So now we have Elie Wiesel — described by Uri Avnery as the ‘professional holocaust survivor’ — along with the disgraced professor of torture, Alan Dershowitz, leading the charge against the boycott. First Elie Wiesel corrals some Nobel laureates to sign a statement against the boycott. As’ad AbuKhalil responds: “Gorbachev would sign anything for a fee; Dhalai Lama would sign anything for a picture with a Hollywood celebrity; and De Clerk signed on principle: as a former Apartheid prime minister, he has deep affinity with Zionism. “

On the other side of the spectrum we have the US unions, who have the sordid distinction of publishing a half-page ad in the New York Times in support of Sharon’s bombing of Beirut in 1982, organizing against the boycott. According to Forward:

The roster of 29 signatories to the JLC’s statement included a broad spectrum of union leaders, who cut across religious and ethnic lines. Among the signatories to the statement were Ron Gettelfinger, president of United Automobile, Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of America International Union, which tends to stay out of the geo-political arena; William Lucy, president of the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists, and Larry Cohen, president of Communications Workers of America…

The Forward also quotes David Hirsh, prominent member of the UK Israel Lobby group Engage.

“It should be a powerful statement that all of these leaders of the American labor movement are making against the boycott campaign, but I’m skeptical as to how effective it will be,” Hirsh said.

Jeffrey Blankfort responds: “The predictable appearance on this list of the name of William Lucy is yet another example of the deleterious effect that the Jewish establishment has had on black political life in the US. There was a time when the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists meant something (as there was time when the American labor movement meant something) but having someone like Lucy, the lobby’s long time faithful House Negro at its head is a sad sign of its current irrelevance.  In reading Hirsh’s statement, I get the feeling that he is already aware of the low esteem in which the more enlightened international unions hold their US counterparts.”

According to the Jerusalem Post, ‘Over 30 American trade unions ranging from the American Federation of Teachers to the American Postal Workers have condemned the spate of boycott initiatives by trade union movements in the UK’. Before we proceed to their boilerplate arguments about Israel being ‘singled out’, following is important context from Jeffrey Blankfort.

At the time of Israel’s invasion of Lebanon in 1982, after a group of trade unionists had taken out a half page ad in the NY Times condemning the invasion, the AFL-CIO responded with a full page ad, appropriately paid for a by a Park Avenue Jewish capitalist whose address was the bottom of the page, that carried a blaring headline, “The AFL-CIO is not Neutral,” and proceeded to give its endorsement to the Israeli blood bath. Lane Kirkland, the long-time head of the AFL-CIO used to brag that he had been to “more Israel Bonds dinner than any many alive” and sure enough, he was attending one while a group of representatives of other international unions from Canada and Europe were investigating conditions of Palestinian workers in the West Bank and Gaza.

Some 1700 US unions are reported to have purchased more than $5 billion worth of State of Israel Bonds with their union pension funds, a fact largely unknown to their membership, which puts the AFL-CIO unions in a position of being obligated to support the US-Israel relationship to insure the safety of their investments. Kirkland is no longer around but his replacement John Sweeney has also sworn his loyalty and that of the AFL-CIO to Israel, making the American labor movement an international embarrassment. As the numbers of its members has declined over the years, we can look for a number of obvious reasons, but one of them most certainly is the willingness of the union leadership to uniquely among all the labor federations on the globe, to attach itself to Israel’s skirts.

Back in 1983, a writer for the Hadassah Courier and an AIPAC staff member wrote an article about the relationship between Israel and the US labor movement. It began something like this: “In the lobby of the AFL-CIO building in Washington, there is a bust of Golda Meir, and that should come as no surprise since next to the Jewish community itself, the greatest support for Israel in the US comes from the labor movement.” The author of the article was Wolf Blitzer who since has become one of the leading hosts on CNN. So it goes.

Now a look at the American trade unionist’s objections:

“Calls for academic boycotts of Israel are inimical to and counter to the principles of academic freedom and freedom of association, key principles for which academics and educational unions have struggled over many years. Rather than limiting interactions with Israeli educators, academics and educational institutions, we see the importance of maximizing, rather than proscribing, the free flow of ideas and academic interaction between peoples, cultures, religions and countries,” the unions said in a statement issued late Thursday evening.

There is no mention here of course of the academic freedom of the Palestinians, which has long been denied them by the Israeli state. Also, the boycott does not target individuals, it targets institutions. The academic freedom of individuals is well protected, so long as they oppose their state denying more basic freedoms of the Palestinians.

With atrocities occurring around the globe, the trade unionists questioned the motivations of the boycotters and asked why the motions are by nature one-sided: “With the large number of local, regional and international conflicts, with the diverse range of oppressive regimes around the world about which there is almost universal silence, we have to question the motives of these resolutions that single out one country in one conflict.

By this logic one’s motivations could also be questioned for buying the Big Issue (for non-UK visitors, this is a magazine established to assist the homeless who get about half the price from each issue they sell) since there is always someone in the third world who is in higher need of that money. Secondly, Britain bears the original responsibility, and a present stake in the conflict (UK supplies arms and spare parts to Israel, purchases ammunition from Israel, and also sustains Israel’s economy through preferential trade agreements), and its civil society needs to be lauded for responding to this responsibility with action.

“We note with increasing concern that virtually all of these resolutions focus solely on objections to actions or policies of the Israeli government, and never on actions or policies of Palestinian or other Arab governments, parties or movements. We notice with increasing concern that characterization of the Palestinians as victims and Israel as victimizer is a staple of such resolutions. That there are victims and victimizers on all sides, and that many if not most of the victims of violence and repression on all sides are civilians, are essential items often not mentioned in these resolutions.”

That is because everything is taking place withing an internationally recognized context of occupation. If the overarching context is ignored, then we could also argue against the actions of the allies in WWII as there were victims and victimizers on both sides. Surely the incinerated citizens of Dresden and Hamburg were as much victims as those blitzed by the Luftwaffe in London or Stalingrad.

The unionists went on to recommend that engagement and investment of time, energy and material aid is the best means to alleviate the ongoing suffering of Palestinians and Israelis.

It was Conor Cruise O’Brien who made precisely the same argument when he visited Apartheid South Africa in breach of the boycott declared by the Congress Party.

Here Steven Rose responds to Joan Smith, columnist for the Independent and parter of notorious ‘Israel-firster’ Denis MacShane, who had written an article that echo the arguments of the UK Israel lobby’s campaign against the Academic boycottt. “Academic freedom, it appears, applies to Israelis but not to Palestinians”, Rose observes.

The University and College Union annual congress last week voted by a two-thirds majority to organise a campus tour for Palestinian academic trade unionists to explain why they had called for an academic and cultural boycott of Israel, and to encourage UCU members to consider the moral implications of links with Israeli universities. Not surprisingly, this overwhelming vote met with a roar of hostility from what we have learned to call the Israel lobby.

Our government, long accustomed to sitting on its hands when any serious attempt to censure Israel is made, predictably joined the chorus. More surprisingly, the Independent’s editorialist and its columnist Joan Smith followed along. The boycott, we are told, damages academic freedom, picks on Israel, and encourages anti-Semitism on British campuses.

Read the rest of this entry »

While in the US, the Israel lobby is more brazen in its approch, in UK it has to work with tact, at times even venturing a word of two of criticism. Eschewing partisanship, which would be counterproductive in a climate not as dominated by the Zionist narrative as in the US, it has to maintain a facade of objectivity. Except, it would never allow any measures beyond token denunciations. In recent days, the lobby has mobilized its foot soldiers to combat civil society’s attempt to hold Israel to account for its continuing brutal repression of the Palestinian people. Take for example this piece by Joan Smith, where she purportedly gives us her ’unbiased’ critique of the boycott campaign. From reading it, you could be forgiven for thinking it is the Israelis, rather than Palestinians who are victims of oppression. What she doesn’t say however is whether her relationship with notorious ‘Israel-firster’ Denis MacShane influence her view in some way.

The UK Israel lobby has been hyperactive ever since the UCU passed the boycott motion against Israel. Earlier when the AUT passed a similar motion, no less a figure than Israel’s ultra right-wing former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was dispatched to counter the motion. Pressure groups like ‘Engage’ were set up and propaganda was ratcheted up  to discredit civil society’s first attempt to hold Israel to account for its crimes against the Palestinian people. The web was saturated with drumbeat of piffle from the propaganda network Euston Manifesto, which is comprised exclusively of Zionist proponents of the invasion of Iraq. The new campaign is even more vicious, except this time it has completley dispensed with appearances of sophistication. Recently the Zionist lobby group Engage organized another event aimed at discrediting the Left for taking meaningful, peaceful action against the Israeli Apartheid system. While in the past a Muslim Uncle Tom or two would be corralled in to give some legitimacy to the proceedings, any claims at ethnic inclusivity were dispensed with altogether this time. But I believe the ‘anti-Semitism’ card has been overplayed, and it would take a lot more than mere crying wolf to reverse the tide of the mounting BDS campaign.

Here is Ghada Karmi’s excellent piece from Ha’aretz. (For other great arguments in favour of the boycott, check out Gabriel Ash’s ‘Why Boycott Israel? Because It’s Good for You‘, and ‘Why the Boycott of Israel is Justified‘)

In conflicts, boycotts are the weapons of the weak. Their chief importance lies in their ability to raise public awareness and arouse disapproval. Yet, going by the paranoid reaction to the academic boycott of Israel, it might as well have been a declaration of nuclear war. No peaceable action in recent times has provoked so much anger and hostility as this British-based boycott.

In the wake of the British University and College Union’s vote at its annual general meeting on May 30 to initiate a national debate on a boycott of Israeli academic institutions, a wave of hysteria engulfed Israel and its friends. Articles appeared, before and after the vote, denouncing the UCU resolution and its initiators, and heated correspondence is still ongoing. Threats were made against members of the boycott group by pro-Israel organizations and individuals, and campaigns were mounted to defeat the boycott. Costly one-page advertisements appeared in The Times and The Guardian, carrying the names of scores of eminent signatories opposing the boycott.

[Most of these articles come from the same battery of individuals that comprise Engage and Euston Manifesto]

Photographs of the boycott’s “ringleaders,” like those of wanted criminals, appeared on the front page of the major British Jewish weekly, The Jewish Chronicle, which also carried a distressed article by Britain’s chief rabbi condemning the boycott as an anti-Semitic “witch hunt.” The Daily Mail’s Jewish columnist Melanie Phillips declared “the age of reason” over. The Jewish-American lawyer and fierce warrior for Israel Alan Dershowitz has teamed up with his British counterpart, Anthony Julius, to take legal action against British supporters of the boycott. While this would not be valid in British law, its aim is clearly to intimidate.

The fuss has not abated yet, and more battles lie ahead this autumn as pressure is exerted upon the UCU to ballot its members individually, in the hope that they will reject the motion passed by the conference.

Two major misconceptions lie at the base of this response, both deliberately fostered. The first misconception is that the boycott is aimed against individual Israeli academics, and the second, and more important, is that it is anti-Semitic.

With regard to the first misconception, the boycott in fact calls for a ban on dealings with Israeli academic institutions, for example, for not participating in joint research, conferences or other collaborative activity. In a malicious misrepresentation of this position, opponents claim that the boycott will end the free exchange of ideas with individual Israelis and encourage discrimination against them within British academia. By suppressing “free speech,” goes the argument, this would end any hope of change in Israel’s policies that academics could have brought about. This is an erroneous argument, and it has galvanized opposition to the boycott in Britain .

The charge of anti-Semitism follows closely on this. The allegation is that the real reason for the boycott is hatred of Jews, a new outbreak of an old gentile affliction. Nothing is more designed to provoke and mislead than this charge, which, its authors know, antagonizes all Jews and many non-Jews.

In fact, of course, the imputation of anti-Semitism is a red herring, as so often is the case when Israel is criticized, and its aim, as always, is to deflect criticism. In the case of the British boycott committee, it is particularly inapt, since most of the members are Jewish. The campaign started in 2004 with a letter that two British scholars, Hilary and Steven Rose, published in The Guardian, calling for a boycott of Israeli academic and cultural institutions, in support of a similar call by Palestinian civil society organizations. These, representing a majority of Palestinian academics and other professionals, had united to form a campaign for boycotting Israel because of its repressive policies against them.

The letter in The Guardian spearheaded a growing demand for Israel to be called to account for its policies, which was soon joined by many academics in Europe and beyond. Support was particularly strong in South Africa, which had lived through a similar boycott during the apartheid era, and was especially sympathetic to the boycott’s rationale and aims. Since that time, the boycott and divestment campaign against Israel has grown, resulting in the Association of University Teachers’ Union voting for a boycott against two Israeli universities at its meeting in 2005. Thanks to a vigorous pro-Israel campaign against it, the decision was overturned within a month. But the issue did not go away, and resulted in the vote for the boycott two years later by the newly formed UCU, which had absorbed the AUT.

Academic boycotts are not new to Britain. In 1965, a boycott campaign against apartheid South Africa was initiated by 34 universities in response to a call for solidarity by the African National Congress. After a prolonged British campaign, the boycott was adopted as policy by the AUT in 1988 and remained in place until the end of apartheid.

The academic boycott against Israel is no different. Israel’s well-documented repression of Palestinian academic life and victimization of Palestinian teachers and students is a scandal to be denounced by all those who claim to care about academic freedom. Rather than rushing to Israel’s defense in a situation so perverse and immoral, all efforts should be directed toward boycotting all Israeli institutions. Only when Israel is made a pariah state, as happened with South Africa, will its people understand tha they cannot trample on another people’s rights without penalty.

Ghada Karmi is the author of “Married to Another Man: Israel’s Dilemma in Palestine.”

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