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Labor in Palestine: The Work of Resistance Gets a New Push
There are a few values that trade unionists generally agree on: the power of collective action, basic economic security, fair job opportunities. Things get messy when those bread-and-butter issues clash with one of the most vicious and bitter political conflicts in modern history. The intersection of the labor movement and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict adds a twist to the expansive, convoluted battle for land, sovereignty and justice in the Middle East.
Left and progressive views get filtered through a curious prism when it comes to Israel-Palestine. Nationalist and revolutionary impulses on both sides have yielded rival versions of history; fractured memories of Palestinian displacement and trauma fulminate on one side of the wall, against Israel's ideological fervor and a fierce sense of entitlement. Civil society, labor included, have been militarized on both sides, with some groups calling for massive resistance and others for formal cooperation.
Today, the boycott, divestment, and sanctions campaign (BDS) has emerged as a global nonviolent front to combat Israeli occupation; the economic agenda of the movement has foregrounded labor's stance.
The BDS campaign has gathered international momentum among labor advocates, spurred through solidarity campaigns by unions and civil society groups. Global organizing efforts culminated earlier this month with the release of a manifesto of the Palestinian Trade Union Coalition for BDS.
Following the Palestinian trade union conference on BDS last month, the “Statement of Principles & Call for International Trade Union Support for BDS” cited myriad injustices suffered by Palestinians in recent years, including systematic discrimination; the alleged confiscation of Palestinian workers' wages; “Maintaining active commercial interests in Israel's illegal settlement enterprise”; and perhaps most of all, the militarized devastation of the occupied territories, whether through outright attack (as with the 2008-2009 War on Gaza ), or gradual socioeconomic strangulation through enforced isolation.
Some recommended direct actions include:
Boycotting Israeli and international companies (such as Elbit, Agrexco, Veolia, Alstom, Caterpillar, Northrop Grumman, etc.) and institutions that are complicit with Israel’s occupation and violations of international law,...
pressuring governments to suspend Free Trade Agreements, end arms trade and military relations with Israel with the intention of eventually cutting all diplomatic ties with it...
Calls on port workers around the world to boycott loading/offloading Israeli ships, similar to the heroic step taken by port workers around the world in suspending maritime trade with South Africa in protest against the apartheid regime, and
Calls on trade unions around the world to review and sever all ties with the [Israeli trade union] Histadrut.
Palestinian labor was one of many civil society forces galvanized by the massacre on the Freedom Flotilla, the activist mission that Israeli forces attacked about a year ago. Joining a worldwide outcry, the Palestine General Federation of Trade Unions indicted Histadrut as an accomplice the military aggression, and “reacted with shock at the irresponsible stand taken by General Federation of Labour in Israel, Histadrut, regarding to the Israeli Forces brutal attacks on civilians, including trade unionists, on [the] freedom flotilla.”
Drawing a battle line across labor, the statement pulled back from an incremental rapprochement during the preceding months. The International Trade Union Confederation helped broker a framework for Israeli-Palestinian labor unity that included, at least in theory, settling financial disputes and ensuring more equitable treatment of Palestinian workers.
But the conciliatory statements failed to remedy the endemic inequality of the social structure under occupation. The assault on Gaza and the flotilla attack underscored Palestinian grievances and seemed to prove, despite well-intentioned efforts by the ITUC, the hopelessness of formal reconciliation.
Histadrut's statement on the Gaza conflict displayed an almost eerie disconnect between the sanitized rhetoric of solidarity and the reality of political strife:
We strongly believe that it is a matter of Israeli and Palestinian self interest to have satisfied and relaxed citizens who will not be attracted to extremism or terrorism.
The Histadrut does not want to deal with the political bones of contention in the Israeli-Arab conflict. It is clear to us that the conflict between the two sides is a zero sum game. We believe that the trade unions in our region are the real grassroots representatives an, as such, we have the power to change the atmosphere and to create a stronger mutual understanding. Our role is to protect workers' rights, regardless of differences in religion, race and sex.
The statement might seem more plausible were it not for Histadrut's deep historical ties to the Zionist movement from its earliest days, and the role of labor Zionism in popularizing and solidifying the ideology of a Jewish state. The intertwining of socialism, labor and Zionism today remains a pillar of Israel's founding narrative.
As the Arab Spring has swept across the Middle East and North Africa, pro-Palestinian activism has taken on a new valence around the world, soon to be tested in the contentious push for unified Palestinian statehood. Palestine stands no longer as a mere symbol of oppression in the Middle East but as a crucible of structural change.
Recently in Al Jazeera, the words of Khaled Entabwe, a Palestinian-Israeli youth activist with Baladna, the Association for Arab Youth, captured the hope and anxiety of the current moment:
Our new modes of organising include a direct challenge to entrenched institutional power. We do not want to just memorialise the past, but also to demand a new future.
While the Palestinian plight has long served as kindling for activism throughout the Arab world, the power of secular pro-democracy movements throughout the region now reverberate in Palestine as a validation of grassroots resistance.
If that feedback loop can be harnessed to reinvigorate the idea of Palestinian liberation, then we might finally see the ends and the means match up in the struggle to defeat imperialism, violence and dictatorship. Peaceful resistance without compromise is harder than waging war—and it's a good job for a strong labor movement.
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17 Comments so far
Show All"Today, the boycott, divestment, and sanctions campaign (BDS) has emerged as a global nonviolent front to combat Israeli occupation; the economic agenda of the movement has foregrounded labor's stance."
Interesting claim. Actually though, not a single solitary country or company has joined the BDS campaign, which most of the world sees as anti-semitic. On the other hand, the number of people and countries doing business with and investing in Israel has been increasing rather significantly. Very few people believe that the Israelis are responsible for Palestinian violence, but are increasingly frightened of the anti-semitism. And most people see it not as nonviolent, but as actively supporting Hamas' violence.
As far as trade unions go, unions are free to operate in Israel, which is a democratic country with civil rights. Of all the countries in the Middle East, Israel is the one with the strongest and freest labor movement. It's not just women, gays and others who have rights in Israel, it's workers as well. There's a reason that workers all over the Middle East are protesting and fighting for the rights that the Israelis enjoy. They can see with their own eyes what Israel has done for tis people, and how freedom, democracy and civil rights improves ones own situation. Workers can organize in any way they want, which has resulted in Israeli workers having the highest standard of living of workers anywhere in the Middle East. By contrast, labor unions are very definitely not free to operate in Gaza. About a year ago, for instance, Hamas shut down the journalists' union completely. Understandable. They certainly don't want the truth to come out about how repressive they really are.
However, the BDS campaign has been incredibly effective in publicizing anti-semitism, so they should continue that. It's kind of paradoxical given that opposition to civil and human rights is the very heart of anti-semitism and what Hamas stands for, but in a way it's actually helping to promote peace and human rights.
You are wrong.
Israel is a democracy for it's Jewish people or those that go along with it's policy of grabbing land and punishing resistance to that.
This is not real democracy this is Theocracy
Being a Palestinian in Israel today you will live under a racist environment like South Africa was.
The BDS is not a government movement, it is a people's movement.
729 is the bar code for your Theocracy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNrMvUbksvo
I think the BDS movement is also supported by lots of Jewish people.
The Israel policy is the biggest cause of new hatred for Jews in the world.
Shalom
Ironic the only place Palestinians are actually free is under the Jewish democracy.
Only If "free" means nothing left to lose...
Lies and disinformation. Check out this website: http://www.bdsmovement.net/
The movement is alive and it's blossoming. The outlaw Israeli government is so terrified of the movement that they're pushing to criminalize any support by good-natured Israeli people.
How typical to conflate any criticism of the Illegal Israeli state with anti-semitism. Don't you guys have anything better in your arsenal of lies?
Boy this is refreshing to read a comment on CD concerning Israel/Palestine that is not just violent antisemitism passing as airheaded hatred of Israel.
If Palestinians provided with weapons by the US are only allowed to use them on fellow Palestinians, it's time to lay those weapons down.
If the Palestinianscan rise phoenix-like from under their oppression and create unions to balancelabour and political power, then perhaps they can serve as an inspiration to the depleted, deflated unions on this continent. Ordinary citizens need a strong voice representing and protecting their interests. If a people so beaten down can do it, why can't we?
Pedant's Corner: Following "Baladna" with "the Association for Arab Youth," capitalized, makes it seem that that is the meaning of Baladna. It's possible the author thinks it is. It isn't. "Baladna" means "our land/our country."
Most readers in the USA and Canada have views similar to those of Mikep and dave_m, even though these two must look at alternate news coverage. They are evidently influenced by Israel version(s) of events generally covered in the public press, although anyone looking at sources outside the US, will see clearly that the treatment (and attitude) of the Zionists of non-Jews in Israel and the territories is extremely discriminatory and unjust. There is no point in relating the laws in existence favoring Jews, but it would be worth it to look some of them up.
Israel was founded as a homeland for Jews only.
It all depends on where you place the beginning. In the late 19th century, Zionists (a word they used for themselves meaning those who were seeking a home for the jews) arrive in the area. They bought land in the region from local rulers. Those lands had been used by arabs for herding and farming for generations. Suddenly they were being told that they could no longer live there. They considered themselves dispossessed from land they had lived on. This practiced continued until after WWI when the british took control of palestine.
Because of the heavy migration of jews from russia and eastern europe during that same time, the US and Britain, disliking the number of jewish immigrants agreed upon a plan to give land in the middle east to the jews for a homeland. So Britain forced more arabs from their lands so that the jews would have that home.
This was the root cause of arab hatred towards the jews. They saw themselves as being pushed from lands they had traditionally held with help from the western powers. That's a brief history and doesn't include many tragedies on both sides.
Neither side is fully to blame, both sides have caused great harm or at least tried to each other.
As for trust, Egypt has been a very good partner for Israel (that may change). They have cooperated with borders, the blockade of Gaza, and against the militants. Most of the middle east countries have made peace with Israel and acknowledged their right to exist. They may not like Israel, but they have made no war against Israel.
Now a few countries, Syria and Iran have funded terrorists groups against Israel. But you will notice that Israel does not want the current leadership to fall in Syria because they have been a stable country to negotiate with. They fear Syria falling like Egypt.
Most of the arabs don't like each other which is one reason why they don't accept refugees. Plus most of them have enough trouble taking care of their own people. The second is that the refugees want the right to return and won't accept going to another country. Would you accept going somewhere else if you were kicked out of your home? Or would you try to reclaim what was once yours?
The west bank palestinians renounced violence against Israel and accepted the right to exist when Abbas was elected leader. But the Israelis continue to settle the west bank and refuse to allow palestinians to establish homes in those areas. That's taking land. One of the stated goals of Netanyahu is to establish a greater Israel that would include the west bank, so where will the Palestinians have as a homeland? They will continue to have their homes bulldozed and forced to move away as Israel continues the settlement expansion.
Now I am all for an Israeli homeland, to be able to live peacefully and freely. I also believe that the palestinians should have the same. If Israel doesn't negotiate a peace with the palestinians, than this will go on for decades more with more violence from both sides.
To try to state that Israel has never done anything wrong in this fight, ignores the history of how the Israeli state was formed. Just as it would be foolish to state the arabs never did anything wrong. Both sides have blood on their hands and at times been impediments to peace. At this point in time, the Israelis have the best opportunity to make peace, failure to do so will hurt them. I'm afraid that with the current Israeli government though, peace doesn't have a chance.
Like in the US, Israeli society is very divided between right wing fanatics and progressives. The control that the right now has over Israeli society, both politically and culturally is even stronger than the control the right in the US has. What is critical is that progressives including trade unionists throughout the world support progressives In Israel. A boycott Including severing ties with unionists in Israel will do just the opposite. targeted boycotts of specific companies and groups is appropriate, like the uncut movement is doing globally. Progressives world wide know how problematic the right wing control of Israel has been both for Palestinians & Israelis. The actions that will help the most to change the situation is to support progressives in Israel who are trying to change both the discourse there and state policies.
"While the Palestinian plight has long served as kindling for activism throughout the Arab world, the power of secular pro-democracy movements throughout the region now reverberate in Palestine as a validation of grassroots resistance."
Indeed, I would like to see the oppressive religious groups Hamas and Al fatah removed and secular democracy in Palestine.
And secular government for Israel too.
How about secular free democracy for every one in the Middle East.
If anyone is seriously interested in how Zionists are systematically ethnically cleansing Palestine, read Ilan Pappe's book entitled "The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine". You'll even discover that Zionists themselves refer to the process as "Cleansing"