4.6.06
The laugh of fate: The state waging a broad international campaign for a boycott is simultaneously waging a parallel campaign, no less determined, against a boycott. A boycott that seriously harms the lives of millions of people is legitimate in its eyes because it is directed against those defined as its enemies, while a boycott that is liable to hurt its academic ivory tower is illegitimate in its eyes only because it is aimed against itself. This is a moral double standard. Why is the boycott campaign against the Palestinian Authority, including blocking essential economic aid and boycotting leaders elected in democratic and legal elections, a permissible measure in Israel's eyes and the boycott of its universities is forbidden?
Statement by Reuven Abarjel, Founder of Israel's Black Panthers, in supports the Academic Boycott of Israel
Translated by Smadar.Lavie
Tuesday, June 6, 2006.
To The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel
NATFHE – The University and College Lecturers’ Union, Britain
I am Reuven Abarjel. I was born in Morocco and have lived in Israel since 1950. In the 1970s I founded the Black Panthers Movement. Our struggle against the regime was difficult and without compromise. The violence spread in the streets and in order to break the Mizrahi resistance, the police acted with full force under the instructions of then prime-minister Golda Meir. From the onset of our struggle the Black Panthers embarked on a dialogue with both local and European Palestinian leadership. Black Panthers delegations traveled to Italy, France, Belgium and the Netherlands. Concurrently, we met in refugee camps with bereaved families who lost their children to the struggle against the occupation. Just before Hon. Chairman Yasser Arafat died I joined a delegation of activists who met with him in the besieged Muqata`a.
The Irish Times
03/10/2006
The idea of an overall academic boycott of Israel is not an attack on individuals and is most certainly justified, writes Ilan Pappe
Guy Beiner (Opinion, September 27th) has asked us all to rethink the idea of an academic boycott of Israel. This is always a good idea, and as an Israeli academic who strongly supports the boycott, I find it useful to rethink such a drastic move against my state and my peers in local academia.
However, most of his rethinking focuses on the tactics of the campaign and he says nothing about the background for it. He is also misinformed about its recent developments.
http://www.alternativenews.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=441&Itemid=70
The Economy of the Occupation, Part Six
The Question of Sanctions and
a Boycott against Israel
by Shir Hever
“It is in fact astonishing that the divestment campaign should
have generated so much controversy, given that its primary
demand is simply that a country that is showered with official
and unofficial American assistance […] merely acknowledge
and implement the rule of law.”
—Saree Makdisi1
At first glance, the Israeli economy is stronger than ever. Israeli economists are exhilarated, and claim that the Israeli market is one of the largest and fastest-growing importing/exporting economies in the world. But economic analysis must go further, and unveil the implications of the Israeli economy’s dependence on international trade. Now more than ever, Israel is vulnerable to economic sanctions. This is the international community’s opportunity to force Israel to respect the human and national rights of the Palestinians, and to stop many of the abuses that have become its central policies.