Posts from March, 2010

The Ugly Truth about Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (DBS)

By Sam Sokolove on Thursday, March 25th, 2010 at 1:54 pm
Categories: Advocacy, Israel

“Every war against the Jews has begun with first demonizing us.”

Michael Oren, Israel’s ambassador to the U.S.

In recent years, the campaign to delegitimize and demonize Israel, which began in earnest at the 2001 UN Conference against Racism in Durban, has intensified. This campaign distorts the history and national aspirations of the Jewish people to live in peace in a homeland to which they have been connected continuously and profoundly for more than three millennia.

The legitimate right of Israel to defend itself from terror often is ignored. Israeli policy and actions are not beyond criticism; but we have witnessed a continuing flow of inaccurate charges of human rights violations and outrageous comparisons of Israel to apartheid South Africa and even to Nazi Germany.

Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions is part of a grand design to destroy Israel and her credibility in the world.

According to Abraham Foxman, National Director of the Anti-Defamation League, “(BDS”) is about the three ‘D’s”: Demonization, Deligitimization, and Applying a Double Standard.”

Tactics of BDS:

  • Denying Israel’s cultural products;
  • Denying Israel’s emissaries the right to be heard;
  • Equating Israel to Apartheid-era South Africa;
  • Delegitimizing the Jewish historical ties to Israel;
  • Portraying Zionism not as an expression of Peoplehood, but as an extension of European colonialization;
  •  Equating Zionism to Nazism.

This is all anti-Semitism

BDS may seem innocuous, but we must understand what BDS proponents really want: Israel could be strangled economically and culturally if people of good concemeince do not counter this campaign.

  • The campaign to delegitimize Israel and the BDS movement, serves as a distraction from the critical task of trying to bring peace to the Middle East;
  • The promotion of boycotts, divestment, and sanctions against Israel evidences a troubling double standard – singling out Israel for blame;
  • The use of boycotts, divestment, and sanctions in the context of the Israeli-Palestinian-Arab conflict is an effort to reward intransigence by suggesting that international pressure can replace efforts to negotiate in good faith.

Those opposed to the existence of the State of Israel are tenacious and will continue to intensify their campaign globally, within local communities and on the campuses.

You Can Fight Back!

  • Confront boycott campaigns with campaigns to purchase Israeli goods or partner with Israeli organizations, with the aim of ensuring that every boycott campaign is a net failure;
  • Respond swiftly to false or distorted media statements about Israel;
  • Invest in programs that promote peace and reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians;
  • Vigorously combat slanderous attacks, including anti-Semitic fabrications that have been levied against Israelis that are reminiscent of the ancient blood libel.

Boycott Fails: Thank you for Standing with Israel!

By Sam Sokolove on Thursday, March 4th, 2010 at 9:54 am
Categories: Uncategorized

From: Jewish Federation of New Mexico and Anti-Defamation League, New Mexico

Thanks to the efforts of a mobilized community, we are delighted to report that the efforts of an anti-Israel group calling itself the New Mexico Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Committee failed dismally in their efforts last Sunday to encourage shoppers at Trader Joe’s Uptown Albuquerque location to boycott the store’s supply of Israeli consumer products .

Ironically, the misguided boycott attempt only helped encourage community members to buy-out Trader Joe’s stock of Israeli products. A similar, national boycott of Israeli products sold at Trader Joe’s backfired last summer when Israel supporters flooded the stores specifically to buy Israeli products.

We commend Trader Joe’s for refusing to remove Israeli products based on pressure from this group, and for responding quickly to concerns from the Jewish community. More is available about Trader Joe’s response here:

http://www.adl.org/PresRele/IslME_62/Trader_Joe’s_Boycott.htm

The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement – or “BDS” — is part of an aggressive, global campaign to delegitimize and demonize the Jewish State. The below article by Martin Raffel, Senior vice president of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, offers more background on this campaign while urging our community and friends of Israel to respond to it with vigor.

Stay educated. Continue to visit www.nmisrael.org to learn more about how you can counter anti-Israel efforts in New Mexico.


Action needed to combat campaign delegitimizing Israel

By Sam Sokolove on Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010 at 2:53 pm
Categories: Advocacy, Media

By Martin J. Raffel

The organized American Jewish community and our non-Jewish allies, with broad representation from across political and religious lines, are poised to launch a major initiative to counter the campaign to delegitimize Israel.

The sky is not falling. President Obama and the U.S. Congress remain firmly committed to Israel’s fundamental security, and opinion polls consistently reflect broad American public support for the Jewish state. But there are clouds gathering on the horizon that must not be ignored.

The delegitimization campaign — and make no mistake, it is a global campaign — has its roots in the international NGO gathering that took place alongside the 2001 U.N. conference on racism in Durban, South Africa. With the second intifada (more aptly described as “Arafat’s terror war”) raging, these anti-Israel NGOs decided to open up a second front to paint Israel as a pariah/apartheid state deserving of political and economic isolation.

Through the years, the principal weapons used by these groups are the boycott of Israeli products, people and events; divestment from Israeli companies and institutions, including Israel Bonds, as well as from certain foreign companies doing business in Israel; and sanctions. This explains why the campaign to delegitimize Israel often is referred to, inadequately and misleadingly, simply as the BDS movement.

There is no central address orchestrating all of the delegitimization activity. Rather we see a loose network of NGOs across the globe, sometimes coalescing around particular spheres, such as the U.S. Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel.

Mainline Protestant churches, universities, municipalities and corporations have processed divestment initiatives, which in virtually every case have failed to gain traction. The divestment language in a 2004 resolution adopted by the Presbyterian Church USA has since been rescinded, but the issue continues to capture the imagination of Israel’s detractors in that church and others.

Israeli cultural events have been subject to boycott attempts, such as the performances of the Israeli ballet now touring the United States and the Toronto Film Festival last fall, which was dedicated to Tel Aviv’s 100th anniversary.

Campuses have been particular targets, with Israel Apartheid Week taking place the first two weeks in March. The delegitimizers prey on those who lack basic knowledge about the complex nature of Middle East politics — people who can easily fall victim to their simplistic and often inaccurate narratives.

In parallel to the NGOs, governments, especially operating through deeply biased U.N. bodies such as the Geneva-based Human Rights Council, continue to promulgate material that fairly can be described as delegitimizing long after revocation of the 1975 resolution equating Zionism with racism.

The Goldstone report, which grossly distorts the reality of Israel’s efforts to combat an amoral adversary in Gaza that uses civilians as human shields — is the latest in a long line of hostile actions emanating from the council.

Accusations of war crimes and crimes against humanity eagerly get picked up by the delegitimization organizations and coalitions as valuable weapons in their arsenals.

Indeed, public international law has increasingly been utilized as a rationale for imposing political and economic sanctions against Israel.

Re’ut, an Israel-based think tank, recently completed an analysis of the issue and concluded that “while Israel’s delegitimizers come from relatively marginal forces in Europe, their effectiveness stems from their ability to engage and mobilize others. This is accomplished by branding Israel as a pariah and ‘apartheid’ state, identifying ‘outstanding issues’ — such as the ‘Gaza blockade,’ ’settlements,’ ‘the separation wall,’ ‘occupation,’ ‘disproportionate use of force,’ or ‘human rights violations’ — and rallying their coalition around it; making pro-Palestinian activity trendy; promoting boycotts, divestments and sanctions; and, most importantly, blurring the line separating them from those that criticize Israeli policy yet do not delegitimize it.”

Re’ut points out that “the delegitimizers work ‘from the periphery to the center’ and ‘bottom-up, thriving in social networks and on the Internet. Hence, while in formal policy spheres Israel’s diplomatic position remains relatively strong and solid, its standing among the general public and intellectual elites is being eroded.”

It is true that Israel’s “diplomatic position” for the time being remains strong both with the U.S. government and the American people. However, as the JCPA resolution on countering the delegitimization campaign adopted at our recent annual conference maintains, “unless effectively countered, over time it may have the corrosive effect of changing the culture of political discussion and making it harder for people of goodwill to publicly support Israel. If support for Israel begins to be seen as de facto racism, this could provide fertile ground for the growth of anti-Semitism.”

The delegitimization campaign, unfortunately, has made significant inroads in other parts of the world. Friends of Israel in this country cannot afford to be complacent. The community relations field — with motivated activists in our own community joined by non-Jewish allies who come to this cause based on relationships forged around a range of joint efforts in the social justice and human rights arenas — is well positioned to develop a strategic and comprehensive response to this challenge.

We must act now to prevent the clouds from becoming a full-fledged storm.


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