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BDS Movement:
Power of the People at Work Against Apartheid
Israeli Regime
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 20, 2012
The issue is not about hummus, chocolate bars or Dead Sea
vacations. It is about civil society taking full responsibility for its own
action (or lack there of). The issue is not exactly about Israeli products
either, but rather about how even a seemingly innocent decision like buying
Israeli dates may enable the continued subjugation of the Palestinian
people. Because the global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions
movement (BDS) highlights this, the reaction it often generates is charged
and vehement. Many also react to the BDS because it actually works. Israeli
supporters have every right to be concerned that their carefully customized
discourse on Israel’s infallibility (juxtaposed with Palestinian depravity)
- which has been promoted for decades in various media and political outlets
in the US and Western countries - is now simply falling apart.
The recent University of Pennsylvania BDS conference, organized by student
group, PennBDS, was the latest example to illustrate both the effectiveness
of the global movement and also of the real worry felt by supporters of
Israel in the United States. Knowing fully that facing BDS allegations head
on would most likely be unsuccessful, they organized around misinformation,
name-calling and intimidation. However, the tired strategy is no longer
bearing fruit. Israel’s Zionist supporters made every attempt to
galvanize the Jewish community in Philadelphia into targeting the conference
that called for Israel to be held accountable for its military occupation,
racial discrimination and flagrant violations of international law.
One of those angered by the conference is Ruben Gur, a professor of
psychiatry at the university. In an article published in the Daily
Pennsylvanian, he likened the conference organizers to ‘Nazis’. “A relevant
precedent for such a movement is the groups organized by the Nazis in the
1930s to boycott, divest and sanction Jews and their businesses,” he wrote,
perhaps knowing fully the historical inaccuracy of his statement.
Penn President Amy Gutmann and Trustees Chair David L. Cohen insisted that
allowing PennBDS to organize was merely a moral duty aimed at “protecting
speech we may not like” (a strangely balanced statement, to say the least).
“The University has repeatedly, consistently and forcefully expressed our
adamant opposition to this agenda. Simply stated, we fundamentally disagree
with the position taken by PennBDS,” they wrote in the Daily Pennsylvanian.
The debate registered in every available medium and extended far beyond
the parameters of the university itself. Bizarrely, the Jewish Federation of
Greater Philadelphia wished to counter the BDS conference by hosting no
other than Alan Dershowitz to deliver an emergency speech on campus.
Dershowitz, known for his inflammatory rhetoric and smearing approach to
pro-Palestinian activists, was forced to change tactics, as the conference
and the controversy it generated allowed BDS activists a platform to
organize and convey a clear and peaceful message. “The BDS conference gives
us an opportunity to respond to hate with positive messages,” Dershowitz
said, as reported in Philadelphia’s Jewish Exponent newspaper.
Those involved in promoting causes of peace and justice know well that such
hysteria is an indication of fear and palpable weakness. The pro-Israeli
logic – justifying racial superiority, rationalizing military occupation,
defending ethnic cleansing – is simply worthless in the face of an
articulate opposing message. Therefore, whenever confronted by such events,
Israeli-sympathizers resort to igniting ‘controversy’. This is fed mostly by
biased reporting, inflammatory language and unfounded accusations. Professor
Gur was unmatched in representing the model, as he attacked even the student
newspaper itself: “I could barely believe my eyes. It is bad enough that
Penn has allowed itself to be associated with this hateful genocidal
organization, but for you to give room for their ‘explanation’ and then
dignify this outpouring of misinformation and anti-Semitism…”
Still, “while the opponents of BDS were busy name-calling, the people at the
conference were engaged in pointing out the facts on the ground,” according
to Uri Hores, an Israeli peace activist (writing in +972 magazine). These
include: “practical facts, historical facts and legal facts, presented by
experts in international human rights law like Noura Erakat, who provided
the conference with a comprehensive overview of the complex legal system
under which Palestinians live.” According to Hores, the Penn
conference was “modeled after a similar conference held in 2009 at Hampshire
College in Amherst, Massachusetts.” This is very important since the success
of these initiatives, despite the defamations and exaggerated controversy,
invite discussions elsewhere. One such precedent was in April 2010, when the
student senate at the University of California, Berkeley debated the issue
of divestment from US companies that were “materially or militarily
profiting” from the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories. A
divestment bill was put to a vote. Notable individuals including Noam
Chomsky, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Naomi Klein and Alice Walker issued
statements in support of the bill, while Nobel laureates Shirin Ebadi,
Mairead Maguire, Rigoberta Menchu Tum and Jody Williams signed a letter
echoing the outpouring of support: “We stand united in our belief that
divesting from companies that provide significant support for the Israeli
military provides moral and strategic stewardship of tuition and
taxpayer-funded public education money. We are all peace makers, and we
believe that no amount of dialogue without economic pressure can motivate
Israel to change its policy of using overwhelming force against Palestinian
civilians.” It should be noted that the outpouring of support for
BDS initiatives was hardly done at the behest of any individual or group.
Rather it was a response to a call made by 171 Palestinian civil society
organizations in July 2005. The Middle East region is already
testimony to the rise of people power which has inspired the world. BDS is a
mere continuation of a global struggle for justice, and PennBDS are but mere
facilitators of an expanding movement that will surely usher real change in
a long-stagnant colonial paradigm. Prominent Palestinian activist Ali
Abunimah told the conference in his keynote speech: “This insane hysteria
about the conference tells us something about the moment we are in. In terms
of the battle of ideas, we are in the end game.” A growing number of
people are already realizing this fact. One of the US’s most celebrated rock
musicians, Cat Power, cancelled her Israel show, “joining a list of artists
shunning the country,” according to the Washington Post (Feb 10). She
canceled a scheduled Tel Aviv concert because she felt “sick in her spirit”.
Numerous artists, companies and ordinary individuals also feel that way,
proving that global solidarity is not a sentimental value, but real podium
for those who wish to bring about positive change. - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter:
Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
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