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Anti-Israel Petitions Signed by Israeli
Academics
Academics supporting boycott of Israel - Dorothy Naor initiates
a letter of supporting the boycott of Israel by the United Methodist
Church, Other Academics signed.
http://www.interfaithpeaceinitiative.com/LetterSupportIsraelis.htm
A recent letter from 131 Israelis to the United Methodist Board
of Church and Society states in part, “We assure the Methodist
Church that it is no more anti-Semitic to criticize and oppose
Israeli government policies than it was anti-American to oppose the
Vietnam War or is anti-American to oppose the present war in Iraq.
It is never anti-Semitic to oppose injustice, destruction, gross
inequity, and inequality.”
The full text and signatories are below:
To: James E. Winkler, General Secretary of the United Methodist
Church Letter of support from Israelis to the 2008 General
Conference of the United Methodist Church
January 22, 2008
We, as Israelis, express our support of the 2004 resolution
adopted by the General Conference of the Methodist Church that
states “The United Methodist Church opposes continued military
occupation of the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem, the
confiscation of Palestinian land and water resources, the
destruction of Palestinian homes, the continued building of illegal
Jewish settlements and any vision of a ‘Greater Israel’ that
includes the occupied territories and the whole of Jerusalem and its
surroundings [Book of Resolutions, 2004, #12].” Should the Methodist
Church in the wake of the above resolution elect to divest from
companies that enable the occupation to continue, we the undersigned
shall applaud your courageous initiative, and fervently hope that it
will set an example for many others to follow.
We assure the Methodist Church that it is no more anti-Semitic to
criticize and oppose Israeli government policies than it was
anti-American to oppose the Vietnam war or is anti-American to
oppose the present war in Iraq. It is never anti-Semitic to oppose
injustice, destruction, gross inequity, and inequality. We also
assure the Church that Israel, having the fourth most powerful
military in the world, is in no existential danger.
As citizens devoted to the promotion of peace and democracy in
the region, we denounce the international community’s continued
economic investments in our country which directly and indirectly
support Israel's daily violations of international law and
colonization of the occupied territories. We fear the potentially
irreversible damage created by Israeli occupation, by Israel’s
unilateral plans, and by the international community’s impotence in
ending Israel’s occupation. We realize that Israel’s occupation of
Palestinians and their lands will probably not end without
international sanctions.
Moreover, Israelis, as well as Palestinians, will benefit from
ending the occupation Symmetry never exists between occupier and
occupied, oppressor and oppressed. Yet Israelis suffer from loss of
life, increase in militarism, and a steady devaluation of human
life. This latter is particularly evident in the socio-economic
sphere and the affliction of post-traumatic distress.
Successive Israeli governments have spent enormous amounts of
money on expansion, to the detriment of social benefits for the
Israeli population. While it is true that had there been no
occupation, Israeli governments might not have spent the money on
social benefits, the fact that expansion continues apace alongside
continued endeavors of ethnic cleansing reveals Israel’s intention
to rid the West Bank of as many Palestinians as possible and to
prevent the emergence of a Palestinian state.
To this end, money is spent on maintaining a large military
presence in the occupied Palestinian Territories, on erecting the
apartheid wall at 4 million dollars a mile, with 400 miles planned
(twice as long as if it had been built on the ‘green line’), and
constructing more housing units in highly subsidized settlements. In
December 2007, for instance, the Israeli Housing Ministry announced
that it was building 300 more units on Har Homa (Jabal Abu Ghnaim to
Palestinians), with another 1000 intended, and more recently has
begun construction of 60 homes in the Ras Al-Amud section of East
Jerusalem. Israel claims Har Homa to be a part of Jerusalem, but the
international community regards Israel’s construction on it and in
East Jerusalem to be further illegal colonization of Palestinian
land. Given the subsidies and other perks with which Israel lures
Israelis to colonize the West Bank, it is small wonder that
population increase in the occupied Palestinian territory is five to
six percent, by contrast to the two to three percent maximum growth
in Israeli communities within Israel proper. Israel additionally
spends much on constructing super-highways for Israelis-only in the
occupied Palestinian Territories, as well as for lookout towers
(that can double as sniper towers), and checkpoints galore.
Furthermore, the majority of the more than 500 checkpoints separate
Palestinian communities from one another.
While all this is taking place at considerable economic cost,
poverty in Israel has increased sharply. Israel in 2006 gained the
dubious notoriety of having the worst poverty level in the Western
world, and has retained this position through 2007. Over one quarter
of Israelis now live under the poverty line. One of every three
children goes to bed hungry. And every fourth elderly person is
poor. No wonder, then, that many of Israel's elderly are “suicidal.”
The Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronot revealed in a report that over
50 percent of suicides in Israel every year are committed by people
aged 65 and over. And there are additional worrying trends. Not only
are the few rich getting richer and the numerous poor getting
poorer, but also many in the middle class who have jobs are sliding
into poverty due to low wages. The Adva Center report of December
2007 showed that a fifth of Israeli wage earners are now living
under the poverty line.
One result of the increased poverty is that 25% of Israelis
forego medical care because they cannot afford it. 75% of the poor
cannot afford medication. But of all the sad statistics, one of the
more shocking is that over 80,000 Holocaust survivors--now mostly
aged individuals--live in desperate straits. It is shameful that of
all places in the world, in Israel, Holocaust survivors live in dire
poverty and misery.
The worsening economic conditions contribute, in turn, to
escalation of violence. Thus, for instance, one of every five
elderly Israelis is subject to abuse, mainly by spouses or children.
And the Israeli police recorded a 24% increase in violence among
youth the first months of 2006.
A direct cost of occupation and a threat to Israel's welfare is
post-traumatic stress, which can result in addiction to drugs and
alcohol, and can also contribute to violence. A counselor at a
rehabilitation center terms the malady “a ticking bomb," Help, he
relates, is unavailable for many soldiers who have gone "into
terrible distress of drugs, beatings, violence, impatience, ...
soldiers who clashed with a civilian population, and when they were
discharged understood that they had been wrong." Hundreds, he
reveals, "are roaming about with the feeling that there is no point
to living, and the path to suicide and drugs is very easy. We are
afraid that former soldiers will commit criminal acts as a result of
their distress."
On the Palestinian end of the occupation, the situation is far
worse both economically and in terms of security. For Palestinians,
occupation means a loudspeaker in the middle of the night ordering
residents out of their homes, regardless of whether it’s winter or
summer, hot or cold, wet or dry. Occupation means long waits at
checkpoints, even in emergencies. Occupation means that one needs
permits to go to one’s fields, permits that are often not given.
Even when permits are given, the Palestinian farmer often finds that
the military gates that control accessing his fields are closed and
fail to open, and, for that matter, fail to open also for children
on their way to school. Occupation means land theft and uprooting of
olive trees, some of which are 100s of years old, all of which are
means of sustenance for the Palestinian people, some now the only
means.
Occupation means curfews, during which sick people can and do
die. Occupation means that one’s home can turn into rubble in
minutes, as bulldozers or explosives demolish it, along with its
furnishings, toys, family photograph albums, computers, and all
else. Occupation means imprisonment. Approximately 11,000
Palestinians are now incarcerated in Israeli facilities.
Israeli Occupation means apartheid. The separation wall is one
instance; four additional ones are water, roads, home construction,
and checkpoints. Of 960 million cubic meters of water that is
generated in the West Bank, Palestinians are allowed to use only
one-tenth of it. The rest goes to Israelis. On average, a
Palestinian citizen in the West Bank is allowed to use no more than
36 cubic meters of water per year, while Israeli settlers in the
West Bank can use up to 2,400 cubic meters. Palestinians are not
permitted to drive on ‘settler’ roads, which are highly superior to
other roads in the occupied Palestinian territories. Palestinians
are not allowed to build houses or even to add rooms, while Jewish
settlement building continues uninhibited. Checkpoints also
discriminate. Israelis, tourists, and Jews from abroad can go from
the Territories to Israel via many checkpoints, but Palestinians
having permits are allowed to enter Israel only through 11 of them,
forcing Palestinians fortunate enough to have a permit to travel far
out of the way on their way to work or for medical care in Israel.
For the above reasons, we Israeli seekers of peace and justice
express our sincere gratitude to the Methodist Church for its stand
on the occupation, and support the proposals before the General
Conference this April on divestment. Boycott and divestment are
non-violent means of pressuring governments to change their
policies--means now sorely needed to compel the Israeli government
to end its occupation of Palestinians and their lands and thereby to
better the lives of Israelis as well as of Palestinians.
Sincerely,
The Undersigned
132. Javanshir
131. Sue Small New Mexico
130. Kupferman Yehuda
129. Peretz Kidron
128. Neta Golan
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