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BDS Update: ‘Besiege Your Siege!’ - Isolate Israel Through Boycott, Divestment And Sanctions
22 December 2010 By Eric
Walberg
The movement to isolate
Israel through boycott,
divestment and sanctions resonates from
Canada
to the Indo-Pakistani border, notes Eric Walberg
Last month Canada’s controversial
Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper
continued his campaign to support Israel through thick
and thin at an international conference hosted by the
Canadian Parliamentary Coalition to Combat
Anti-Semitism (CPCCA), where he solemnly warned
participants, “History shows us, and the ideology of
the anti-Israel mob tells us all too well, that those
who threaten the existence of the Jewish people are in
the longer term a threat to all of us.”
His goal was to produce a protocol, to be adopted by
all Canadian political parties, expanding the
definition of anti-Semitism to include criticism of
Israel. But Harper’s vocal support for Israel
right-or-wrong over the past three years has
backfired. The Bloc Quebecois withdrew from the CPCCA
in March, citing “the refusal of the Steering
Committee to hear groups with opposing viewpoints”.
The
New Democratic Party has been
under intense pressure to do the same.
I'm not sure about a "threat" to the Jewish people in
Canada, but "the anti-Israel mob" is very much a
threat to Harper's neocon programme, not only in its
warlike foreign policy, but its elitist domestic one.
In any case, the proposed declaration never appeared,
as it became clear that it would not be possible to
submit such a declaration to parliament, and it would
only add further fuel to the Canadian grassroots
activists who are appalled at Canadian complicity with
Israel’s behaviour.
As Canadians turn their thoughts to Noel feasts,
boycott divestment sanction (BDS) activists are
finding that what’s sauce for the goose is sauce for
the gander. Harper’s over-the-top obsession with
Israel has been a boon to educating Canadians about
Israeli apartheid.
George
Galloway made several speaking
tours speaking to packed audiences this year
criticising the bias of the Canadian government, after
he was barred from entry last year as a security risk.
Omar
Barghouti, a founder of the
Palestinian BDS campaign, toured Canada last month
after attending the Montreal BDS conference at the end
of October. He is "very optimistic" about the effect
the growing global BDS is having, which a
Congress of South African Trade Unions
(COSATU) delegate at the Montreal conference called
“an unstoppable movement”.
Barghouti dubbed
Montreal “the capital of the BDS
campaign in the Francophone world”. “The Old Order is
going. BDS is skyrocketing, well-anchored in
international law and in the universal principles of
freedom, justice and equal rights. We are absolutely
anti-racist and we reject anti-Semitism. We believe in
ourselves, in our heritage, in our roots. The once
‘invincible’ US-Israeli axis is now shaking. You’d
think Netanyahu and Lieberman were working for the BDS
movement!” He was too polite to add “and Harper”, but
his listeners got the message. “Besiege your siege,”
exhorted Barghouti, echoing the cry of
Palestinian poet Mahmoud
Darwish.
Despite the presence of trade unionists representing
COSATU, Quebec unions, the
Canadian Union of Postal Workers
and
Canadian Union of Public Employees,
Canadian unions still have long-established links with
the Israeli labour federation Histadrut, and
resistance among union leadership to BDS continues.
The International Trade Union
Confederation (ITUC) world
congress in June 2010 in
Vancouver
rejected calls to support BDS, and even elected
Histadrut head Ofer Eini one of its vice presidents.
“COSATU lost a few friends in Canada when it raised
the BDS issue at the ITUC conference. Its
international officer was even threatened with the
withdrawal of his Canadian visa. But the attack has
only strengthened world solidarity behind the BDS
campaign,” said the COSATU representative in Montreal.
Barghouti said the world order was changing rapidly,
seconding Kenyan writer Ngugi wa Thiongo’s argument
that “decolonising the minds” is even “more important
than decolonising the lands”. “Canada kept it quiet,
but it did refuse, with many other countries, to
attend the OECD Tourism conference held in
Jerusalem,”
Barghouti said. “At the 2009
AIPAC
conference, it was stressed that
the BDS campaign was becoming mainstream, and Israel’s
Hasbara (Propaganda) campaign was failing. The Knesset
is now looking to criminalise Jewish support for BDS
inside Israel.”
Barghouti’s colleague Areej Jaafari, a young woman
activist from the Dheisheh refugee camp near
Bethlehem,
told the conference “Boycott of Zionism is nothing new
for us. It goes back 100 years. We have Gandhi, the US
civil rights movement
and
South Africa
on our side.”
There was a strong presence of Canadian First Nations
at the Montreal conference, including the
Mohawk Nation,
once dwellers on the land that is now Montreal.
Canadian apartheid was condemned alongside Israeli
apartheid. Judy Dassylva of the Grassy Narrows First
Nation in
northwestern Ontario
compared Israeli actions to the contamination of First
Nation lands through clear-cutting and mercury
poisoning. “To us, apartheid is one and the same
whether in South Africa, Israel or Canada. Our kids
were brainwashed in residence schools. Our women
raped. It’s a miracle I am alive and sitting here in
front of you. But we are not as powerful as you, we
need our own BDS campaign,” she beseeched Barghouti
and Jaafari.
One of the BDS groups that Harper has inadvertently
helped most is
Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East
(CJPME), which recently inaugurated an impressive
Boycott Centre at
cjpme.org,
providing activists around the world with resources
and tools to promote the campaign to bring Israel to
its senses. It features Talking Points, a “Why boycott
Israel?” Factsheet, a Consumer Boycott Network and
City Activist Network.
Each month CJPME features an active consumer boycott
campaign of a company supporting Israel through
economic ties. Last month it was the turn of Aroma
Espresso Bars, part of an Israeli-owned chain which
operates in Maaleh Adumim, an
Israeli settlement built on the
site of several Palestinian and Bedouin villages,
strategically located near Jerusalem, part of a clear
plan by Israel to expand and annex
East
Jerusalem.
CJPME is setting its sites next on
Mountain Equipment Co-op,
which uses Israeli military contractors as suppliers.
Western Union, Ahava, H&M, Office Depot and Pizza Hut
are on their list for the new year. The BDS movement
in Canada targets more than 120 brands and labels
linked to Israel, including Coca Cola, Estee Lauder
and Indigo-Chapters bookstores.
Another CJPME focus is artists, asking those who
contemplate performing in Israel or have been there
recently to rethink their actions. They can point to
such stars as Meg Ryan and Dustin Hoffman, who refused
to attend the
Jerusalem film festival
in July to protest the Israel raid against the Freedom
Flotilla, and director Mike Leigh, who last month
cancelled his plan to teach at the
Sam Spiegel Film
& Television School in Jerusalem, citing the new
loyalty oath.
Far from wintry Canada, a poignant meeting took place
on 5 December on the Pakistan-Indian frontier, when 28
Indians and one Japanese
peace activist
crossed the
Wagah border to hand over a
Palestinian flag
to Pakistani participants in the Asian Gaza Solidarity
Caravan.
India-Pakistan is a sad testament to another failed
two-state solution imposed by colonial Britain
following WWII, and the Indian activists were forced
to return to New Delhi to take a flight to Tehran
where they will join their Pakistani comrades to
continue their journey of solidarity and peace to
beleaguered Gazans.
Muthu Krishnan, a Hindu journalist from Tamil Nadu,
said the caravan had touched the hearts of millions of
Indians of all faiths. “Palestine and
Yasser Arafat are household names
in India,” despite the fact that current Indian
leaders toe a US-Israeli line. The caravan is
scheduled to reach the
West
Bank on 27 December after passing
through
Iran,
Jordan, Turkey and
Syria.
Eric Walberg writes for
Al-Ahram
Weekly
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/
You can reach him at
http://ericwalberg.com/
©
EsinIslam.Com
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