These are the salad days for the BDS crowd. Their cause has gotten some traction with
American academics. It is all the rage
in Europe. And now, even Secretary of
State Kerry has said that BDS is a force to be reckoned with. Cue the balloons, BDS has officially arrived and
in a huge way. It’s bigger than, oh I
don’t know, it is bigger than Hollywood.
Don’t just take my word for it; ask Scarlett Johansson.
For those of you who live in a bubble and are
wondering exactly what BDS is, it stands for “Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions”
and its target is none other than Israel.
There are two points that are packed into that one statement. First, that peaceniks all over the globe are
now increasingly advocating the strategy of boycotting, divesting from, and
sanctioning Israeli goods, services and/or institutions. And second, that Israel is being singled out
as the one and only one jurisdiction that warrants such treatment.
BDS makes me sick.
But I do recognize that the strength of this movement stems in large
part from the failures of the Israeli government and the tunnel-vision of the Jewish
people. That realization
sickens me even more.
BDS has an official website: http://www.bdsmovement.net/
At its top, you will find the words that
must be the rallying cry for the movement -- “freedom justice equality.” Below that, at least at times, you might find
the lovely face of Ms. Johansson, together with a snide message mocking her for
her support of an Israeli company. Maintained
by the so-called “Palestinian BDS National Committee,” the website goes on to
set forth in detail precisely what is meant by the B, the D and the S. The boycott “targets products and companies (Israeli and international)
that profit from the violation of Palestinian rights, as well as Israeli
sporting, cultural and academic institutions [which] directly contribute to
maintaining, defending or whitewashing the oppression of Palestinians as Israel
deliberately tries to boost its image internationally through academic and
cultural collaborations". Divestment, the website adds, "means
targeting corporations complicit in the violation of Palestinian rights and
ensuring that the likes of the university investment portfolios and pension
funds are not used to finance such companies". Finally, sanctions are said
to be "an essential part of demonstrating disapproval for a countries [sic]
actions. Israel's membership of various diplomatic and economic forums provides
both an unmerited veneer of respectability and material support for its crimes."
Sorry, I couldn’t resist sticking in that “sic.” Call it the whimper of a petty Jew. But I have bigger issues here than the BDS leadership’s
command of the English language. In
fact, I have multiple concerns about this movement.
To begin, consider what it means to single out
Israel as the one place in the world that is worthy of targeting. Or, perhaps I should say, consider Israel’s
abuses in relation to all of the other countries that are NOT being singled out
as part of this movement. One need not
go any further than Israel’s own neighborhood to find the absurdity of such disparate
treatment. Israeli’s neighbors include
countries that sanction religious discrimination, grotesque abuse against women,
and even international terrorism. But
are they the object of BDS wrath? Not as
far as I can tell.
Back in the day, organizations that would target
Jewish institutions for unique sanctions would at least have the courtesy to
use the word “Jewish” in describing the focus of their enmity. Now, however, they have learned to hide that
word and to replace it with “Zionist” or “Israeli.” But given that Israel is
hardly at the top of the international list of abusers and yet is increasingly
rising to the top of the world’s pariahs, one cannot help but wonder how much
of the success of BDS stems from good old-fashioned anti-Semitism.
If nothing else, the enthusiasm of the European Left
in embracing this movement, while remaining uninterested in similarly
sanctioning other nations, is ironic. Seventy years ago (and many times before
that), their right-wing ancestors were inappropriately singling out the Jewish
people for their targeting, whereas now it is the left-wingers’ turn. Perhaps instead of punishing the economy of a
familiar foe, however, the Europeans might ask themselves what they can do to support
the economy of the Palestinians. For
that would surely advance the interests of peace and prosperity without fostering
the type of divisiveness and mistrust that has cemented the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict over the decades.
Another problem with the BDS movement is the effect
that it is having on the Palestinians.
For that region to know peace, both sides need to accept responsibility
for making compromises. That
requires some degree of willingness to accept a share of the blame. What BDS does, however, is to shift the
Palestinians’ focus away from what they can do to compromise and instead single
out the Israelis as the one and only wrongdoers in this conflict. According to the conventional narrative of the
left, the Palestinians are doing all we can reasonably ask them to do simply by
forbearing from violence; it is the Israelis who must make the other
compromises. Talk about a toxic message
to deliver to the Palestinians and the Arab world.
Thanks in part to the advocates of BDS, Palestinians
can feel free to see themselves simply as resistance fighters whose goals are
nothing more than “freedom justice equality.” Consider that the proponents of
BDS don’t stop at singling out the abuses of the Israeli government but also
wax eloquent about the inherent imperialist and discriminatory nature of
Zionism. The result is to encourage Palestinians
to see their conflict with the Israeli Jews as a simple good-versus-evil
struggle. The Palestinians’ job is to
see themselves as Gandhis – avoiding violence, but remaining resolute in a
struggle against western imperialism.
Just as the English had no legitimate claim to India, the Jews are being
portrayed as having no legitimate claim to Palestine (or Israel). And the Palestinians are told that it is
just a matter of time before the colonialist Jews will either leave the area, as
the English left India, or at least recognize like the whites in South Africa
that they are not entitled to control a state in a continent that does not
belong to them. (Conveniently, BDS
advocates, in their rush to compare the Zionist movement with South Africa,
Colonialist England, or Nazi Germany, love to ignore centuries of Jewish
history, in which the Jews found themselves tossed around like a football,
ghettoized, or simply slaughtered, all the while pining for nothing more than
to live in peace in their traditional holy land.)
To be fair, some BDS proponents acknowledge concerns
with boycotting Israel in its entirety and prefer instead to confine their BDS
advocacy to those companies, institutions and individuals that support Jewish
activity in the West Bank. As someone who despises Israel’s decision to
build settlements in that area, I do appreciate the distinction between such
limited BDS and the whole-hog variety. But
that doesn’t require me to support limited-BDS.
The fact is that I find neither justice nor expediency in singling out
the Israelis for economic sanctions, as if they have a monopoly on human rights
abuses. Just look at the Palestinian
regime in Gaza – the lovable group known as Hamas. Are they not corrupt? Do they not practice discrimination against
women? Do they not engage in violence
against innocent people, including international acts of violence? And yet does it make any sense to punish the
economy of Gaza? Of course not.
I recognize that BDS, as a general principle, has
its place in the international arena. In
the 1980s, while a student at Harvard, I actively worked for my university to
divest its holdings from South Africa, and I have never regretted those
efforts. Similarly, I do not
underestimate the right-wing turn in Israeli politics during the years after
the Oslo framework broke down, and especially after Israel gave up its
settlements in the Gaza Strip. Clearly,
there is a fragment of the Israeli population that has been turning blind eyes
to the legitimate demands of the Palestinian people, and BDS represents a way
to confront that complacency that is strongly preferable to the alternative of
physical violence. Still, BDS is the
lazy man’s way of dealing with the problem.
There are better, more affirmative ways of supporting these two besieged
peoples, ways that foster peace without widening the chasms and building
mistrust, which is the greatest enemy in all the Middle East.
What we need to do first and foremost is to
celebrate the legitimate aspirations of both peoples. This entails recognizing the Jewish claim to
autonomy known as “Zionism” and the Palestinian claim to autonomy known as “Palestinian
Nationalism.” What we fight must be
limited to that which stands in the way of either of those aspirations (rather
than that which ignores one set of aspirations and demonizes extreme forms of
the other). Supporting Palestinian
Statehood in the United Nations, something the United States did not do, would
have been appropriate in my view. We
must also support the efforts of NGOs to bring increased prosperity to places
like the West Bank and the Gaza Strip – and there is where the Europeans might
want to get off their judgmental butts and lend a hand.
I have no qualms about being critical with respect
to the conduct of either people. And
indeed, I have often said publicly that the Settlements can be categorically criticized in the
strongest possible terms, though I am no more enamored of the radio silence among the Palestinian
community when it comes to recognizing the legitimate right of the Jewish
people to self-determination and a peace of oith in their native Israel. Neither side came into this conflict in 2014 with totally clean hands, and both sides had better grapple with that reality. BDS places all the blame on one side, at least implicitly. In that regard, it is part of the problem, not part of the solution.
Make no mistake; were it not for the selfishness and/or
religious extremism of a small fraction of the Jewish people, Israel would not
be settling the West Bank. And were it
not for those God-forsaken Settlements, there would be no BDS. But that does not excuse the Left from
advocating BDS and attempting to turn the Jewish State into an international
pariah. Personally, I don’t think you
have to be an anti-Semite to be an anti-Zionist or a BDS advocate. But those anti-Zionists who hate
anti-Semitism might want to think long and hard about the logic of their
position. What they are trying today – singling
out the Jewish people for punishment -- has been tried many times in our world’s
history. Each time, “freedom, justice
and equality” has been a casualty. Why
should this time be any different?
2 comments:
Well written, Dan! The hypocracy of the BDS movement is quite apparant to all objective observers. I do not agree that the settlements are the work only of religious fanatics. Security hawks have always view the West Bank as a strategic necessity for the tiny state.
I agree to some extent with BDS movement ---i do think Israel should do something like go back to 68 borders .
Some people say Hamas and the fanatical part of the 'settlers' in a way are working together, along with business, military and even the elite part of the Palestinian community (the one not based in Gaza). Each group just keeps committing atrocities and the status quo prevails--permanent warfare.
(I have or had one relative there who fled the nazis to go there --he was a small boy in russia and his whole community was wiped out---he was hidden under a floor by some orthodox christians until they could smuggle him out----a straight out of anne frank story but true. Half of my relatives came through Ellis island from russia and eastern europe ).
my own experience with BDS movement in DC is many of the leadership are basically very elite people(posibly descendents of the wealhty Palestinian landowners who sold their land to Jews; at that time i think its possible they would have been viewed as 'oppressors' by poor palestinian people. )
I happen to have sort of read alot of papers in physics, mathematical logic, and other fields by Israeli academics and writers (ranging from Robert Aumann--noble prize in econ, S Snyder (physics), Shelah (logic), Uri Gordan ('anarchists against the wall' --who i met---has an oxford PhD and wrote some extremely shallow books but i guess worked in some sort of ecologically based development over there when h's not doing book tours).
I view BDS as basically hypocrites. If they want to BDS then make it universal. Start with
yourself and then you can apply it to everyone else. 'golden rule'.
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