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Palestinians Link Global and Local in Israel Boycott Campaign
In an era of globalization, countries are more linked through economic ties than by international law. So when one government decides to violate human rights with impunity, sometimes the best way for the world to respond is by taking its business elsewhere. That is why the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions campaign (BDS) has proven to be one of the most effective mobilization tools in the international movement against the Israeli occupation. From inside Israel and Palestine, however, the movement has complex ripple effects.
People living under occupation face unique obstacles when leveraging the instruments of capitalism for political emancipation.
The main components of BDS involve consumer boycotts of Israeli products; the breaking of ties between educational and cultural institutions and Israeli counterparts, and ultimately, sanctions by governments in order to isolate Israel in the international arena.
Though the movement has an international scope, it originated with Palestinian civil society groups and is today coordinated by a Palestinian-led BDS National Committee. But how do Palestinians themselves mobilize against an economic system that they are a part of? As consumers and business owners, Palestinians may have little flexibility about sourcing Israeli goods when local production has been stymied. As workers, they frequently have little choice about jobs when Israeli bosses are often the only ones hiring. (These challenges were underscored last year in official efforts to cut off settlement economies in the West Bank.)
But within Palestine, the boycott movement is less about the economic logistics than about channeling popular outrage into participatory politics.
Challenge from Within
According to Beesan Ramadan, a Nablus-based student activist, as a movement strategy, BDS for Palestinians centers on personal transformation through the discipline of resistance. Among Palestinian youth, Ramadan said in an interview, consciousness is rising step by step:
It's hard to get the people convinced that with over 20 years of relying on the Occupier and having this … sort of mentality that everything that comes from my oppressors is good, and should be better than what I would make. So for me, locally, it's working on the actual ground, and on the market itself, but [it's] also decolonizing the mind from previous ideas about the occupation. I think this is part of the big picture.
The big picture is not a simple one for the most economically vulnerable Palestinians. The legal and economic infrastructure of the occupation allows Israel, both the government and private sectors, to profit from its draconian control of Palestinian society, including its workers and natural resources.
The 1994 Paris Protocol purported to foster trade and labor relations between Israel and the occupied territories. But restrictions on freedom of movement, according to human rights monitors, have prevented real economic development and exacerbated inequality.
Way back in the aftermath of the 1967 war, Israel imposed an economic stranglehold on Palestinians by tightly restricting the issuing of business licenses and rendered people in the occupied territories dependent on Israeli exports. Farmers suffered widespread confiscation of their lands, which still continues today with encroachment by settlers on Palestinian communities.
Working toward Resistance
For Arab workers, the role of labor in the resistance movement reflects the tension between the struggles for survival and justice. Facing severe unemployment and a crumbling infrastructure, low-wage work with Israeli employers may be the only job opportunity available—a predicament that renders them even more vulnerable to abuse and exploitation.
Rights advocates across Israel and the Palestinian territories report that in addition to the wholesale ghettoization of Palestinian workers through militarized borders, even less restricted Arab workers in Jerusalem face heavy discrimination in a two-tier workforce.
While it may be unfeasible for Palestinian workers to reject jobs linked to the Israeli economy, progressive labor groups see the goal of defending workers and the goals of BDS as complementary.
The Palestinian Trade Union Coalition for BDS recently formed to champion the movement “as the most effective form of solidarity with the Palestinians in our struggle to end Israeli occupation and apartheid.” Citing the legacy of the South Africa trade union movement in the battle against Apartheid in the 1980s, the coalition's manifesto declared:
it is up to people of conscience and international civil society, especially the trade union movement, to take concrete action to end international collusion with decades of violations of international law and human rights by Israel, its institutions and international corporations.
BDS is not as cut and dry for some labor groups working with Palestinians, which after all still must conduct their day-to-day advocacy within an inequitable system. While the General Union of Palestine Workers has endorsed the campaign, the Palestinian General Federation of Trade Unions recently expressed general solidarity with unions that have participated in BDS but did not explicitly align itself with the campaign.
Workers Advice Center-Maan (WAC), supports the overall goal of BDS but calls for a policy of a “targeted boycott” of goods and services specifically related to the settlement economies, arms sales, and international accords that support Israeli military actions. The leaders of the organization have expressed reservations about the possibility that an international boycott may provoke a political backlash from Israelis and harden the right wing.
Though it is ideologically left wing, WAC's campaigns are pointedly inclusive, seeking to link Israeli and Palestinian workers under a banner of anti-racism and class consciousness. They see their main contribution to the struggle in unifying working people, Jews and Arabs alike, and insupporting grassroots development in Palestinian communities, such as the fair-trade women's cooperative Sindyanna of Galilee.
Erez Wagner, a field organizer with WAC's Jerusalem branch, approached the concept of a boycott with the caveat that the campaign judges institutions not by a blanket targeting of Israel but according to the organizations' specific positions and activities.
“I think the big question is how does it help the alternative economic systems," he said. "How does it help the progressive parts of Israeli society to fight to change the balance against the right wing?”
Nonetheless, for many Palestinians, even those who depend on Israel to earn a living, the BDS movement at the very least is a platform for mobilization. The broad, nonviolent campaign--buoyed by the Arab Spring uprisings--might lift Palestinian civil society beyond the demoralization stemming from years of failed rebellion, political isolation by Israel and U.S. policies, partisan infighting within Palestine, and the humiliation of constant military siege.
Though the principles may appear vague—no agenda, no talk of a one or two-state solution—the logic of BDS is a straightforward ultimatum: if the political establishment refuses to allow Palestinians a voice, and war has already proven a dead end, people have no choice but to let their money do the talking.
BDS will provoke controversy, and that's the point. No boycott movement will succeed unless it is coupled with education and mobilization; solidarity is mediated through debate and understanding of how different elements of the movement respect each other's efforts and limitations.
If the boycott movement inspires a sense of collective sacrifice, it will encourage fresh thinking about a peaceful resolution to the conflict. And even the workers with the most to lose from the economic impact--Palestinians living in poverty and working-class Israelis, will find common ground on building a truly equitable society.
The evolving BDS concept evokes a historical antecedent in the liberation struggle of South Africa. In 1959, anti-apartheid leaders stated their case on the value of boycotts:
It has been argued that Non-White people will be the first to be hit by external boycotts. This may be so, but every organization which commands any important Non-White support in South Africa is in favour of them. The alternative to the use of these weapons is the continuation of the status quo and a bleak prospect of unending discrimination. Economic boycott is one way in which the world at large can bring home to the South African authorities that they must either mend their ways or suffer for them.
BDS is a strategy, not a solution. It simply proves there is no room in an interconnected world for unjust division, and that everyone has a stake, and a price to pay, in ending the oppression.
This dispatch is based on reporting the author did during a recent visit to Nablus in the West Bank, where she taught social media workshops with the Zajel Youth Exchange Program.
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21 Comments so far
Show AllBDS is making a difference. Here's a good site that lists the corporations and groups who profit off the illegal, inhuman occupation:
http://www.whoprofits.org/
Do your part, spread the word, withhold donations, pressure businesses, don't buy Israeli goods.
I see this contention often and I would be interested in any figures. I would like to see what business has been stopped and the dollar value so that I can compare it to GDP. I see lots of statements of success but no figures to back that up.
I would say the best evidence of success lies in the attempt by the ultra right-wing Israeli government to criminalize the boycott.
http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/features/2011/02/201126123643463123.html
http://www.muzzlewatch.com/2010/06/09/israeli-law-to-criminalize-advocates-of-boycotts-inside-or-outside-of-israel/
http://www.caldivestfromapartheid.com/sb118/
I have seen that, but Israel over-reacts to everything. If you write that you are boycotting on a bathroom stall in sharpie, they will come after you. That isn't a sign something works, it's a sign of it bothering them.
I am interested in $ amounts that companies have not spent in or on Israel for the stated reason of BDS.
I'm still hoping that Bob Dylan will rise in support of the BDS movement tomorrow, Jun 20, 2011, during his scheduled performance at Ramat Gan Stadium in Tel Aviv.
Oh, wait...
Not a chance in hell. Bob is an extremely intelligent and well-informed person, and like all decent civilized people is a very strong supporter of Israel. In fact, he is going there as an expression of support for Israel, and for its noble struggle to defend human rights, civil rights, women's rights, rights for gays, democracy, the rule of law, and everything he's always stood for. You won't find any intelligent informed people supporting the boycott, just anti-semites and ignorant, bigoted jerks. He grew up in a very anti-semitic state and knows what the Jews are facing. He's expressed his opinions in a song, The Neighborhood Bully, where he openly mocks those who attack Israel, and makes clear that he supports it.
http://ellissharp.blogspot.com/2005/09/bob-dylans-racist-song_25.html
Link to an interesting critique of "neighborhood bully."
So mikep believes that, if you don't support the nation-state of Israel, you lose the right to consider yourself a decent civilized person. Supporters of the nation-state of Israel believe it is above and beyond any and all criticism and that people who don't buy in one hundred percent are "anti-semites and ignorant, bigoted jerks."
This does not bode well for ever settling the disputes in that area of the world. It is impossible to argue with people who think this way. They are incapable of admitting the possibility that they could even be a little bit wrong, and resort to name calling when told they are.
It's become so difficult to tell the difference between sarcasm and psychopathy these days...
Does Bob Dytan know that in 1900, over 60% of the people living in what is now called Israel were Arab?
Does he know that they lived there for generations?
Does he know that the majority of European Jews were descended from a European tribe that converted to Judeism, and have no historical ties to Israel?
Does he know that the Palestinians had nothing to do with the Holocaust, but are being made to pay for it?
"Does he know that the majority of European Jews were descended from a European tribe that converted to Judeism, and have no historical ties to Israel?"
That was a theory that was dis-proven rather soundly with DNA testing.
[all decent civilized people is a very strong supporter of Israel]
Interesting, so only indecent, uncivilized people oppose ethnic cleansing. Only the barbarians oppose theft, murder or torture.
I'm very glad you never got to edit the Oxford English Dictionary. You're getting odder by the post. Is the BDS campaign worrying you for some reason? Do you really believe that everyone who supports it is a rabid nazi who yearns for the days of the old regime? (don't bother answering, I know you do.)
Better to just support those musicians who are supporting Palestine, even if only by performing there: Daniel Barenboim, Lisa Leonskaja, Helene Grimaud.
I agree. I think that Barenboim specifically has done a great thing by performing there. I would love to see more artists make that move. If all the concerts were in Palestine instead of Israel that would be a real statement.
Barenboin has done more than just perform there. He, or rather the foundation he formed with Said, organises the concerts, gets artists, such as the others I mentioned, Lisa Leonskaja, Helene Grimaud, etc to perform there. And AFAIK, the concerts are free.
Israel must be forced to give back the lands it stole and pay for their war crimes but I know this will never happen because there is no justice.
I have posted yesterday on an other thread on this site:
"I wouldn't be caught dead to aliyah to Israel. I live in the diaspora and about a year ago I stopped buying anything "made in Israel" or associated with Israel. I am not religious, but I always wonder how can religious people reconcile their faith and their beliefs in what consitutes a "decent human being and decent human behaviour" with their blind support of Israel? (not only Jews, but those hypocrite Christians mainly!)
I firmly believe that economic means can help to if not cripple this deplorable apartheid regime, but at least make them transform.
As a person, I feel very much for every Palestinian, as a Jew, I am ashamed. I just hope that I don't live till the day of reckoning comes and Jews will be on the receiving end again...
In the meantime, please read this and spread the word:
http://www.bdsmovement.net/
I am spreading the word, but unfortunately not many people listen. But I urge everyone, especially Jews like myself to keep fighting for justice for those poor Palestinians. One day it might come...
Obviously your not a Jew, but someone else posing as one. No Jew would say these words. "I just hope that I don't live till the day of reckoning comes and Jews will be on the receiving end again...
In the meantime, please read this and spread the word:" Here's the word STFU imposter!
Thank you for standing up for me. I live in Australia, also, don't have much time to come back and comment to every nonsense uttered by some cretin.
BDS can be extended to Zionist supports like the US also.