In July, in Rachel Corrie�s hometown of Olympia, Washington, the popular food
co-op announced that no Israeli products would be sold at its two grocery stores.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu, a principal endorser of this new Israel Divestment
Campaign, issued a statement endorsing the boycott. �The Olympia Food Co-op has
joined a growing worldwide movement on the part of citizens and the private
sector to support by non-violent tangible acts the Palestinian struggle for
justice and self-determination.�
In a surprise move in August, Harvard University divested itself of all its Israel investments,
almost $40 million worth of shares, including pharmaceutical industries, NICE
Systems, Check Point Software Technologies, Cellcom Israel and Partner
Communications. Initially, Harvard gave no explanation for its actions to the
SEC. John Longbrake, spokesman for Harvard, maintained that Harvard has not
divested from Israel, that these changes were routine and did not represent a
change in policy. But was Harvard in fact caving under BDS calls and trying to
do so as quietly as possible to avoid a Zionist backlash? In the past, Harvard
has divested from companies for purely political reasons, but they did so
publicly. For instance, five years ago, Harvard divested from PetroChina in
order to protest China�s actions in Sudan.
In Vancouver, Canada,
port truck traffic slowed to a crawl in late August as a group of about 50 protesters
approached drivers with leaflets asking them to observe the world boycott
campaign against Israel, and in particular to refuse to unload the Israeli
container ship Zim Djibouti, one of the largest in the world, that had landed
in Vancouver harbour. �This action was part of the growing international
campaign to pressure Israel to comply with international law and stop killing
innocent civilians,� said Gordon Murray, spokesperson for the Boycott Israeli
Apartheid Coalition (BIAC). �Workers in South Africa, Scandinavia, the United
States, Turkey and India have already responded to the Palestinian call for
action,� said BIAC spokesman Mike Krebs. �The international solidarity movement
has decided that the best way to change Israel�s behaviour is to take actions
against Israeli companies and institutions in order to put pressure on the
government there.�
In an interview with the Christian Science Monitor
earlier this year, Jonathan Ben Artzi, a PhD candidate at Brown University and
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu�s
nephew, made clear his belief that equality and social justice will
prevail in Israel when the government and people of the United States adopt a
no-tolerance stance toward Israel�s abuse of Palestinians. Ben Artzi, whose
family has lived in the region for nine generations, and who�s seen a lifetime
of Israel�s abuse of Palestinians, declared: �Sometimes it takes a good friend
to tell you when enough is enough. As they did with South Africa two decades
ago, concerned citizens across the US can make a difference by encouraging
Washington to get the message to Israel that this cannot continue.� His
reference to South Africa was to the protests, boycotts and divestment actions
in the US between 1984 and 1989, which ultimately forced the white minority
South African government to relinquish control over its oppressed Black
majority. Ben Artzi served 18 months in prison for refusing his mandatory
service in Israel�s military.
The California
Israel Divestment Campaign launched a campaign on 8 September for a
California ballot initiative in November requiring public employee and teacher
pension funds to divest from business activities in Israel. Said local campaign
organiser Sherna Gluck, a member of the Public Employee Retirement System: �Our
public retirement systems have more than $1.5 billion invested in at least
eight companies that provide war materials and services used in violation of
internationally recognised human rights, including support for the illegal
Israeli settlements and the Separation Wall.� Archbishop Tutu told the
Californians: �We defeated apartheid nonviolently because the international
community agreed to support the disinvestment in apartheid campaign. A similar
campaign can help to bring peace in the Middle East and do so nonviolently.�
This is the just the first divestment launch in California.
Similar launches in other California cities are soon to come. With this
divestment campaign, Californians are poised to spark a state-by-state
divestiture movement to parallel the anti-Apartheid campaign that helped defeat
the oppressive rule in South Africa.
The Dutch government
too has set an important precedent for European and indeed world governments.
It dropped a bomb this week when the Foreign Ministry cancelled a tour of mayors
from Israel planned for October. The forum is funded by the Joint Distribution
Committee, a Jewish-American charity, and the participant list included
representatives from West bank settlements Efrat and Kiryat Arba in �Judea� and
�Samaria.� The Israeli Foreign Ministry harrumphed: �This is undoubtedly
useless and harmless politics, and we hope that this is not the final word on
the topic.�
Well, I hope it is.
The Netherlands has become notorious for the Islamophobia whipped up by Dutch
politician and filmmaker Geert Wilders, who proudly says, �I hate Islam,� calls
the Quran a �fascist book� and the Prophet Mohamed �the devil.� He argues that
Muslim immigration is a �Trojan Horse.� His words are being echoed by Israeli
politician Aryeh Eldad, who condemned the boycott move: �The Dutch surrender to
the Arabs reflects their surrender to the Muslim minority.� This principled
move by the Dutch, clearly an attempt to fight the negative image of the
Netherlands, will give pause for thought to all governments. Israel Local
Council Chairman Shlomo Buchbut rightly concludes: �The decision by the
Netherlands puts the [Israeli-Arab] conflict before anything else.�
Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly. You can reach him at ericwalberg.com.