias Nakhleh broke away from Progress and Development.[1]
For the 1969 elections, Nakhleh merged the party into Cooperation and Brotherhood, effectively swapping parties with Jabr Muadi, who had begun the session as a member of Cooperation and Brotherhood, then left to set up the Israeli Druze Faction, before joining Progress and Development.
References
- ↑ Mergers and Splits Among Parliamentary Groups Knesset website
External links
- Jewish-Arab Brotherhood Knesset website
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