MIFTAH
Friday, 26 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

In the last six months, civic groups and churches in the United States have independently launched campaigns to divest financially from companies profiting from the Israeli military occupation of Palestinian lands. These groups have targeted town governments, university boards and religious bodies in an effort to publicly spotlight the low standards that human rights have been accorded in the U.S.-dominated "peace process" between Israel and the Palestinians. The American Presbyterian Church, a body of some 2.5 million followers, last summer decided to selectively divest its pension funds from companies profiting from the Israeli military occupation. The church has paid a price for daring to criticize Israel's human rights record. In November, church leaders were threatened with violence, called anti-Semitic and anti-Israeli for their stance. One hate message the church received said: "I promise violence against Presbyterian churches, they will go up in flames - that's a terrorist threat." Beside these words was a hand-drawn swastika. In addition to these attacks, the church has been publicly rebuked by such ardent pro-Israel supporters as high-profile law professor Alan Dershowitz.

In addition to the Presbyterian churches' activities, the first municipality in the U.S. to publicly be asked to divest its funds from Israel was Somerville, Massachusetts, near Boston. In November, a local group, with over 1,000 citizen signatures in hand, asked the town council to divest their pension funds from companies benefiting from the Israeli occupation. Passage of the resolution, which is non-binding, should have been easy: Somerville has a tradition of using its pension funds to uphold human rights, for example when it banned investment in Burma due to its human rights abuses.

However, with the perception among much of the public in the U.S. that Israel is always right, it was no surprise what happened when the resolution was presented to the town council. It was bashed by anti-divestment supporters as anti-Semitic, bad for business and bigoted. The town mayor, the pension-fund manager and even elected state representatives were all recruited by pro-Israel groups to urge the council to vote "no." Ironically, the message put across by many anti-divestment supporters was that the resolution, if passed, would hurt the chances for peace between Israelis and Palestinians. In the logic of many people in America and the country's relationship with Israel it seems that an act against Israel's military occupation is also a step away from peace. The reactions to both the Presbyterian Church's and the city of Somerville's requests for divestment from Israel highlights a growing problem for Israel's image. Until now, those who believe that "Israel is always right" have enjoyed a near monopoly over U.S. attitudes. Yet calls for divestment have the potential to become the Achilles heel for pro-Israel perceptions in the U.S. So far, Israel is not worried about moves in the U.S. to divest from its economy. Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom seemed to know little about such actions when a reporter asked him about divestment campaigns at a recent news conference. Given the paltry sums involved, and the unconcerned attitude of the Israeli government, Israel is clearly unworried about whether or not its bonds will sell in international financial markets anytime soon. However, divestment campaigns against Israel's human rights abuses cannot be seen as failures because they do not cripple Israel's ability to occupy Palestinians. Instead, divestment achievement should be judged by the growth they foster in the number of Americans who are committed to speaking out against the abuses of the occupation. Consider this: At the Somerville town council meeting where the divestment resolution was presented, an hour of anti-divestment speakers took the stage followed by a stronger one-hour parade of speakers in support of divestment. Many of those from the town who spoke for divestment were people who said they did not want their funds to sustain neglect of human rights. Others - Palestinians, Israelis, American Jews, Muslims and Christians - used personal and faith-based arguments, including the fact that divestment was consistent with Jewish beliefs on human rights and justice. This confluence of interests of diverse groups and actors, united by a common desire to end Israel's occupation, was a sign of hope.

While debate on the issue of Israel and its human rights violations against Palestinians is still confined in the U.S., questions are being raised publicly about the "benevolence" of Israel's military occupation of the Palestinians. This is producing real causes for hope. This hope, built on the universal ethic of human rights for all, will hopefully be strong enough to withstand the fury of status quo supporters of the occupation.

Paul Beran is a lecturer in political science at Northeastern University. From 1997-2001 he worked in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and Israel with relief and development agencies. He wrote this commentary for THE DAILY STAR

 
 
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