Israel is a nation of ancient and contemporary interest. Its population is made up of approximately 5 million Jews, 1 million Arabs and a few other small minorities. As in the Arab world more generally, most Arabs in Israel are Muslim, with a small percentage being Christian (Reference Bin-TalalBin-Talal, 1995). More than 2 million Arabs also live on the West Bank and in Gaza (Reference Abdeen and Abu-LibdehAbdeen & Abu-Libdeh, 1993), currently under partial autonomous Palestinian rule and the foci for ongoing negotiation of a potential Palestinian State. Close links have historically existed between Arabs and Jews in the Middle East, notwithstanding current military and political conflict (Reference GoiteinGoitein, 1989). The city of Jerusalem is held in reverence by all three of the monotheistic religions.
Mental health legislation in Israel
Israeli law is an amalgam of Ottoman Turkish, British and Jewish sources (Reference Rabinowitz and Zur-WeissmanRabinowitz & Zur-Weissman, 1994). With the founding of the modern State of Israel in 1948, secular influences predominated and the sphere of Jewish law was confined to the personal status issues of marriage, divorce and burial (Reference Bin-NunBin-Nun, 1992).
New Israeli mental health law in 1955 replaced the Asylum for the Insane Act of 1892 passed during the Ottoman Turkish Empire. British influences on the 1955 legislation were considerable. In 1991 it was replaced by the Treatment of Mental Patients' Law, the principles of which are broadly consistent with its counterparts in Western Europe and North America, taking account of aspects of patients' civil rights, including access to health records and provision of mental health tribunals. One notable difference in Israel is that civil patients are detained by the office of the district psychiatrist (Reference Bar-El, Schneider and LevyBar-El et al, 1989), rather than by a range of psychiatrists and social workers as in Britain.
Mentally disordered offenders (MDO) in Israel may be admitted to a hospital by order of a court. The Israeli law provides only for detention of patients suffering from mental illness, there being no legal category of psychopathic disorder as there is in England and Wales. People with learning disabilities who require detention are dealt with separately under different legislation. All decisions about transfer, discharge or leave of absence of detained MDOs are made by the mental health tribunal, there being no equivalent in Israeli law of the restriction order.
The English concept of diminished responsibility under the Homicide Act (1957) is reflected in similar, though not identical, Israeli legislation, the Law of Punishment (1977) and an amendment to it of 1995 (Reference MargolinMargolin, 1998), which enable a sentence other than life imprisonment for certain homicides. Israel is virtually alone in the Middle-East in having no death penalty except for crimes of genocide.
Crime in Israel
Taking account of differences in the size of the populations, recent figures for convictions for homicides and rape are both higher in Israel than in England and Wales (Reference Gordon, Kirchhoff and SilfenGordon et al, 1996). Convictions for violent crimes by Jews across the world have always been regarded as low. The higher crime rates of Jews in Israel than elsewhere are likely to be owing to social factors. Social class differences in Israel between Jews from Europe (and via North America) (Ashkenazim) and those from Arab and Asian societies (Sephardim) may underpin the higher levels of delinquency and crime in Israel (Reference HassonHasson, 1993). Higher rates of drug misuse have also been recorded in Jews in Israel from such oriental origins (Reference Portowicz, Ben-Dor and KimhiPortowicz et al, 1987). Rises in levels of domestic violence by Ethiopian Jewish immigrants to Israel have also been recorded (Reference Westheimer and KaplanWestheimer & Kaplan, 1992). Organised crime from the former Soviet Union more generally has been felt to have penetrated Israel. Though ethnic background is not recorded specifically for those convicted of crimes in Israel, crime figures for Israeli Arabs are not thought to be disproportionately high. Indeed, crime figures in Arab countries generally tend to show relatively low rates compared to neighbouring nations of Christian persuasion (Reference NeopolitanNeopolitan, 1997). There may, however, be some elevation in ‘crimes of honour’ in some Muslim communities, involving the killing of young women who have formed sexual relationships of a culturally disapproved nature (Reference StendelStendel, 1996). The issue of the role of ethnicity in general and forensic psychiatric practice in Israel is complex, reflecting similar debates in Britain and elsewhere (Reference Kaye and LingiahKaye & Lingiah, 2000).
Perhaps the most prominent crime in recent Israeli history was the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzchak Rabin in November 1995. The perpetrator, Yigal Amir, sought at his trial to argue that he had acted legally under Jewish law in that the peace process was risking Jewish lives (Reference GreenGreen, 1995). The court, however, rejected such a defence as Israeli criminal law is not based on Jewish law, and instead concentrated on legislative issues of premeditation and intention (Reference Povarsky and GoldmanPovarsky, 1997). At his trial, the court accepted evidence from three forensic psychiatrists that Yigal Amir was not suffering from mental illness or indeed any other mental disorder (Zabow, personal communication, 2000). In March 1996, he was convicted of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. The presence of intensely held religious and messianic motivation at a time of rising social conflict was sufficient to account for the assassination of the Israeli Prime Minister, without any factor of mental illness in the perpetrator. This is a pertinent reminder to the public that concern about homicides by people suffering from mental illness needs to be kept in context of the relevance of a range of other factors associated with homicides in the community (Reference Taylor and GunnTaylor & Gunn, 1999).
Facilities for the MDOs in Israel
Throughout Israel there is a comprehensive system of psychiatric hospitals and out-patient clinics for those suffering from mental illness. There are a total of 6005 psychiatric beds, providing one bed per 1000 of the population (Israel Ministry of Health, 2000). Hospital and community psychiatric facilities provide care for patients of Jewish, Arab or other origin. Until 1997 MDOs found not guilty by reason of insanity were admitted to a private psychiatric hospital that offered a degree of security, while convicted prisoners who suffered from mental illness were transferred to the hospital wing of Ramle Prison. In 1997 a new forensic psychiatric unit was opened in Sha'ar Menashe Hospital in Hadera, north of Tel Aviv. The new unit is located within the grounds of a general psychiatric hospital, thus avoiding any geographical or professional isolation that may have pertained in the special hospitals of Britain. The Israeli unit has 128 beds and in practice provides a level of security that is mid-way between medium and maximum. The Israeli unit is gender-integrated, although the number of female patients is very low. The staffing of the unit is similar to secure hospitals in Britain, except for the presence of a professional discipline known as clinical criminologists, whose training blends aspects of academic criminology, sociology, psychology and health sciences. The clinical criminologists play a role in providing treatment, although boundary disputes may occur with clinical psychologists. The Sha'ar Menashe forensic unit is still in its relative infancy and it will be necessary for it to create an effective research base for its patient population.
Training in forensic psychiatry in Israel
Child psychiatry is the only designated sub-speciality in psychiatry recognised by the Israel Medical Association. In 1995 the Israel Forensic Psychiatric Association submitted a proposal for forensic psychiatry to be recognised as a sub-speciality (Reference Silfen and LevySilfen & Levy, 1995). However, in the absence at that time of any established training schemes in forensic psychiatry and any comprehensive secure facilities within the health sector, the proposal was not accepted. A postgraduate training scheme in forensic psychiatry was then established in 1997 at Tel Aviv University, the course being of 2 years' duration on a day-release basis, and has included up to two visiting lecturers from Britain. About 40 Israeli psychiatrists have now completed the Israel Diploma in Forensic Psychiatry and interest in the field is growing. There are as yet, however, no professorial chairs in forensic psychiatry in Israel, the advancement of the proposed sub-speciality having been driven by general psychiatrists with a special interest, including two who are professors of clinical criminology.
Future developments
Forensic psychiatry is developing in Israel with an established postgraduate programme and the evolution of a new secure facility for MDOs within the health sector. There is a need to develop a more comprehensive research base, which may be facilitated by the eventual recognition of forensic psychiatry as a designated subspecialty. Links in forensic psychiatry between Britain and Israel have been developing, with conferences having now been held on four occasions in both countries. Palestinian psychiatrists have attended three of these. If peace was to reign on its borders, mutual links in forensic psychiatry would also probably develop further between professionals in Israel and its Arab neighbours.
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