| Jennifer Loewenstein Archive |
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EXCERPT:
In a situation in which the governments of the West effectively support
the continuation of the occupation, even if they declare their
opposition to it, this role moves to civil organizations. When a group
of American attorneys, including Jews, calls for a boycott of the
Caterpillar company, whose bulldozers razed complete neighborhoods in
Khan Yunis and Rafah, it should be thanked for this. The same applies
to the boycott of the universities: When an association of British
university lecturers boycotts Israeli colleagues who are not prepared
to at least declare their opposition to the occupation, we should
appreciate it.
Each group in its field, and perhaps this
will
someday also include tourism officials, business people, artists and
athletes. If all these boycott Israel, perhaps Israelis will begin to
understand, albeit the hard way, that there is a price to pay for the
occupation - a price in their pockets and in their status.
Last update - 10:24 04/06/2006
With a little help
from the outside
By Gideon Levy
The laugh of fate: The state waging a broad international
campaign
for a boycott is simultaneously waging a parallel campaign,
no less
determined, against a boycott. A boycott that seriously
harms the
lives of millions of people is legitimate in its eyes
because it is
directed against those defined as its enemies, while a
boycott that
is liable to hurt its academic ivory tower is illegitimate
in its
eyes only because it is aimed against itself. This is a
moral double
standard. Why is the boycott campaign against the Palestinian
Authority, including blocking essential economic aid and
boycotting
leaders elected in democratic and legal elections, a
permissible
measure in Israel's eyes and the boycott of its universities
is
forbidden?
Israel cannot claim the boycott weapon is illegitimate. It
makes
extensive use of this weapon itself, and its victims are
suffering
under severe conditions of deprivation, from Rafah to Jenin.
In the
past, Israel called upon the world to boycott Yasser Arafat,
and now
it is calling for a boycott of the Hamas government --
and via this
government, all of the Palestinians in the territories. And
Israel
does not regard this as an ethical problem. Tens of
thousands have
not received their salaries for four months due to the
boycott, but
when there is a call to boycott Israeli universities, the
boycott
suddenly becomes an illegitimate weapon.
Those calling for a boycott of Israel are also tainted with
a moral
double standard. The National Association of Teachers in
Further and
Higher Education -(NATFHE-) in Britain and the Canadian
Union of
Public Employees in Ontario, which have both decided to
boycott
Israel, did not act similarly to protest their own
countries' war
crimes and occupations - the British army in Iraq and
the Canadian
army in Afghanistan. Nonetheless, the handful of human rights
advocates and opponents of the occupation in Israel should
thank
these two organizations for the step they have taken,
despite their
flawed double standards.
It would have been preferable had the opponents of the
occupation in
Israel not needed the intervention of external groups to
fight the
occupation. It is not easy to call upon the world to boycott
your own
country. It would have been better had there been no need
for Rachel
Corrie, James Miller and Tom Hurndall, bold people of
conscience who
paid with their lives after standing in front of the
destructive
bulldozers in Rafah. These young foreigners did the
dangerous and
vital work that Israelis should have done.
The same is true for the few peace activists who still
manage to roam
the territories, to protest and offer assistance to the
victims of
the occupation in the framework of organizations like the
International Solidarity Movement -(ISM-) - which
Israel fights -
preventing its members from entering its borders. It would
be better
if Israelis mobilized to fight instead of them. But except
for a few
modest groups, there is no protest in Israel and no real
mobilization. Thus, it only remains to hope for the world's
help.
The world can help save Israel from itself in limited ways.
In a
situation in which the governments of the West effectively
support
the continuation of the occupation, even if they declare
their
opposition to it, this role moves to civil organizations.
When a
group of American attorneys, including Jews, calls for a
boycott of
the Caterpillar company, whose bulldozers razed complete
neighborhoods in Khan Yunis and Rafah, it should be thanked
for this.
The same applies to the boycott of the universities: When an
association of British university lecturers boycotts Israeli
colleagues who are not prepared to at least declare their
opposition
to the occupation, we should appreciate it. Each group in
its field,
and perhaps this will someday also include tourism officials,
business people, artists and athletes. If all these boycott
Israel,
perhaps Israelis will begin to understand, albeit the hard
way, that
there is a price to pay for the occupation - a price in
their pockets
and in their status.
The occupation is not just the domain of the government,
army and
security organizations. Everything is tainted: institutions
of
justice and law, the physicians who remain silent while
medical
treatment is prevented in the territories, the teachers who
do not
protest against the closing of educational institutions and
the
prevention of free movement of their peers, the journalists
who do
not report, the writers and artists who remain mum, the
architects
and engineers who lend a hand to the occupation's
enterprises - the
settlements and the fence, the barriers and bypass roads and
also the
university lecturers, who do nothing for their imprisoned
colleagues
in the territories, but conduct special study programs for
the
security forces. If all these boycotted the occupation,
there would
be no need for an international boycott.
The world sees a great and ongoing injustice. Should it
remain
silent? It is not, of course, the only injustice in the
world. Nor is
it the most terrible. But does this make it any less
necessary to act
against it?
It is easy to exempt ourselves from our moral responsibility
and
attribute, as usual, any criticism to anti-Semitism. There
may indeed
be some elements of anti-Semitism among those calling for the
boycott. But also among them are groups and individuals,
including
quite a few Jews, for whom Israel is close to their hearts.
They want
a just Israel. They see an Israel that occupies and is
clearly
unjust, and they believe they should do something. We should
thank
them for this from the bottom of our hearts.
Have you asked yourself how is it possible that you, a well informed and educated citizen, can be ignorant of what is being done in your name, with your money? Why have you never read anything by these journalists and commentators in the newspapers and magazines you read? Why have you not heard about this on your radio or TV?
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