United
Church of Canada General Assembly recommended a boycott of products from
Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.
This is a copy of the article published in the October 2012 ucobserver yet not found in their web site
__________________________________________________________________
THE UNITED CHURCH OBSERVER
$3.95
OCTOBER 2012 FAITH, JUSTICE AND ETHICAL
LIVING www. ucobserver.org
FOR
BETTER OR FOR WORSE, A BOYCOTT
The
most controversial plank of the United Church's Mideast policy is a largely
symbolic action with far-reaching consequences. By Mike Milne
At
August's General Council, the United Church voted to speak out, once again,
against Israel's 45-year occupation of the West Bank. For the first time, it
called for a boycott of products from Israeli settlements. But the question
looms: will United Church people and congregations translate General Council's
words into action?
Dedicated
social activists, who have been pushing the church for over a decade to do more
than just talk about peace in the Middle East, say yes. Others aren't so sure.
The
newly minted United Network for a Just Peace in Palestine and Israel (UNJPPI
)-planning an inaugural meeting in
Toronto this month will likely push for congregational education and study
programs on the issue. The Holy Land Awareness and Action Task Group, based in
Toronto Conference's South West Presbytery, hopes the decision will reignite a
Presbytery- based boycott campaign that fizzled shortly after its launch last
year. General Council staff will provide information and resources across the
church.
Nonetheless,
as senior General Council program staffperson Rev. Bruce Gregersen told
journalists after the final vote, General Council leads, but the rest of the
church doesn 't always follow. "We don 't tell people what to do,"
said Gregersen. "What we can do is invite consideration; we can
encourage." Commissioners made that point very clear, refusing to adopt
the Mideast working group's report as a whole to form the basis of policy, but
instead voting to "recommend the report and its policies to its members
for study, prayerful discernment and personal action."
As
with past contentious United Church stands, this one opened to mixed reviews. In Barrie,
Ont., Rev. Susan Eagle of Grace United called Council's decision "a
cautious step forward " and said a study group in her congregation will
likely grapple with the issue.
Rev.
Brian McIntosh of Toronto, a long-time member of the Toronto Holy Land
awareness group and interim chair of UNJPPI, hopes both groups "will help
congregations have the confidence that what we're doing is not strange for
anti-Semitic."
In
Arnprior, Ont., Rev. Andrew Love of Grace St. Andrew's United says some members
of his congregation are "shaking their heads" over the church's
decision but remain more focused on local issues. Love took a high-profile
public stand against a boycott of Israeli products, formed an antiboycott
group called Faithful Witness and was closely aligned with the Centre for
Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA), a national advocacy organization for the
Canadian Jewish community, during the lead-up to General Council. He now hopes
to prepare resources to offer churches "more balanced information."
22 www.ucobserver.org
• OCTOBER 2012
A
strong majority of General Council commissioners voted for an end to the
Israeli occupation and a boycott of settlement products. But Council's
decision-making process, which lets commissioners consider and alter proposals
before they become official motions, using informal "warm or cool"
polls, sometimes meant viewpoints were expressed through changes in wording or
emphasis rather than being clearly articulated in debate.
In
the first of three sessions on Israel-Palestine, General Council's working
group of three volunteers and a half-dozen staff presented their report and two
pages of suggested actions and policy -the fruit of about two years of
research, discussion and writing. As well as supporting Israel as a Jewish
state, the report rejected "apartheid" as a description of the
Israeli occupation and stated that criticism of Israeli policies was not
anti-Semitic.
Council
heard from the working group, including former moderator Very Rev. David
Giuliano of Marathon, Ont., Toronto minister Rev. Barbara White and Hamilton
chaplain Rev. Thorn Davies. White said she was initially opposed to any boycott
but decided it was the only way to "convey to Jewish and Israeli colleagues
that something has to happen to allow justice for Palestinian people and the
healthy unfolding of a Jewish state for Israelis."
Ecumenical
guests from the Canadian Jewish community and Palestinian Christian partners
also had their say. Dr. Vicror Goldbloom, chair of the Canadian Christian
Jewish Consultation, admitted settlements are "a problem that needs to be
resolved," but said a boycott would not lead to a solution. Ramzi
Zananiri, a Palestinian working for the Middle East Council of Churches, cited
statistics on West Bank settlements to illustrate a "policy of humiliation
and subjugation of Palestinians with total control of their resources."
By
the fifth day of the meeting, Council had voted to adopt 12 parts of a 13-part
motion, including one "encouraging members of the United Church to avoid
any and all products produced in the settlements."
Lengthy
additions asked the church to denounce "aggression and incitement to
violence coward the state of Israel and its people" and "the ongoing
violence toward and promotion of hatred for residents of the occupied
territories by some settlers." The action, however, could only be
finalized when the rest of the motion was adopted.
By
the second-last day of the meeting, all that remained was the question of how
the working group's report would be applied. But some commissioners felt the
call for a boycott had not been properly aired. Past moderator Very Rev. Bill
Phipps spoke against the boycott and called on the church "to support ... those people on the
ground in Israel and Palestine who every day put their lives on the line to
work together."
For
others, it was rime for more direct action. "I think in a time when
diplomacy and politics have failed to find a just peace, it is incumbent on the
Christian church to engage in society and in political discourse and even take
a side," said Rev. Ralph Carl Wushke of Toronto.
A
final vote recommended that church members study the report, pray over the
policy and suggested actions, and then decide what to do.
Supporting
a boycott against Israeli settlement products puts the United Church beside the
U.S. Presbyterian Church and United Methodist Church and the British Methodist
Church, all of whom have taken similar actions.
Adoption
of the boycott brought supportive words from Jewish pro-peace groups such as
Independent Jewish Voices (IJV) and Canadian Friends of Peace Now. "Jews
don't speak with one voice" on settlements or boycott action, said IJV
spokesperson Sid Shniad. He promised the group's members will work with
congregations studying the issue.
Giuliano
said he got supportive messages from many in the Jewish community, and the
United Church had to be true to its beliefs in spite of anti-boycott pressure.
"The bottom line is, if the cost of friendship is abandoning other friends
or selling out our convictions,
we
can't do that in good faith."
The
immediate response from CIJA, which led a high pressure campaign against the
boycott, was "outrage." Two weeks after the Council, it called on the
Canadian Jewish community, including lay and rabbinic leaders, for a moratorium
on dialogue or partnership with all levels of the United Church.
CIJA's
board of directors planned to meet in September and was likely to discuss how
to stay connected with United Church people who worked against the boycott.
CIJA may also launch an anti-boycott campaign encouraging Canadians to buy
products of West Bank settlements and Israel.
UCO
SETTLEMENT GOODS
GeneralCouncil's encouragement to "avoid any
and all products produced in the settlements" raises the question: What, exactly,
is made in the settlements? How about buying products from companies that
operate in the area but also offer products in Canada that are made elsewhere?
The General Council Executive has promised
clarification soon. In the meantime, here is a sampling of brands and products,
available in Canada, that are connected to the settlements*:
·
Ahava beauty
products
·
SodaStream
home water carbonators
·
Shamir Salads
·
Keter Plastic
(outdoor storage, sold through Home Depot)
·
Food additives
patented by Adumim Food Ingredients, including fenugreek gum (common in salad
dressings) and kombucha concentrate
·
Pampers
diapers and Always pads (Avgol Nonwoven Industries sells to Procter &
Gamble)
Pieta Woolley
*This list is
based on research by the Interfaith Peace Initiative. End the Occupation, Meretz
USA. Canadians for Justice and Peacein the Middle East, and the Coalition of
Women for Peace
THE UNITED CHURCH OBSERVER • OCTOBER 2012 page 23
No comments:
Post a Comment
Your comment are welcome.