Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University – Rachel Giora
(Dept of Linguistics) Struts her support for the "Divestment and
Boycott" Racists, but refuses to Resign and Move to Gaza
'The major role of the Israeli BDS movement has
been to support international BDS calls against Israel and
legitimize them both as clearly not anti-Semitic, as not working
against Israelis but against Israeli governmental policies, and as
supporting a legitimate nonviolent means by which Palestinian civil
society can reclaim and re-own its people’s rights and freedoms.
Alongside solidarity with the Palestinians, the driving force behind
the Israeli BDS movement has been the realization that the criminal
occupation and repression of the Palestinian people, as practiced by
Israeli governments, will not be redressed without significant
international pressure.'
http://www.bricup.org.uk/documents/history/IsraeliBDS.pdf
Milestones in the
history of the Israeli BDS movement: A brief chronology
Rachel Giora
18 January 2010
Updated 27 January 2010
The emergence of the Israeli boycott,
divestment, and sanction (BDS) movement has been influenced by a
number of factors. In essence, however, the movement in Israel has
been basically reactive - a response to (a) international calls
following traumas, and to (b) ideas, primarily those introducing the
South African model into the international and Israeli discourse;
and perhaps most significantly, it has evolved in response to (c)
calls by Palestinians to the international community to boycott
Israel, divest and disinvest from it, and sanction it. Although the
history of the BDS movement in Israel is reviewed here
chronologically, the assumption is that all these factors have
worked interactively and in tandem to influence the development of
the BDS movement worldwide as well as in Israel.
The major role of the
Israeli BDS movement has been to support international BDS calls
against Israel and legitimize them both as clearly not anti-Semitic,
as not working against Israelis but against Israeli governmental
policies, and as supporting a legitimate nonviolent means by which
Palestinian civil society can reclaim and re-own its people’s rights
and freedoms. Alongside solidarity with the Palestinians, the
driving force behind the Israeli BDS movement has been the
realization that the criminal occupation and repression of the
Palestinian people, as practiced by Israeli governments, will not be
redressed without significant international pressure.
1. The awakening
A l-Aqsa Intifada
The first BDS call in Israel
was initiated by
Matzpen
during the first year
of the first intifada, in February 1988.1
It called on
Israelis not to buy products made in Jewish settlements. This was
how Israelis could divest from the settlements in the occupied
territories including the Golan Heights. This call, which included a
list of settlements’ products, was also distributed among foreign
missions in East Jerusalem. In March 1988, a group called The 21st
Year published
a Covenant for the Struggle
Against the Occupation
wherein its members
declared their refusal “to collaborate with the Occupation and
pledged to do either part or all of the following: never enter the
occupied territories without an invitation from their Arab
inhabitants, not allow their children to be exposed to the racist
bias of the school system, boycott institutions and products of
companies whose Palestinian
1
http://www.matzpen.org/index.asp?p=kria
2
employees are denied
human dignity and decent working conditions, boycott goods produced
by Israeli settlements in the occupied territories, never confuse
acts of protest and resistance by Palestinians with acts of terror,
refuse any military command ordering them to take part in acts of
repression or policing in the occupied territories and protest every
act of violence and injustice committed by the Israeli regime in the
occupied territories”.2
In September 1997,
Gush Shalom launched a call asking Israelis as well as the U.S., the
European countries, and others having trade treaties with Israel to
boycott products of the Jewish settlements in the occupied
Palestinian territory. The
call proffered a provisional list in Hebrew,
Arabic, and English of
products produced in the settlements.3
However, the first
Israeli initiatives supporting international calls for comprehensive
boycott against Israel emerged only following the outbreak of the
second intifada known as the
Al-Aqsa Intifada,
in September 2000. They were mostly responses, by a few individuals,
to international calls for BDS against Israel. At the time, support
for such calls did not come from Israeli organizations. On the
whole, the Israeli left shunned such initiatives. The first boycott
support action by Israelis that I recall, which again attracted few
other Israelis, was the one initiated by the late Tel Aviv
University linguist, Professor Tanya Reinhart, and myself, in April
2001, demanding that the city
of Ann Arbor divest itself of Israeli investments.4
In April 2001, 35
Israelis published a call for boycotting Israel. The authors of this
appeal are Israeli citizens and Jews of other nationalities whose
families have been victims of racism and genocide in past
generations, and who feel they cannot remain silent:
“We call on the world
community to organize and boycott Israeli industrial and
agricultural exports and goods, as well as leisure tourism, in the
hope that it will have the same positive result that the boycott of
South Africa had on Apartheid.
“This boycott should
remain in force as long as Israel controls any part of the
territories it occupied in 1967. Those who squash the legitimate
2
http://israeli-left-archive.org/cgi-bin/library?site=localhost&a=p&p=about&c=the21sty&l=en&w=utf-8
3
http://israelipalestinianpeace.org/issues/81toi.htm#Consumers
http://gush-shalom.org.toibillboard.info/boycott_eng.htm
4
http://www.think-israel.org/leftists.html;
(http://209.85.135.132/search?q=cache:QOQqY2MK6UEJ:www.matzpun.com/+"After+six+months+of+
relentless+military+oppression+of+Palestinians+in+the+Israelioccupied+
territories,+the+government+of+Israel+has+made+daily+life+even+more+intolerable+for+the
+Palest)
3
aspirations of the
Palestinians must be made to feel the consequences of their own
bitter medicine.
“We urge every
recipient of this appeal, irrespective of origin and nationality,
to:
“1. Start practicing
the boycott on a personal level immediately, and make sure that the
steps taken are known in the community (for example: tell your
shopkeeper why you will not buy Israeli products; avoid leisure
travel to Israel).
“2. Add your name to
the appeal, circulate it to your friends, and do whatever you can to
have it endorsed by groups concerned about human rights.
“3. Organize
activities to put pressure on your government to cut economic and
commercial ties with Israel and to rescind preferential economic
treaties with Israel”.
Original signatures:
1. Meir Amor, Toronto,
Canada
2. Yael Arbel, Tel-Aviv, Israel
3. Dita Bitterman, Tel-Aviv, Israel
4. Hagit Borer, Los Angeles, USA
5. Ouzi Dekel, Paris, France
6. Esty Dinur, Arena, USA
7. Aviva Ein-Gil, Tel-Aviv, Israel
8. Ehud Ein-Gil, Tel-Aviv, Israel
9. Arie Finkelstein, Paris, France
10. Rachel Giora, Tel-Aviv, Israel
11. Zamir Havkin, Givataim, Israel
12. Zvi Havkin, Tel-Aviv, Israel
13. Haggai Katriel, Haifa, Israel
14. Irit Katriel, Haifa, Israel
15. Justin Kodner, Princeton Junction, USA
16. Helga Kotthoff, Fulda, Germany
17. Miri Krasin, Tel-Aviv, Israel
18. Debby Lerman, Tel-Aviv, Israel
19. Mely Lerman, Tel-Aviv, Israel
20. Moshe Machover, London, UK
21. Yael Oren Kahn, Warwickshire, UK
22. Akiva Orr, Kfar Shmaryahu, Israel
23. Rachel Ostrowitz, Tel-Aviv, Israel
4
24. Eran Razgour,
Tel-Aviv, Israel
25. Eyal Rozenberg, Haifa, Israel
26. Hilla Rudich, Givataim, Israel
27. Herzl Schubert, Tel-Aviv, Israel
28. Ilan Shalif, Tel-Aviv, Israel
29. Oz Shelach, New York, USA
30. Ur Shlonsky, Geneva, Switzerland
31. Toma Sik, Budapest, Hungary
32. Ehud Sivosh, London, UK
33. Gideon Spiro, Jerusalem, Israel
34. Guy West, Herzliyya, Israel
35. Adeeb Yaffawy, Yaffa, Israel
The 35 original
signatories were supported by
994 signatures worldwide.5
Then, in May 2001, as
a keynote speaker before a nationwide meeting of Jewish
anti-occupation activists in Chicago, Rela Mazali, an Israeli
feminist and writer, one of the outstanding founders of
New Profile6,
called for suspension of US military aid to Israel.7
Jenin Jenin8
The year 2002,
however, may be singled out as a turning point triggered by the
Israeli army’s large-scale assault on cities, towns, villages, and
refugee camps in the West Bank in late March (titled Operation
Defensive Shield but often referred to as the Jenin Massacre). This
ferocious attack unleashed a wave of protest in the Arab world,
Europe, the United States, and beyond. At this stage, it looked like
the citizens of the world, including those sheltered in their ivory
towers, could no longer be indifferent to the plight of the
Palestinians. “Academics, artists, and intellectuals launched a
number of initiatives, among them a movement to isolate Israel in
the international arena through moratoria, boycotts, and a
divestment campaign”.9
The ferocious
assault combined with the construction of the Apartheid Wall in
July, which turned the West Bank into bantustans, affected some
change among Israelis. On the whole, a growing number of activists
protested the occupation, and some also voiced support of such
boycott and divestment campaigns.
In March 2002,
supporting the Suspend Aid Campaign of the Jewish Voice for Peace,
the Israeli feminist author, Rela Mazali, wrote: “Arms are the motor
of
5
http://www.matzpun.com/
6
http://www.newprofile.org/english/
7
Mazali, Rela (2001).
“Someone Makes a Killing off War’: Militarization and Occupation in
Israel-
Palestine,” Bridges, A Journal for Jewish Feminists and our
Friends, Volume 9, Number 1, Fall 2001,
special insert.
8
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenin,_Jenin
9
(Mona Baker, 2009.
Chronology of Boycott. Ms. in preparation).
5
militarization. Please
reciprocate the young people inside Israel saying “NO” to the
deployment of their bodies and souls, in the service of the
occupation. Please join them by saying “NO” to arming it with your
dollars”. 10
Her call to
suspend military aid to Israel earned the full support of the
members of the feminist organization New Profile.
In April 2002, a call
for a Moratorium on EU and European Science Foundation support for
Israel was launched. The call was initiated by Professor Steven Rose
(Physics, Open University) and Professor Hilary Rose (Bradford
University) and was published
in the Guardian
on 6 April 2002.11
More than 120
academics signed this call, among them about 10 Israeli academics:
12 13
Professor Amit,
Daniel, Hebrew University
Bar, Iris, Haifa University
Professor Farjoun, Emmanuel,
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem14
Professor Giora,
Rachel, Tel-Aviv University
Professor Jablonka, Eva, Tel-Aviv University
Dr Katriel, Haggai, Haifa University
Professor Lavie, Smadar, Tel-Aviv
Dr Pappe, Ilan, Haifa University
Professor Razi, Zvi, Tel-Aviv University
Professor Reinhart, Tanya, Tel-Aviv University
Dr Shlonsky, Tuvia, Hebrew
University, Jerusalem15
The letter had an
immediate effect. It was soon followed by a unanimous decision made
by the board of directors of the organization for professors and
teachers in higher education in England to call for a more sweeping
boycott. “The decision calls on all the British institutions of
higher education to weigh - with the goal of severing - any future
academic connection with Israel. It insists that such relations
should be resumed only after a full withdrawal of all the Israeli
forces, the beginning of negotiations to implement UN resolutions,
and the promise of full
access for all Palestinians to institutions of higher learning”.16
In April 2002,
an Art boycott petition
was launched
too, appealing “to all artists of good conscience around the world
to cancel all exhibitions and other cultural
10
www.jewishvoiceforpeace.org
11
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4388633,00.html
12
According to Tamara
Traubman (2002), over 270 European scientists, including about 10
Israelis signed
this letter. http://www.inminds.co.uk/boycott-news-0033.html
13
One should note that
the idea of an academic boycott against Israel first originated at
the "World
Conference against Racism" in Durban, South Africa in 2001.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1059775.html
14http://www.haaretz.co.il/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=155710&contrassID=2&subContrassID=5&sb
SubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y&itemNo=155710
15
http://www.think-israel.org/leftists.html;
http://www.inminds.co.uk/boycott-news-0033.html
16
http://www.inminds.co.uk/boycott-news-0033.html
6
events that are
scheduled to occur in Israel, to mobilize immediately and not allow
the continuation of the Israeli offensive to breed complacency”. It
was endorsed by many signatories (more than 180) from Australia,
Austria, Belgium, Canada, Egypt, France, Germany, India, Ireland,
Italy, The Netherlands, Norway, Palestine, Sweden, Switzerland, UK
and US, and Israel.17
At the same time,
several hundred students and about 100 staff at
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT)
and
Harvard University
signed a
divestment petition
which was also
supported by professors at several Israeli universities.18
In April 2002, a
US-initiated boycott letter
called for
Boycotting Israeli Academics and Research.19
In June,
Professor Mona Baker of the University of Manchester Institute of
Science and Technology (Umist) dismissed two Israeli linguists from
the editorial board of the translation journal she edited. Such acts
did not go unnoticed and stirred a heated debate among Israelis,
giving the boycott movement a lot of visibility here.
In May 2002,
Professor Tanya Reinhart published
an article in Yediot Aharonot,
the then most popular Israeli daily, in which she endorsed a boycott
of Israeli academic institutions for being complicit in the
Palestinians’ oppression by turning a blind eye to their plight, not
least the plight of Palestinian academic colleagues: “Never in its
history did the senate of any Israeli university pass a resolution
protesting the frequent closure of Palestinian universities, let
alone voice protest over the devastation sowed there during the last
uprising”. The type of academic boycott she endorsed drew on a model
used effectively in South Africa. “The economic pressure on South
Africa”, she said, “was combined with another aspect of pressure --
cultural boycott and social isolation: South Africa was kicked out
of international sports; professional and academic organizations did
not cooperate with South-African organizations; there was a ban on
conferences and cultural events. All these helped. South Africa was
forced to change”.20
A comparison of the
occupation with South African Apartheid was also brought up by Nobel
Peace Prize laureate Desmond
Tutu in October
2002. “If apartheid ended”, he said, “so can this occupation, but
the moral force and international pressure will have to be just as
determined. The current divestment effort is the first, though
certainly not the only, necessary move in that direction”.21
The
17
http://oznik.com/petitions/020407.html
18
http://www.merip.org/mer/mer223/223_urbina.html
19
http://is.gd/5IG1y
20
http://www.monabaker.com/pMachine/more.php?id=96_0_1_12_M5
21
http://www.counterpunch.org/tutu1017.html
7
analogy to the South
African case, made explicit by various thinkers,22
will affect the
minds of many Israeli leftists. Not only will the numbers of Israeli
boycott supporters increase, but more importantly, the Israelis’
attempts to resist the occupation will be geared towards
collaborating with the Palestinian resistance movement, thus
modeling their action after the joint struggle for liberation of
South Africans.
Earlier that autumn,
when interviewed in September
2002 for Labournet,
Dr. Ilan Pappe,
a renowned historian and boycott supporter at
Haifa University,
had expressed his views on his support for boycott, including
academic and cultural boycott: “a cultural and academic boycott can
drive the message to good Israelis that there is a price to be paid
for being indifferent. Not only for doing the things themselves, but
even for being silent in Israel itself”.
23
Before the year was
out, in December 2002, the administrative council of Marie Curie
University - Paris VI - “demanded that the European Union (EU) not
renew its 1995 Association Agreement with Israel, giving that
country commercial concessions, but also providing funds for
infrastructure and research. The university's motion called on
Israeli academics to adopt positions on the measures being taken
against Palestinian universities, whose work has been rendered
impossible, and called on the university's president to foster
contacts with academics from both sides,
in order to promote a peaceful
solution”.24
In January 2003, this
decision was endorsed by Palestinian academics who issued a letter
of support to French colleagues. In the same spirit, in February
2003, Professor Tanya Reinhart also
expressed support for this
resolution.25
Inspired by the
South African resistance movement,
Anarchists Against the Wall
(AATW) – an Israeli
direct action group - was founded in 2003 to oppose the Apartheid
Wall Israel had started building on Palestinian land in the Occupied
West Bank. The group is essentially Palestinian led. It works in
cooperation with Palestinians in a joint popular struggle against
the occupation.26
Many of its
members will later make up the nucleus of
BOYCOTT! Supporting
22
“The Israeli left has
been discussing this comparison since at least the late 1980s, when
Israeli
anthropologist Uri Davis published his famous work, Israel: An
Apartheid State. At the September 2001
UN conference on racism in Durban, South Africa, calls to compare
occupation with apartheid were
drowned out by the more incendiary claim that "Zionism is racism,"
and therefore received little
substantive or even-handed coverage in the press”.
http://www.merip.org/mer/mer223/223_urbina.html
23
http://www.labournet.net/world/0209/pappe1.html
24http://209.85.135.132/search?q=cache:X_fMyDQsuOAJ:www.monabaker.com/pMachine/more.php%3Fi
d%3D155_0_1_0_M5+%22demanded+that+the+European+Union+(EU)+not+renew+its+1995+Associat
ion+Agreement+with+Israel%22&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=il
25
http://www.phrconline.org/articles.php?ArtID=377
http://www.monabaker.com/pMachine/more.php?id=96_0_1_12_M5
26
http://www.awalls.org/
8
the Palestinian BDS Call from Within
27
- an Israeli group of
Palestinians, Jews, Israeli citizens and residents resisting Israeli
Apartheid by supporting BDS initiatives against Israel.
In May 2003, Dr. Ilan
Pappe called for divestment,
boycott, anti-Apartheid campaigns against Israel.
Expressing his views on the analogy to the South African case, he
declared: “it is difficult to compare Israel’s apartheid system with
the one that existed in South Africa”… “Conditions the Palestinians
live under are much worse than South Africa’s”.28
2. The impact of the
Palestinian Civil Society calls for BDS against Israel on the BDS
movement
The Palestinian calls
for BDS against Israel affected the BDS movement worldwide. These
calls were a significant milestone, inducing a much more sweeping
support for BDS against Israel than observed earlier. The most
influential Palestinian calls for BDS against Israel emerged in
August 2002 when a group of Palestinian organizations in the
Occupied Palestinian Territory called for a comprehensive economic,
cultural, and academic boycott of Israel: “For the sake of freedom
and justice in Palestine and the world, we call upon the solidarity
movement, NGOs, academic and cultural institutions, business
companies, political parties and unions, as well as concerned
individuals to strengthen and
broaden the global Israel Boycott Campaign”.29
Then, in
October 2003, Palestinian academics and intellectuals in the
occupied territories and in the Diaspora called for a boycott of
Israeli academic institutions. These calls were later followed by a
group of Palestinian academics and intellectuals who launched the
Palestinian Campaign for the
Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI)
in Ramallah in April
2004, highlighting the institutional nature of the boycott.30
These calls mobilized
many academics worldwide, including in Israel. In March 2004,
an Open Letter addressed to the
Israeli academic leadership was released to the press.
Nearly 300 academics from around the world, including Israel, called
for “leaders of Israeli universities to lay their political cards on
the table
27
http://boycottisrael.info/
28
http://www.washington-report.org/archives/may03/0305063.html
29
http://www.badil.org/en/press-releases/55-press-releases-2002/330-press268-02
30
http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=868
http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=1051
See also
Professor Mona Baker “On the distinction between institutions and
individuals in relation to
academic boycott”. On targeting institutions rather than individuals
and on how the only joint projects
Palestinians and Israelis can consider are those resisting
injustice, see Omar Barghouti
Lisa Taraki April 2005.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/comment/0,10551,1463752,00.html
http://www.monabaker.com/BakerLondonConference.htm
9
and reveal whether
they support the government's policies on the border conflict”.31
In January, 2005, the
Israeli Committee Against
House Demolitions (ICAHD) issued a statement supporting sanctions
against Israel.
“Since sanctions are a
powerful, non-violent, popular means of resisting the Occupation, a
campaign of sanctions seems to us the next logical step in
international efforts to end the Occupation. While it will develop
over time, ICAHD supports the following elements at this time:
• “Sales or transfer
of arms to Israel conditional upon their use in ways that do not
perpetuate the Occupation or violate human rights and international
humanitarian law, violations that would end if governments enforced
existing laws and regulations regarding the use of weapons in
contravention of human rights;
• “Trade sanctions on
Israel due to its violation of the “Association Agreements” it has
signed with the European Union that prohibit the sale of settlement
products under the “Made in Israel” label, as well as for violations
of their human rights provisions;
• “Divestment from
companies that profit from involvement in the Occupation. In this
vein ICAHD supports initiatives like that of the Presbyterian Church
of the US which targets companies contributing materially to the
Occupation and certainly the campaign against Caterpillar whose
bulldozers demolish thousands of Palestinian homes;
• “Boycott of
settlement products and of companies that provide housing to the
settlements or which play a major role in perpetuating the
Occupation; and
• “Holding
individuals, be they policy-makers, military personnel carrying out
orders or others, personally accountable for human rights
violations, including trial before international courts and bans on
travel to other countries. “ICAHD calls on the international
community – governments, trade unions, university communities,
faith-based organizations as well as the broad civil society – to do
all that is possible to hold Israel accountable for its Occupation
policies and actions, thereby hastening the end of this tragedy.
While we also call on the Palestinian Authority to adhere to human
rights conventions, our support for selective sanctions against
Israel's Occupation policies focuses properly on Israel which alone
has the power to end the Occupation and is alone the violator of
international law regarding the responsibilities of an Occupying
Power”.32
31
http://phrconline.org/articles.php?ArtID=808
32
http://www.icahd.org/eng/news.asp?menu=5&submenu=1&item=218
10
In April 2005,
Dr. Ilan Pappe appealed to the
British Association of University Teachers (AUT),
expressing support of a prospective resolution to boycott the
Israeli universities, Haifa and Bar-Ilan. Publishing his appeal in
the Guardian he explained that “outside pressure is effective in a
country where people want to be regarded as part of the civilized
world, but their government, with their explicit and implicit help,
pursues policies which violate every known human and civil right.
Neither the UN, nor the US and European governments, and societies,
have sent a message to Israel that these policies are unacceptable
and have to be stopped. It is up to the civil societies, through
organizations like yours, to send messages to Israeli academics,
businessmen, artists, hi-tech industrialists and every other section
in that society, that there is a price tag attached to such
policies”.33
To Haaretz, Dr. Pappe said
that he hoped
that his support of the boycott had contributed to the boycott
decision imposed on Haifa and Bar-Ilan universities by the British
Association of University Teachers.34
In May 2005,
Professor Tanya Reinhart published
an article explaining why Israeli academia deserved to be boycotted.35
In July 2005, the
Palestinian United Civil Society (involving about two hundred
organizations) call for BDS
was launched,
stating:
“We, representatives
of Palestinian civil society, call upon international civil society
organizations and people of conscience all over the world to impose
broad boycotts and implement divestment initiatives against Israel
similar to those applied to South Africa in the apartheid era. We
appeal to you to pressure your respective states to impose embargoes
and sanctions against Israel. We also invite conscientious Israelis
to support this Call, for the sake of justice and genuine peace.
“These non-violent
punitive measures should be maintained until Israel meets its
obligation to recognize the Palestinian people‘s inalienable right
to self-determination and fully complies with the precepts of
international law by:
“1. Ending its
occupation and colonization of all Arab lands and dismantling the
Wall;
“2. Recognizing the
fundamental rights of the Arab-Palestinian citizens of Israel to
full equality; and
“3. Respecting,
protecting and promoting the rights of Palestinian
33
http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2005/apr/20/highereducation.uk3
34
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=569361
35
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article3879.shtml
11
refugees to return to
their homes and properties as stipulated in UN resolution 194”.
36
This call for BDS
against Israel was endorsed by
171 organizations and individuals.37
Among the welcoming
followers were the British
Committee for the Universities of Palestine (BRICUP),
which was formed in 2005 in the UK in response to the Palestinian
Call for an Academic Boycott,38
and
Professor Mona Baker,
translation and intercultural studies specialist and ardent British
activist and writer, supporting the BDS movement against Israel.39
These
initiatives have been endorsed by a growing number of Israeli
academics and activists.
In August 2005, in
their 13th International
Conference in Jerusalem under the title “Women Resist Occupation and
War”,
Women in Black
expressed support for
the Palestinian call on the international community to impose
‘non-violent and effective measures such as divestment and sanctions
on Israel, for as long as Israel continues to violate international
law, and continues the occupation and the oppression of the
Palestinian people’.40
In that
conference, at the workshop on Sanctions, Boycott and Divestment,
Dr. Dalit Baum “was emphasizing the importance of knowledge-building
as a condition for such a campaign. Of compiling a list of
institutions and companies to be divested from or boycotted”.
Rela Mazali
too raised her voice
in support of endorsing BDS against Israel, asking the international
community: “Please, boycott me. Boycott my country. Sanction it till
it stops committing these crimes. And sanction as well those outside
it who are profiting”.41
In March 2006, Shir
Hever from The Alternative
Information Center (AIC)
published an in-depth
analysis of the dependence of Israel on the global economy and its
vulnerability to the effect of BDS campaigns against it. The
conclusion of his analysis is straightforward: “International
reluctance to buy Israeli arms or to sell arms to Israel will
encourage Israel to find
non-violent ways of dealing with the Palestinians”.42
36
http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=66
37
http://www.fosna.org/content/palestinian-civil-society-divestment
38
http://www.bricup.org.uk/
39
http://www.monabaker.com/
40
http://gilasvirsky.com/declaration.html
41http://coalitionofwomen.org:80/home/english/events/women_in_black_0805/conf_participants/rela_maza
li
42
Shir Hever (2006). The
Economy of the Occupation Part 6:
The Question of Sanctions and a Boycott against Israel.
http://www.alternativenews.org:80/publications/econoccupation.html
12
In May 2006, following
the Palestinian call, I expressed support for comprehensive boycott
of Israel including academic boycott (published
by Yediot Acharonot).43
In May 2006, the
feminist organization, New
Profile, sent a
letter of support to the
Presbyterian Church USA (PCUSA),
initiated by New Profile activist
Dr. Dorothy Naor,
for contemplating adopting a policy of selective divestment as a
means of bringing peace to Palestinians and Israelis. “We fervently
support such an endeavor, and hope that PCUSA will indeed adopt
divestment as a non-violent means of ending Israel’s Occupation of
Palestinians and their lands”.44
In the same month,
New Profile also expressed
support for selective divestment.
Given that economic pressure is a non-violent means of ending this
catastrophic Occupation, they argued, “New Profile welcomes and
supports selective divestment aimed at divesting from companies that
contribute to the continuation of the Occupation by supplying arms,
other equipment, or staff”.45
In June 2006, about
100 Israeli individuals, organizations, and movements expressed
their support of the Ontario wing of
Canadian Union of Public Employees
(CUPE)46
who, in May, had voted
unanimously to pass a resolution in support of the “international
campaign of boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel until
that state recognizes the Palestinian right to selfdetermination”.
Endorsing the July 2005 Palestinian call, the CUPE Ontario
resolution demands the dismantling of the Apartheid wall as well as
the right of return for all
Palestinian refugees.47
In June 2006,
Reuven Abergel,
founder of Israel's Black Panthers, expressed support for the
academic boycott of Israel.48
At the same
time, Gideon Levy,
Haaretz journalist, published
an op-ed supporting boycott resolutions.49
Also in June 2006,
a group of more than 50
Israeli citizens
supporting BDS against
the occupation was formed issuing a statement to this effect later
on in June 2007.50
In May 2007, Professor
Kenneth Mann of Tel Aviv University, the chairperson of the advisory
council of Gisha, the Legal
Center for Freedom of Movement,
called upon Israeli
university presidents to protest the government's restrictions
43
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3257291,00.html
44
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=14061
45
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=14061
46
http://www.cupe.on.ca/aux_file.php?aux_file_id=241
47
http://www.icl-fi.org/english/spc/supplements/cupe.html
48
http://boycott-occupation.mahost.org/?q=node/19
49
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=722611
50
http://www.jai-pal.org/content.php?page=540
13
imposed on Palestinian university
students in 2000.
Only four university presidents signed the appeal to Defense
Minister Amir Perez to lift the ban: Ben- Gurion University of the
Negev President Professor Rivka Carmi, Technion Institute of
Technology President Professor Yitzhak Apeloig, Hebrew University
President Professor Menachem Megidor, Haifa University President
Professor Aharon Ben Zeev.51
In June and July 2008,
open letters were issued by Palestinian and Israeli BDS groups to
Snoop Doggy Dog, Branford Marsalis, and Mercedes Sosa, all of whom
were scheduled to perform to Israeli audiences. During that month,
over 100 European Organizations, including the Israeli Committee
against House Demolitions, joined the
Palestinian BDS National Campaign
(BNC)52
in calling for
suspension of the EU-Israel
Association Agreement.53
In September 2008,
Dr. Kobi Snitz and Roee
Harush
published a report about a working group’s discussions on how to
build the BDS campaign by Israeli citizens.54
They were
documenting the way the Israeli BDS group, called BOYCOTT!
Supporting the Palestinian BDS Call from Within, was formed during
that year.
In October 2008,
Shir Hever
from the Alternative
Information Center called for “economic resistance to the occupation
through divestment”.55
3.
Gaza's Guernica56
Following the Gaza
offensive by the Israeli army in December 2008, titled Operation
Cast Lead, over 540 Israelis
(backed by more
than 5000 internationals) issued a call initiated by the
philosopher, Dr. Anat Matar, the publisher Yael Lerer, and other
members of BOYCOTT! Supporting the Palestinian BDS Call from Within,
for “support of the Palestinian human rights community call for
international action”:
“We are calling on the
world to stop Israeli violence and not allow the continuation of the
brutal occupation. We call on the world to condemn and not become an
accomplice in Israel's crimes…
“In light of the
above, we call on the world to implement the call by
51
http://www.inminds.co.uk/article.php?id=10115
52
http://www.bdsmovement.net/?q=node/126
53
http://www.badil.org/en/al-majdal/item/1250-over-100-european-organizations-join-bnc-in-calling-forsuspension-
of-eu-israel-association-agreement
54
http://www.badil.org/en/al-majdal/item/91-israeli-citizens-for-a-boycott-of-israel
55
http://www.jai-pal.org/content.php?page=757
56
http://www.odsg.org/co/index.php/Statements/1071-gazas-guernica-enough-is-enough.html
14
Palestinian human
rights organizations which urges:
• “The UN Security
Council to call an emergency session and adopt concrete measures,
including the imposition of sanctions, in order to ensure Israel's
fulfillment of its obligations under international humanitarian law.
• “The High
Contracting Parties to the Geneva Conventions to fulfil their
obligation under common Article 1 to ensure respect for the
provisions of the Conventions, taking appropriate measures to compel
Israel to abide by its obligations under international humanitarian
law, in particular placing pivotal importance on the respect and
protection of civilians from the effects of the hostilities.
• “The High
Contracting Parties to fulfil their legal obligation under Article
146 of the Fourth Geneva Convention to prosecute those responsible
for grave breaches of the Convention.
• “EU institutions and
member states to make effective use of the European Union Guidelines
on promoting compliance with international humanitarian law (2005/C
327/04) to ensure Israel complies with international humanitarian
law under paragraph 16 (b), (c) and (d) of these guidelines,
including the adoption of immediate restrictive measures and
sanctions, as well as cessation of all upgrade dialogue with
Israel“.57
In January 2009,
members of BOYCOTT! Supporting the Palestinian BDS Call from Within,
including Prof. Yoram Carmeli, Dr. Anat Matar, Jonathan
Pollak, Dr. Kobi Snitz, myself, and another 17 members
published a call in The Guardian
appealing to EU
leaders to “use sanctions against Israel's brutal policies and join
the active protests of Bolivia and Venezuela”. We also appealed to
the citizens of Europe: “please attend to the Palestinian Human
Rights Organisation's call, supported by more than 540 Israeli
citizens (www.freegaza.org/en/home/658-acall- from-within-signed-by-israeli-citizens):
boycott Israeli goods and Israeli institutions; follow resolutions
such as those made by the cities of Athens, Birmingham and Cambridge
(US). This is the only road left. Help us all, please!”58
In April 2009,
BOYCOTT! called on musician
Leonard Cohen
to cancel his planned concert
in Israel: “We
see our society becoming more and more calloused and racist and
given your longstanding, vocal commitment to justice, we cannot
envision you cooperating with continued Israeli defiance of justice
and morality; we cannot envision you playing a part in the Israeli
charade of selfrighteousness.
We appeal to you to
add your voice to those brave people the world over who boycott
Israel. We urge you to cancel your planned performance in Israel”.59
57
http://www.petitiononline.com/freegaza/petition.html
58
www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/17/gaza-israelandthepalestinians1
59
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article10493.shtml
15
In May 2009, I sent
a letter of support to
BRICUP’s pre University and College
Union (UCU) Congress 2009 meeting,
which said, in part:
“in spite of the
growing plight of their Palestinians colleagues, universities’
senates and heads have never spoken up against the Israeli
occupation of the Palestinian territory or against the oppression of
the Palestinians; nor have they protested the destructive damage
inflicted on Palestinian academic institutions by the Israeli
military; nor have they shown any concern for or solidarity with
their Palestinian colleagues. And when given the chance to protest
“the policy of the Israeli government which is causing restrictions
of freedom of movement, study and instruction, and […] call upon the
government to allow students and lecturers free access to all the
campuses in the Territories, and to allow lecturers and students who
hold foreign passports to teach and study without being threatened
with withdrawal of residence visas”, only very few
(407 out of over 5000) faculty have
chosen to sign this petition.60
Is “academic
freedom” only the prerogative of the powerful?
These are only shreds
of evidence testifying to the complicity of Israeli academic
institutions in the state's apartheid policies against the
Palestinians”.
61
Also in May 2009,
BOYCOTT! appealed to the
European Union
via its embassies in Israel to suspend existing trade agreements
with Israel and to “implement the human rights clause that is part
of your trade agreement with Israel and suspend the existing trade
agreements with Israel until it upholds international and
humanitarian law”.62
In the same month,
BOYCOTT! sent a message to
Madonna asking
her to cancel her planned
performance in Israel:
"A performance here would imply that Israel is behaving in an
acceptable manner, and would be interpreted by Israelis as moral
support for the illegal and inhumane policies, described by many as
war crimes and crimes against humanity".63
Also, during May 2009
BOYCOTT! joined the Coalition
of Women for Peace
in
calling on Norway to divest from the
Israeli occupation.
Twenty Israeli organizations urged the Norwegian pension fund to
“remove from the fund’s
60
http://academic-access.weebly.com/
61
http://www.bricup.org.uk/documents/israel_unis/Giora.pdf
62
http://www.israel-academiamonitor.
com/index.php?type=large_advic&advice_id=7065&page_data%5Bid%5D=174&cookie_lang=
en&the_session_id=50ac1a7049bcbe47a50e7c2fb45248b9&BLUEWEBSESSIONSID=51516d04fe803b
39109a09d40ef3a5d2
63http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1249418563695&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull
16
investment portfolio
all corporations that support and maintain the Israeli occupation of
the Palestinian territory”.64
In the same month,
BOYCOTT! sent a message to
the Barcelona Department for International Cooperation
wondering if Barcelona
is still cooperating with Tel Aviv, even after the Gaza massacres.
The letter reminded Barcelona that “keeping up the business as usual
charade will only encourage Israel to proceed with its illegal,
atrocious, and unjust practices that have been going on for the past
42 years without much interference from the international
community”.65
In July, 2009 BOYCOTT!
sent a message to UNICEF
on the issue of
their partnering with
Motorola,
letting them know that we consider it “is immoral for UNICEF to
partner with a company which undermines UNICEF’s efforts by its
actions. We ask that UNICEF end its partnership with Motorola until
Motorola stops selling equipment used by the Israeli army to violate
the rights of Palestinian children along with those of many others”.66
In the same month,
BOYCOTT! joined PACBI’s call on
Amnesty
to follow their appeal
to boycott all Israeli academic and cultural institutions and
withdraw their support from
Leonard Cohen’s concert in Israel.67
In July 2009,
Women's International League for
Peace and Freedom (WILPF)
Israel decided on
joining the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Campaign against
Israel: “Taking into account that up till now our calls for
significant international pressure on Israeli policy have not been
answered, and in spite of having utilized all the means we have had
available to us, these actions have not brought about change in
Israeli policies, we, therefore join the call for BDS on Israel.68
In August 2009, Dr.
Neve Gordon, a longtime peace activist and head of the political
science department at Ben-Gurion University, published an op-ed in
the Lost Angeles Times,
endorsing the
Palestinian call for BDS against Israel.69
In September 2009,
BOYCOTT! also joined the
Toronto declaration70
supporting the
call to protest the Toronto International Film Festival's
City-to-City Spotlight on Tel Aviv. Filmmaker, writer, and visual
artist, Udi Aloni and the
artist David Reeb71
were also among
the supporters of the
declaration.72
64
http://boycottisrael.info/content/israeli-organizations-call-norway-divest-israeli-
occupation
65
http://boycottisrael.info/content/barcelona-still-cooperating-tel-aviv-even-after-gaza-massacres
66
http://boycottisrael.info/content/unicef-and-motorola-partnership
67
http://boycottisrael.info/content/entertaining-apartheid-israel-deserves-no-amnesty
68
www.wilpf.int.ch/PDF/Statement%20on%20BDS%20Movement.pdf
69
http://articles.latimes.com/2009/aug/20/opinion/oe-gordon20
70
http://torontodeclaration.blogspot.com/
71
http://opedisrael.blogspot.com/2009/10/attacking-conscience-corporate-owned.html
17
In October 2009,
Michel (Mikado) Warschawski a prominent member of The Alternative
Information Center, published a reply to
Uri Avnery
titled
“YES to BDS!”
in which he states:
“For us Zionism is not
a national liberation movement but a colonial movement, and
the State of Israel is and has always been a settler's colonial
state. Peace, or, better, justice, cannot be achieved without a
total decolonization (one can say de-Zionisation) of the Israeli
State; it is a precondition for the fulfillment of the legitimate
rights of the Palestinians – whether refugees, living under military
occupation or second-class citizens of Israel… any attempt for
reconciliation before the fulfillment of rights strengthens
the continuation of the colonial domination relationship. Without a
price to be paid, why should the Israelis stop colonization, why
should they risk a deep internal crisis?
“This is where the BDS
campaign is so relevant: it offers an international framework to
act in order to help the Palestinian people achieving its
legitimate rights, both on the institutional level (states and
international institutions) and the civil society's one… The BDS
campaign was initiated by a broad coalition of Palestinian political
and social movements. No Israeli who claims to support the national
rights of the Palestinian people can, decently, turn his or her back
to that campaign”.73
In the same month, Uri
Yacobi Keller from The Alternative Information Center published a
document justifying the academic boycott of Israeli universities
titled “The Economy of the
Occupation: Academic Boycott of Israel”.
He further argues that “An academic boycott of Israel represents a
threat that could damage one of the most important cultural
connections between Israel and the western world”.74
In November 2009,
The Coalition of Women for
Peace75
passed a motion to
join the BDS movement in Israel. It’s the first such endorsement by
a major Israeli organization, representing thousands of activists.
This initiative has been preceded by a three year long project it
had run (initiated in November 2006), titled
Who Profits: Exposing the Israeli
Occupation Industry,
coordinated by Dr. Dalit Baum, Merav Amir and other members of the
Coalition. Who Profits aims to expose Israeli and international
corporations which are involved in the
72
http://www.counterpunch.org:80/aloni08282009.html
http://www.haaretz.com:80/hasen/spages/1116151.html
73
http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1733
http://toibillboard.info/144boyc.html
74
http://kanan48.wordpress.com/2009/10/23/the-economy-of-the-occupation-academic-boycott-of-israelby-
uri-yacobi-keller/
75
http://coalitionofwomen.org/home/english
18
construction of
Israeli colonies and infrastructure in the occupied territories, in
the settlements’ economy, in building walls and checkpoints, and in
the supply of specific equipment used in the control and repression
of the civilian population under occupation. The question Who
Profits investigates is not the traditional complaint about the
costs incurred by the occupation but the extent to which those
involved in it benefit: Who profits from Control of Population,
Economic Exploitation, and The Settlement Industry.76
The Who Profits
data base has become a mainstay of the international BDS movement,
providing much of the research and information that is vital for
worldwide economic activism against companies and corporations
benefitting directly from Israel's occupation.
In the same month,
BOYCOTT! sent an Open Letter
to the Board of Governors of Trondheim University,
asking them to follow the Palestinian call to boycott the Israeli
academy. “Indeed, it has to be recognized by academics the world
over that Israeli universities are part and parcel of the structures
of domination and oppression of the Palestinian people. They have
played a direct and indirect role in promoting, justifying,
developing or supporting the state‘s racist policies and persistent
violations of human rights and international law”.77
BOYCOTT! also joined
Adalah-NY’s call on others to
tell the New York Mets that they should refrain from supporting
Hebron’s settlers.78
In December 2009,
members of BOYCOTT!, “including Emmanuel Farjoun, Hebrew University;
Rachel Giora, Tel Aviv University; Anat Matar, Tel Aviv University;
Kobi Snitz, Technion; and Ilan Pappe now at Exeter” supported the
US campaign for academic
boycott against Israel
who issued
a statement calling for a boycott of
Israeli academic and cultural institutions.79
In January 2010,
ICAHD issued a renewed
statement
titled “in support of a campaign of BDS based upon the fundamental
principles of the Palestinian civil society call:
• “Ending Israel’s
occupation and colonization of all Arab lands and dismantling the
Wall;
• “Recognizing the
fundamental rights of the Arab-Palestinian citizens of Israel to
full equality; and
• “Respecting,
protecting and promoting the rights of Palestinian refugees to
return to their homes and properties as stipulated in UN resolution
194”.
76
http://www.whoprofits.org/
77
http://usacbi.wordpress.com/category/israeli-organizing/
78
http://boycottisrael.info/content/tell-new-york-mets-say-no-hebron’s-
racist-violent-settlers
79
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article10967.shtml
19
It then goes on to
give details about ICHAD’s support of BDS not mentioned in the
original statement, such as:
• “Boycott of Israeli
academic institutions, which have not fulfilled their responsibility
of upholding the academic freedoms of their Palestinian
counterparts. Our call for an academic boycott of Israeli
universities is targeted at the institutions, opposing, for example,
the holding of international academic conferences in Israel or
funding joint research ventures. It does
not
call for boycotting
individual scholars or researchers in any way”.80
In the same month,
filmmaker and artist Udi Aloni
published an article in Ynet,
explaining why BDS is the right tool to level against the
occupation:
“[W]e must try to
create the preconditions for non-violent resistance to emerge, in
order to render violent resistance unnecessary.
“The most
provably-effective form of pressure known to us so far is BDS. Thus,
BDS action does not amount to negative, counter-productive action,
as many propagandists try to portray it. On the contrary, BDS action
is a life-saving antidote to violence. It is an action of
solidarity, partnership and joint progress. BDS action serves to
preempt, in a non-violent manner, justified violent resistance aimed
at attaining the same goals of justice, peace and equality.81”
4. Impact: Israel is
losing its legitimacy
The BDS movement
against Israel is growing worldwide. The Israeli public and
policy-makers, including military officers, cannot ignore it any
longer.82
Israelis are
witnessing the loss of Israel’s legitimacy and beginning to grasp
the cost of continued Israeli disregard of international law.
In September 2009, in
his article, “The third
threat”,
Gabriel Siboni registers the impact of the BDS movement against
Israel:
“In recent years,
however, an additional threat has been developing. Its main thrust:
attempts by pro-Arab organizations to destroy
Israel's legitimacy
as a
political entity. There are many examples of this such as
accusations of an apartheid policy, Holocaust denial and the claim
that the state's establishment was an illegal act, as well as
accusations that Israel has
80
http://www.icahd.org/eng/
81
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3829694,00.html
82
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/world/2010/0106/1224261731116.html
20
committed war crimes.
These lead to boycotts of Israeli companies and products, academic
and cultural boycotts and ultimately calls to destroy the Zionist
entity” (emphasis added, R.G.).83
In October 2009,
Aluf Benn,
Haaretz correspondent testifies: “Only one thing does bother the
Israelis, according to the polls: fear of a diplomatic
embargo and an international boycott. The Goldstone Report and the
International Court of Justice in The Hague are arousing concern and
interest, far more than Obama's peace speeches. However, as long
as relations with the rest of the world are satisfactory, Israelis
see no reason to emerge from indifference and listen to the
president of the United States” (emphasis added, R.G.).84
During the same month,
in his article “Israel needs
legitimacy to wage war and peace”,
Haaretz mainstream journalist, Ari Shavit, counts the threats to
Israel’s loss of legitimacy, including the BDS movement against
Israel:
“But things are not
all right - they really are not. Why? Because underneath those still
waters on which Israel's ship is sailing lurks an iceberg. The
Goldstone report marked the iceberg's first appearance. Turkey
turning its back on Israel was the second. Attempts by European
courts to try Israel Defense Forces officers were the third; the
boycott of Israeli products and companies in various places round
the world was the fourth”.85
In November 2009,
mainstream journalist, Sever
Plocker, admits
that “Israel’s image has hit a nadir; it is isolated, unwanted, and
perceived as bad. The world is telling us that should we continue
along the same contemptible path, we will lose our legitimacy”
(emphasis added, R.G.).86
In the same month, in
his article titled “How we
became a night unto the nations”,
Haaretz mainstream columnist Yoel Marcus laments Israel’s loss of
legitimacy:
83
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1117739.html
84
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1116923.html
85
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1121263.html
86
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3798761,00.html
21
“Israel is … described
as a strong country, aggressive and domineering, as Charles de
Gaulle once said. President Shimon Peres was recently greeted by
angry demonstrations in Argentina and Brazil. Many countries boycott
Israeli products, and Israeli lecturers on college campuses
throughout the West endure catcalls. During Ehud Olmert's recent
lecture tour of the United States, he was greeted almost everywhere
he went with cries such as ’child killers!’
“Ever since Operation
Cast Lead in Gaza, officers in the Israel Defense Forces have been
at risk every time they land in an international airport. … it would
be preferable for our government to discuss how we got to where we
are - no longer a light unto the nations - and what needs to be done
to stop the freefall in our international image before it's
too late” (emphasis added, R.G.).87
Still, in the same
month, Yoav Karny writes in
Globes:
“Israel will not
continue to exist if the educated middle class of the West turns
against it. The experience of South Africa has taught all the
boycotters in the world that there isn’t a more effective tool to
weaken a society's stamina than the withdrawal of foreign
investments” (emphasis added, R.G.).88
In January 2010, Gidi
Grinstein, the founder and president of the
Reut Institute,
a policy group designed to provide real-time long-term strategic
decision-making support to the Government of Israel,
89
acknowledges the
de-legitimization threat:
“And so, our
politicians and military personnel are threatened with lawsuits and
arrest when they travel abroad, campaigns to boycott our products
gain traction, and our very existence is challenged in academic
institutions and intellectual circles. The country is increasingly
isolated”. 90
The BDS movement
against Israel, supported by a growing number of Israelis, is
biting. It threatens to undermine Israel’s position in the civilized
world. It holds up a mirror to the ugly face of Israel as Oppressor.
Sooner or later, mainstream Israelis will have to acknowledge the
face in the mirror as their own. The sooner they do, the sooner they
will press for a drastic course correction in partnership with
Palestinians that will bring justice for all and will set the
country on the path to regaining its legitimacy.
87
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1130262.html
88
http://www.globes.co.il:80/news/article.aspx?QUID=1056,U1259349558910&did=1000517467
89
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reut_Institute
90
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1142739.html
22
Acknowledgements
I am really grateful
to anyone who sent me comments and helped in shaping up this
document. I am most indebted to Reuven Abergel, Mona Baker, Dalit
Baum, Ehud Ein-Gil, Jeff Halper, Shir Hever, Ingrid Jaradat Gassner,
Reuven Kaminer, Debby Lerman, Rela Mazali, Dorothy Naor, Ofer
Neiman, Ilan Pappe, Deb Reich, Jonatan Stanczak, Aliyah Strauss,
Gila Svirsky, Mikado Warschawski, and Beate Zilversmidt.
|