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Why The Israel Boycott Is Not Anti-Semitic

The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement is a moral response to the Israeli government’s aggression against Palestine.

On a recent “Speak Your Mind”, Leslie Lenkowsky accused the American Studies Association and other academic groups who support the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (or BDS) movement against Israel of being anti-Semitic.

The BDS movement urges those who oppose current Israeli government policies to avoid purchasing products made in Israel or the Occupied West Bank, divest from Israeli companies, and lobby for governmental sanctions against the Israeli government in an attempt to change Israeli policy toward the Palestinians.

To accuse the boycott’s supporters of anti-Semitism is an old and well-worn tactic that attempts to discredit those who would protest against what many in the international community see as Israel’s unjust and illegal actions aimed at the Palestinian people and their land. The accusation of racism seeks not only to discredit the messenger, but to distract from the real issues at hand. In fact there is nothing racist in condemning Israeli government policies, just as there would be nothing racist in, say, condemning President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe for his unjust and illegal actions.

The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement is a moral, legitimate and grassroots response to the Israeli government’s aggressive and unwise policy to expand settlement activity in the West Bank and to turn a blind eye to settler violence, as well as its cruel and unjust blockade of Gaza.

Many in the BDS movement (although by no means all) believe that Israeli government actions in the West Bank and Gaza undermine the possibility of a two-state solution and thus in the long term threaten Israel’s Jewish and democratic character. Opposing Israel’s unjust actions and supporting the boycott is therefore anything but anti-Semitic. Indeed, from my perspective, it is the moral calling of our time.

Carl Pearson

Carl Pearson is a visiting scholar in the History and Philosophy of Science Department at Indiana University. He believes that one secular, democratic state between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean is the only path forward toward a just and peaceful solution to the Israel/Palestine crisis.

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