![]() | ||
|
Divestment and Boycott ~Peaceful Ways that YOU Can Change the World~
For the past several decades, the Israeli government has continuously violated United Nations resolutions and international humanitarian law. In the creation of Israel in 1948, 75% percent of the Palestinians were dispossessed of their land and sent into exile. Then in 1967, Israel illegally occupied Palestinian territories in the West Bank and Gaza, creating a new wave of refugees. Palestinians who remained in Israel live as third class citizens, facing legal, economic, and social discrimination. In the occupied territories, Israel continues to subject the Palestinians there to home demolitions, closures & checkpoints, extrajudicial detentions and assassinations, immobilizing curfews, and countless other daily abuses and forms of oppression. The system of apartheid that Israel has developed closely resembles that which South Africa once had. Apartheid in South Africa was eventually abolished in large part because of an international grassroots movement to stop financial support of the apartheid regime. Through divestment (stopping capital investment in companies that do business in Israel) and boycott (not buying Israeli products) we can bring justice to the Israelis and Palestinians as well. The following questions can help you as you decide to join this growing movement: What are the goals of this divestment/boycott campaign?
Can divestment from Israel be called anti-Semitic? Absolutely not. Anti-Semitism goes against the very principles that are the foundation of this movement: justice, equality, human rights, and peace for ALL peoples. It is important to separate Israeli policies from the Jewish people, many of whom support divestment. Divestment and boycott campaigns target Israeli, not Jewish, products. The campaign also targets American-owned companies that do business in Israel and fund the occupation, but it is not anti-American. Charges of anti-Semitism are poor attempts to distract from the real problem: Israel's apartheid. Why are we singling out Israel? What about all of the other countries that abuse human rights? Should we have refrained from challenging apartheid South Africa because there were abuses throughout the world? Of course not! There are many compelling similarities between Israel & apartheid-era South Africa. Here are just a few:
Aren't both the Israelis and Palestinians committing violence? While both sides have been violent towards each other, there are key distinctions between the two sides that the mainstream media and pro-Israel voices tend to disregard:
Is the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip necessary to maintain Israeli security? No. If Israel were truly occupying these areas to provide security for Israel proper, it would not be allowing and encouraging civilians settlers to move into the region. Throughout the 1990s, Israel continued to construct permanent "colonies" in the Palestinian territories (even though the Oslo agreements between the two parties forbid it). Israeli civilians have been encouraged to move to these settlements through tax incentives and bargain real estate deals. These Israeli "colonists" actually create more of a security risk; many are considered right-wing fanatics by most of their countrymen, and they aggravate the conflict by carrying machine guns, uprooting Palestinian orchards, and harassing Palestinian in their neighborhoods and markets. The Palestinians are denied access to the colonists' communities, which expropriate large quantities of Palestinian land and water, and are forbidden from using the bypass roads that now crisscross the territories. These colonies and the roads that connect them form the basis for Israel's apartheid state. Palestinians are confined to smaller and increasingly isolated areas, similar to the black "homelands" in South Africa under Apartheid. The hopelessness and resentment that Israel has created through this apartheid and colonization policy continue to create a greater security risk for Israel. What impact will a boycott really have? Although the true economic impact of a boycott is unknown, its value in raising awareness of Israel's occupation is tremendous. When we exercise our economic power and take a moral stance as individuals and as a community to speak out against oppression, we get the attention of world leaders. We must support businesses that are guided by strong ethical principles, not simply profit. How does investing in Israel relate to the policies of occupation & apartheid? Some investments have very direct links to the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories and the oppression of the Palestinian people. United Technologies, for example, sells Blackhawk helicopters to Israel, which Israel then uses to attack Palestinian civilians in the occupied territories. Caterpillar is another company that contributes directly to the Israel's brutal military rule. Caterpillar bulldozers are routinely used to demolish Palestinian homes, often killing inhabitants inside. A young American peace activist was recently murdered by an Israeli soldier when she was run over by a Caterpillar bulldozer. Other connections are less apparent but crucial nonetheless. Hewlett Packard, for example, owns part of the Technion Institute in Israel, a prestigious college that discriminates against Arab students, admitting a disproportionately high number of Jewish students and very few Arab students, who are also citizens of Israel. It also develops high-tech weaponry for the Israeli military. Israel Bonds are another form of investment that support Israel's apartheid. Revenues from government bond sales go directly into Israel's treasury. Bond money is used for infrastructure improvement projects, including illegal construction in the Palestinian territories. It is also used to resettle Jewish immigrants who are welcomed into Israel while Palestinian refugees are denied the right to ever return home. Even seemingly innocuous investments in Israel are actually funding the violation of fundamental Palestinian human rights.
|