Survey shows most Israelis are happy

by erikasnyder | June 13, 2007 at 09:33 am
781 views | 2 Recommendations | 1 comment

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The level of satisfaction with life of Jewish Israelis stands in stark contrast to those living in Gaza.  Suggesting the stark difference between quality of life for the two peoples despite the closeness in distance.
Eighty three percent of Jewish Israelis are satisfied or extremely satisfied with their lives, according to the Central Bureau of Statistics annual Social Survey 2006 released Tuesday.

Eighty four percent of the Jewish population reported being satisfied or extremely satisfied with their work situation, while 71% of the Arab community said they felt the same way.


Furthermore, more than half the population told researchers that they believed within the next few years, life in Israel would greatly improve for them.


Compared to:



More than nine in 10 Palestinians show signs of depression caused by despair over violence between Hamas and Fatah gunmen and the apparent demise of the Palestinian unity government, according to a West Bank pollster.

 
Jamil Rabah, the director of Ramallah-based Near East Consulting, said he found that 92 percent of Palestinian survey respondents suffer from depression-related anxiety, a jump of 15 percent compared with a poll in October and more than double the level from November 2005.

 
"The higher the level of depression, or discontent, the higher this score comes out, the higher the social fragmentation of society," Mr. Rabah said.

 
Mr. Rabah said he built a depression index with questions used by the World Health Organization to study the Balkans.

 
The group polled 801 Palestinians from the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem for the latest survey, which has a margin of error of 3.4 percent.

 
The poll was taken last month, following a deadly flare-up between Hamas and Fatah gunmen that left dozens dead in Gaza and laid bare a dysfunctional unity government. The unrest cuts across region, political affiliation and social class, according to the poll findings.


As violence in Gaza and the West Bank grows close to the brink of total chaos, the situation for both peoples will continue to grow increasingly grave.  It remains to be seen if being a neighbor to civil war will decrease the happiness of those living on the safer side of the border.

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ryan
ryan
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 11:07 on June 13th, 2007

erikasnyder, i like the way you contextualize the survey.

I find the section where Israelis believe that their lives will improve in the next four years especially interesting - does that mean that their lives suck now but they still have hope or are their lives good now and therefore they have hope that things will get even better...this is good stuff.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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ryan
First Flagged at 11:07 AM, Jun 13, 2007 by ryan
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