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The Boycott of Israel Is Gaining Speed
By Lawrence Davidson
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 13, 2010
Lawrence Davidson outlines the reasons why the boycott of
Israel is gaining speed, from “the horrors of the Israeli occupation and
its ghettoizing of the people of Gaza”, to the segregation and economic
and social discrimination against Israel’s non-Jewish population, to the
corrupting influences of Zionism on policy-making institutions of Western
governments, especially those of the United States.
On 5 September
2010 the Israel newspaper Ha’aretz published an article the headline of
which read ‘Anti-Israel economic
boycotts are gaining speed’. The subtitle went on to state that "the
sums involved are not large, but their international significance is
huge". Actually, what seems to have triggered the piece was not
international. Rather, it was the decision of a "few dozen theatre people"
to boycott "a new cultural centre in Ariel", an illegally settled town in
the occupied territories. This action drew public support from 150
academics in Israel. The response from the Israeli right, which presently
controls the government and much of Israel’s information environment, was
loud and hateful.
Though this affair was domestic, it provided a
jumping off point for Ha’aretz to go on and examine the larger
international boycott of Israel which is indeed "gaining speed". It noted
that Chile had recently pledged to boycott products from the Israeli
settlements and Norway’s state pension plan had divested itself of
companies involved in construction in the occupied territories. The
Ha’aretz article pointed out that these incidents (and there are others
that can be named in such countries as Ireland and Venezuela) are signs
that the boycott movement – so long the province civil society – is now
finding resonance at the level of national governments. The Israeli paper
declared that "the world is changing before our eyes. Five years ago the
anti-Israel movement may have been marginal. Now it is growing into an
economic problem."
“It might come as a surprise to the Israelis, but you can run a boycott
movement without heavy outside funding -- as was the case of the boycott
against South Africa.”
The article puts forth two explanations for this turn of events one of
which is problematic, and the other incomplete. Let’s take a look at them.
1. "Until now boycott organizers had been on the far left. [Now] they
have a new ally: Islamic organizations… The red side has a name for
championing human rights, while the green side [the Islamic side] has
money." I have some personal knowledge of the boycott movement and I find
some of these particulars to be, at best, exaggerations. The term "far
left" must be based on some arbitrary Zionist definition of the political
spectrum. Worldwide community support for the growing boycott movement has
gone beyond political alignments. Today, it is a reflection of real united
front seeking the promotion of Palestinian human rights (in this Haaretz
is on the mark). As for the "green side", there is certainly an
understandable affinity here. Muslims too are concerned about the human
rights of Palestinians (including the Christians ones). However, the claim
of any significant flow of cash is, as far as I know, another
exaggeration. The Ha'aretz piece cites the example of the aid flotilla to
Gaza, with its link to Turkey. But this is just one case in a worldwide
movement. And, there was nothing illegitimate (despite Israeli propaganda)
about the involvement of Turkish charities. It might come as a surprise to
the Israelis, but you can run a boycott movement without heavy outside
funding – as was the case of the boycott against South Africa.
2.
Ha’aretz continues: "but then came the occupation, which turned us into
the evil Goliath, the cruel oppressor, a darkness on the nations". The
article suggests that this is such a contrast with the righteous stand
that helped convince the West to support the original formation of Israel
that many have turned away from Israel in disappointment. "And now we are
paying the price of presenting ourselves as righteous and causing
disappointment: boycott." No doubt there is much disappointment. The
horrors of Israeli expansionism and occupation are such that they draw
worldwide attention. And rightly so. But, they are symptoms of some deeper
cause. What might it be? The state of Israel was founded on an ideological
programme called Zionism. That programme called for the establishment of a
state designed to serve the exclusive interests of one religiously
identified group. While the Zionists felt this aim was justified by the
centuries of persecution suffered by European Jews, it actually carried
within it the seeds of its own corruption. The simple truth is that you
cannot successfully design a state for one group only unless you found it
on some desert island. If you put it down in a place that is occupied by
others who are not of your group, what is the most likely next step? You
turn into racists, ethnic cleansers or worse. The Zionist adherence to
their ideology and its programme is the cause of their turning into "cruel
oppressors". The means dictated by their end made it so.
“Those who wonder whether they should support the boycott should
certainly consider the horrors of the Israeli occupation and its
ghettoizing of the people of Gaza.”
The Ha'aretz article does not go beyond these points, but there is
plenty more to say. Those who wonder whether they should support the
boycott should certainly consider the horrors of the Israeli occupation
and its ghettoizing of the people of Gaza. They might also consider the
following:
1. The non-Jewish population of Israel proper, that is Israel within
the 1967 borders (the "Green Line") are subject to segregation and
economic and social discrimination that is both de jure and de facto.
Their overall standards of living are lower than the Israeli Jews, their
educational facilities inferior and their economic prospects poorer. This
is to be expected. If you are running your state based on a racist
principle, by definition discrimination must infuse the home front. This
fact does not appear to fit with the often heard claim that the Israelis
are "just like us" Americans. However, in a rather anachronistic way they
are "like us" – that is like the United States prior to our civil rights
legislation. In other words, Israel is like, say, Georgia or Alabama circa
the 1920s.
2. The second factor worthy of consideration is the
negative international impact of Zionist ideology, for the harm of Zionism
is not confined to either Israel or its occupied territories. The fact is
that Zionist influence spreads far beyond Israel’s area of dominion and
now influences many of the policy-making institutions of Western
governments, and particularly those of the United States. This influence
is corruptive if only because it distorts both official and popular
notions of national interests in the Middle East. When you have a powerful
and single-minded lobby that is able to manipulate your government in such
a fashion that it pours its national treasure into a racist state, arms it
and protects it to the point of becoming an accomplice to its crimes, and
by doing so wilfully alienates 22 per cent of the world’s population, you
know that your notion of national interest has been seriously mangled.
This harmful influence makes it imperative that Israel’s oppressive
behaviour be singled out as a high priority case from among the many other
oppressive regimes that may be candidates for boycott.
So no one in
Israel, the US or anywhere else should be surprised that the boycott
against Israel, in its many manifestations, is "gaining speed." If you are
not yet a supporter you should become one. To join the boycott is good for
the world’s future in general. It is certainly good for the Palestinians,
and yes, it is good for the Jews too. For more information on how to
join the boycott Israel campaign, visit the websites of the
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions
Movement website and the Boycott
Israeli Goods campaign.
Lawrence Davidson
is professor of history at West Chester University. He is the author of
numerous books, including Islamic Fundamentalism and America's Palestine:
Popular and Official Perceptions from Balfour to Israeli Statehood.
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