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Since its early stages, the original crude text of this bill has been refined somewhat.
As it stands now, the law will punish any person or association
publicly calling for a boycott of Israel – economic, academic or
cultural. “Israel”, according to this law, means any Israeli enterprise
or person, in Israel or in any territory controlled by Israel. Simply
put, it is all about the settlements. And not only about the boycott of
the products of the settlements, which was initiated by Gush Shalom some
13 years ago, but also about the recent refusal of actors to perform in
the settlement of Ariel and the call by academics not to support the
so-called University Centre there. It also applies, of course, to any
call for the boycott of an Israeli university or an Israeli commercial
enterprise.
This is a fundamentally flawed piece of legislation: it is
anti-democratic, discriminatory, annexationist and altogether
unconstitutional.
Everybody has the right to buy or not to buy whatever he or she
desires, from whomsoever he or she chooses. That is so obvious that it
needs no confirmation. It is a part of the right to free expression
guaranteed by any constitution worth its salt, and an essential element
of a free market economy.
I may buy from the store on the corner, because I like the owner, and
shun the supermarket opposite, which exploits its employees. Companies
expend huge sums of money to convince me to buy their products rather
than others.
What about ideologically motivated campaigns? Years ago, while on a
visit to New York, I was persuaded not to buy grapes produced in
California, because the owners oppressed the Mexican migrant workers.
This boycott went on for a long time and was – if I remember right –
successful. Nobody dared to suggest that such boycotts should be
outlawed.
Here in Israel, rabbis of many communities regularly paste up posters
calling upon their flock not to buy at certain shops, which they believe
are not kosher, or not kosher enough. Such calls are commonplace.
Such publications are fully compatible with human rights. Citizens for
whom pork is an abomination, have the right to be informed about which
shops sell pork and which do not. As far as I know, no one in Israel has
ever contested this right.
Sooner or later, some anti-religious groups will publish calls to boycott kosher
shops, which pay the rabbis – some of them the most intolerant of their
kind – heavy levies for their certificates. They support a vast
religious establishment that openly advocates turning Israel into a Halakha state – the Jewish equivalent of a Muslim Shari’ah state”. Many thousands of Kashrut supervisors and myriads of other religious functionaries are paid for by the largely secular public.
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So what about an anti-rabbinical boycott? It can hardly be forbidden,
since the religious and the anti-religious are guaranteed equal rights.
So it appears that not all ideologically motivated boycotts are wrong.
Nor do the initiators of this particular bill – racists of the Lieberman
school, Likud rightists and Kadima “centrists” – claim this. For them,
boycotts are only wrong if they are directed against the nationalist,
annexationist policies of this government.
This is explicitly stated in the law itself. Boycotts are unlawful if
they are directed against the State of Israel – not, for example, by the
State of Israel against some other state. No Israeli in his right mind
would retroactively condemn the boycott imposed by world Jewry on
Germany immediately after the Nazis came to power – a boycott that
served as a pretext for Josef Goebbels when he unleashed on 1 April
1933, the first Nazi anti-Semitic boycott (Deutsche wehrt euch! Kauft nicht bei Juden!)
Nor does any upright Zionist find fault with the boycott measures
passed by Congress, under intense Jewish pressure, against the late
Soviet Union, in order to break down the barriers to free Jewish
emigration. These measures were hugely successful.
No less successful was the worldwide boycott against the Apartheid
regime in South Africa – a boycott warmly welcomed by the South African
liberation movement, though it also hurt the African workers employed by
the boycotted white businesses (an argument now repeated by Israeli
settlers, who exploit Palestinian labourers for starvation wages).
So political boycotts are not wrong, as long as they are directed against others. It’s the old “Hottentot morality“ of colonial lore – “if I steal your cow, that’s right. If you steal my cow, that’s wrong”.
Rightists can call for action against left-wing organizations. Leftists
cannot call for action against right-wing organizations. It’s as simple
as that.
But the law is not only anti-democratic and discriminatory, it is also blatantly annexationist.
By a simple semantic trick, in less than a sentence, the lawmakers do
what successive Israeli government did not dare to do: they annex the
Palestinian occupied territories to Israel.
Or maybe it’s the other way round: are the settlers annexing Israel?
The word “settlements” does not appear in the text. God forbid. Much as
the word “Arabs” does not appear in any of the other laws.
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Instead, the text simply states that calls for the boycott of Israel,
which are forbidden by the law, include the boycott of Israeli
institutions and enterprises in all territories controlled by Israel.
This includes, of course, the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Golan
Heights.
This is the core of the matter. Everything else is camouflage...
Recently, the folly of the law was demonstrated by a French judge in
Grenoble. This incident concerned the quasi-monopolistic Israeli
agricultural products export company, Agrexco. The judge suspected the
company of fraud, because products of the settlements were falsely
declared as coming from Israel. This could well be fraud, too, because
Israeli exports to Europe are entitled to preferential treatment which
the products of the settlements are not.
Such incidents are occurring more and more often in various European countries. This law will cause them to multiply.
In the original version, boycotters would have committed a criminal
offence and been fined. That would have caused us great joy, because our
refusal to pay the fines and and subsequent imprisonment would have
dramatized the matter.
This clause has now been omitted. But every single company in the
settlements and, indeed, every single settler who feels hurt by the
boycott can sue – for unlimited damages – any group calling for the
boycott and any individual connected with the call. Since the settlers
are tightly organized and enjoy unlimited funds from all kinds of casino
owners and sleazy sex merchants, they can file thousands of suits and
practically paralyze the boycott movement. That, of course, is the aim.
The fight is far from over. Upon the enactment of the law, we shall
call upon the Supreme Court to annul it, as contrary to Israel’s
fundamental constitutional principles and basic human rights.
As Menachem Begin used to say: “There are still judges in Jerusalem!”
Or are there?