by The Associated Press and Israel Hayom Staff
"It's become more and more clear that the BDS movement is hostile to Israel and does not support a two-state solution," concerned Presbyterian community elder George Douglas says. "If you vote for divestment, you place the church in the BDS camp."
People listen to a session
of the 220th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA), July 5,
2012 [archive]
|
Photo credit: AP |
The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) appears to be
on the brink of handing a major victory to a movement that wants
institutions to wield their investment dollars against Israel over its
treatment of the Palestinians.
The Presbyterian General Assembly, gathering
in Detroit through next week, will consider withdrawing its investments
from some companies whose products are used by the Israeli government in
the Palestinian territories. Divestment advocates were narrowly
outmaneuvered at the last Presbyterian convention in 2012, losing a
crucial ballot by just two votes. They enter this year's fight with
signs of increasing momentum, within and outside the church.
"I remember in 2006, the use of the word
'occupation' in General Assembly circles -- it was like using a bad
word. You just didn't say it and when you said it sounded outrageous,"
said the Rev. Jeffrey DeYoe of the Presbyterian's Israel Palestine
Mission Network, which advocates for Palestinians. "We've come a long
way from there."
Presbyterian national assemblies have for a
decade considered adopting some type of sanctions over Israeli treatment
of the Palestinians. In 2004, delegates voted overwhelmingly to start
"phased, selective divestment" of corporations operating in Israel, then
in later meetings took a step back, apologizing for the hurt they
caused Jews. Still, delegates continued criticizing Israeli policy in
official resolutions, and at the 2012 convention, came within two votes
of directing the church to divest. The 2012 delegates did win enough
votes to call for a boycott of Israeli products manufactured in the
Palestinian territories.
The broader movement known as BDS -- which
stands for boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel -- has
scored some successes in Europe and elsewhere, but has had far less
influence in the United States, Israel's closest and most important
ally. However, the boycott campaign is gaining some ground in America,
with small but symbolic victories meant to pressure Israel to stop
building settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem and end the
occupation.
Last year, the American Studies Association,
with about 3,800 members, and the Association for Asian American
Studies, which has about 800 members, became the first scholarly groups
in the U.S. to support an academic boycott of Israel. Still, the larger
and more prominent Modern Language Association, with 23,900 members,
this month rejected a resolution critical of Israel.
Among religious groups, the Mennonite Central
Committee and a firm that manages assets for U.S. Quakers has divested
holdings in some companies in protest over Israeli policy. And this
week, the pension board of the United Methodist Church, the largest
mainline Protestant group in the U.S., revealed plans to sell its
holdings in the company G4S, which provides security equipment and has
contracts with Israel's prison system, said David Wildman of the church
General Board of Global Ministries. The stock is worth about $110,000.
G4S said on its website that it has conducted reviews of its business in
Israel related to human rights and has concluded the company hasn't
caused or contributed to any human rights violations.
George Douglas, a Presbyterian elder on the
steering committee of Presbyterians for Middle East Peace, which opposes
divestment, said he was deeply worried that a vote for liquidating
stock would align the Presbyterian church with the BDS movement, which
he said does not fit with the traditional Presbyterian and Christian
idea of peacemaking.
"It's become more and more clear that the BDS
movement is hostile to Israel and does not support a two-state
solution," Douglas said. "If you vote for divestment, you place the
church in the BDS camp."
The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) is among the
many liberal-leaning Protestant denominations that were once at the
center of American religious life but have been losing members and
influence for decades. As of last year, the denomination had just under
1.8 million members.
Still, the denomination is historically
important within the U.S. and works closely with Presbyterians
worldwide, and would be the most prominent American religious group by
far to support divestment. The stocks that would be targeted in the
latest proposals before delegates are in Caterpillar, Hewlett-Packard
and Motorola, and are collectively valued at about $21 million,
according to a church spokeswoman.
Advocates on all sides of the debate say the
lobbying ahead of the vote has intensified this year. The proposals will
be debated in committee hearings early in the week, then will be sent
to the full General Assembly for more discussion and a final vote some
time before the event ends next Saturday.
Rabbi Rick Jacobs, head of the Union for
Reform Judaism, which represents the largest American Jewish movement,
said the Presbyterian meeting will be "a moment for us to counter the
narrative of the BDS community."
"This vote will have wider repercussions," said Jacobs,
who will be in Detroit for the event. "This is a debate for the very
fundamental legitimacy of the State of Israel."
The Associated Press and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=18145
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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