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First Palestinian Conference for the
Boycott of Israel
(BDS)
22 November 2007
Al-Bireh, Ramallah
Summary Report
“The Campaign for the Boycott of Israel will
re-vitalize popular resistance and restore dignity to the Palestinian people”
To read the Declaration of Principles, click here.
An important mile-stone in building the global BDS campaign
was achieved in Ramallah on 22 November 2007. Some 300 activists, members of
unions, associations and NGOs in towns, villages and refugee camps of the
occupied West Bank, with monitors from the global solidarity movement in
Britain, Canada, Norway, Spain and South Africa, convened for a day of
discussion and debate about ways to promote all forms of boycott against Israel
among Palestinian community organizations, unions, as well as political,
academic and cultural institutions. Organizers and participants left the
conference with a sense of accomplishment: practical recommendations are in
place for building the popular Palestinian BDS campaign as a strategic form of
civil resistance in the long struggle ahead against Israel's regime of apartheid over
the Palestinian people.
The conference was opened by Dr. Gabi Baramki (PACBI) who
reminded participants of the fact that boycott has been a tool of the
Palestinian struggle since the 1920s. He stated that the power of popular
boycott derived from international law and universal ethical principles, and
emphasized the timeliness of a Palestinian popular boycott movement, especially
now, when isolation and fragmentation are imposed more than ever on the
Palestinian people, in order to bring about loss of hope, dignity and
surrender. Boycott and popular struggle contributed to the liberation of India
and South Africa, he stated, adding that, while it is true that the challenge
for Palestinians is bigger, because South Africa never enjoyed the level of
support Israel has from the United States and Europe, the Palestinian boycott
campaign can be effective because of Israel’s ultimate dependence, politically,
diplomatically and economically, on the West.
Representing PNGO, Dr. Allam Jarrar then summarized the need
for boycott in the current political context, asserting that “The Palestinian
struggle is a struggle against the systematic effort by Israel to
replace one people in the country by another.”
He affirmed that the conference was a historic event, “because 60 years
into the Palestinian Nakba, we are beginning to revise the strategy of our
struggle for the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people, foremost among
them our rights to self-determination, independence and return [for refugees].
The boycott campaign will re-vitalize popular resistance and restore
dignity.” He presented several
motivating factors for the BDS campaign:
-
it dispels the
myth that negotiations with Israel
are the only form of struggle that Palestinians can engage in;
-
as a non-violent
tool, it is a form of popular resistance that can appeal to all Palestinians,
in the homeland and exile, as well as to global supporters;
-
it is a tool for
rebuilding collective struggle and unity;
-
it revives
national culture and identity, and can give hope and inspiration to the young
generation;
-
it challenges the
current balance of power through applying sustained and effective pressure on Israel.
The first session included presentations – followed by
discussion - by two guest speakers. Virginia Setshedi, from the Palestine
Solidarity Committee in South
Africa, reminded the audience of the fact
that Apartheid is a crime against humanity, and explained that the new,
post-Apartheid South African social movement understands the struggle of the
Palestinian people. At the time of the
2001 World Conference Against Racism in Durban,
a commitment was made to support the Palestinian struggle to isolate Apartheid Israel, she
said. The social movement in South Africa, which welcomed the 2005 Palestinian
civil society BDS call as an appeal by the Palestinian people to launch this
joint struggle, has worked ever since on building the BDS movement in South
Africa -- shaming the South African government and pressuring it to rescind normal
relations with Israel, and boycotting Israeli consumer products. She emphasized
the importance of solidarity to be mutual and encouraged Palestinians to
express their support for the people's struggle in post-Apartheid South Africa
for economic and social justice.
Prof. Haim Bresheeth, of the British Committee for
Universities of Palestine (BRICUP), gave a personal account of how a state
visit to Israel in 1972 by
the prime minister of the South African regime made him aware of the affinity
between Apartheid and Israel's
Zionist regime. He emphasized the need
for a profound analysis not only of Zionist Israel's strengths, but also of the
failures of Israel's
regime, as a system that can cause massive destruction but is unable to provide
solutions to Jews, to the Palestinian people, or to the people in the region.
Speakers in the second session set the agenda for the
subsequent discussions in the workshops, examining how to promote boycott as a
key component in the struggle by all sectors of Palestinian civil society and
the criteria, programs and mechanisms needed to guide the Palestinian and
global boycott campaign. Based on a review of joint Israeli-Palestinian civil
society projects (“people to people” projects) in the fields of gender, youth
and efforts at “building a joint historical narrative,” Dr. Islah Jad of PACBI
showed how such projects have undermined Palestinian identity and struggle for
freedom by giving the false impression of “balance” and of the possibility of
reaching a “middle-ground” between the oppressor and the oppressed, rather than
ending oppression altogether. As western
donors continue to encourage such projects, she said, every Palestinian is
responsible to undertake, before engagement, a close examination based on the
criteria developed by the BDS campaign.
Adnan Ateyah, speaking for OPGAI, explained the criteria for
the BDS campaign and emphasized the strategic character of this campaign which
aims not only to end the military occupation in place since 1967, but also to
challenge Israel's
ideology, Zionism, and its international relations. Jamal
Jum’a of the Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign pointed out that boycott is an
effective tool in supporting Palestinian farmers and the building of a
Palestinian economy of steadfastness on the land as opposed to grandiose
“development projects” that effectively entrench dependency on the occupation.
He stressed the need to unify the political analysis, terminology and
campaigns, and to promote the BDS campaign at a national level. Opposition to
normalization has to be a crucial element of the campaign, he stated, in order
to strengthen Palestinian cohesion and give a signal to the people and the
leadership. Globally, Jum’a added, the
BDS movement has become today so widespread and diversified that it is beyond
the capacity of the Zionist lobby to destroy it; only Palestinian normalization
can do so.
Recommendations
(from the three, parallel workshops)
There was consensus among
participants that building civil resistance is a priority in the current era.
Work on the Palestinian BDS Campaign should be seen in this context and lead to
the formation of an inclusive Steering Committee for the Campaign.
Additional recommendations included:
1. For the local Palestinian BDS
Campaign
General:
Palestinian employment in Jewish settlements and Israel is to be excluded from the
boycott, because it is a source of necessary income that has no current
substitute.
Consumer Boycott
·
Study Israeli
products in the Palestinian market: What are they? Where are they distributed?
How do they enter?
·
Identify products
which have Palestinian (or other) alternatives and mobilize for massive
consumer boycotts against them;
·
Mobilize pressure
to prevent entry of Israeli products (e.g. put up boxes for public complaints)
where local alternatives exist;
·
Start dialogue
with Palestinian companies about ways to support Palestinian national products
and expand employment of the Palestinian work force.
Education
·
Undertake a review
of the Palestinian curriculum to ensure historical accuracy;
·
Raise awareness
and work with students at schools and universities to spread the culture of
boycott;
·
Request from the
Ministry of Education to urge private schools to stop selling Israeli products
(in the cafeterias) and not to engage in normalization projects with Israeli
organizations.
Media and Public Awareness-Raising
·
Pressure
Palestinian media to halt all advertisement of Israeli products;
·
Organize public
awareness campaigns (posters, stickers, etc.) about boycott, and request
support from the local media.
Mechanisms for Campaign Building
and Promotion
·
Form popular
boycott committees in all regions and sectors in order to: build public
awareness about the importance of the campaign and the criteria for boycott and
anti-normalization; initiate action and build a popular culture of boycott; and
develop a response to those insisting on normalization;
·
Build pressure on
PA officials for ending normalization with Israel (end security coordination,
rescind Paris Protocol on economic cooperation, etc.);
·
Express
Palestinian support for struggles in the “global south” (e.g., Africa, South
America, Asia), in order to build mutual
support.
2. For the Campaign in the Arab
World
·
Seek cooperation
and coordination with anti-normalization committees in the Arab world;
·
Lobby for
re-activation of the Arab-League boycott committee;
·
Raise the profile
of BDS in the mainstream Arab media;
·
Encourage Arab
investors to invest in the Palestinian economy;
·
Promote
Palestinian products in Arab countries.
3. For the International/Global
Campaign
Strategy and Message
·
Emphasize that the
BDS campaign does not only target Israel's
economy, but challenges Israel's
legitimacy, being a colonial and apartheid state, as part of the international
community. Therefore, efforts are needed not only to promote wide consumer
boycotts, but also boycotts in the fields of academia, culture and sports;
·
The Nakba-60
campaign in 2008 is a campaign for the boycott of Israel,
including calling for a boycott of the “Israel at 60” celebrations.
Targets
·
Select boycott
targets that provide an opportunity for public education about Israel's
apartheid regime.
Alliances
As work with the major (potential) allies (e.g., unions,
faith-based organizations/churches, political parties) continues, give special
attention to:
·
Palestinian and
other Arab media correspondents in the respective countries: brief them about
BDS initiatives and encourage them to report them to audiences in Palestine and the Arab
world;
·
Support other
struggles in the “global south” and struggles of marginalized communities in
the “north,” and encourage links with the global BDS campaign;
Coordination
·
For the time
being, use existing websites (e.g. PACBI) and lists to update about and
coordinate global activities and campaigns, until a centralized BDS website can
take over that role;
·
For the time
being, the International Coordinating Network on Palestine (ICNP) serves as
(symbolic, temporary) network for coordination of the global BDS campaign;
·
Participants
recommend a special BDS organizers conference to be held in November 2008, in
order to formalize and improve the mechanism of global coordination.
The
conference was convened by the Palestinian NGO Network (PNGO), the
OPGAI-Coalition, PACBI and the Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign. The organizing
committee expresses its special thanks to Muwatin, The Palestinian Institute
for the Study of Democracy, OPGAI-Occupied Palestine and Golan Heights Advocacy
Initiative, BADIL
Resource Center,
PMRS-Palestinian Medical Relief Society, UHWC-Union of Health Work Committees,
UAWC-Union of Agricultural Relief Work Committees who made this conference
possible. Thanks also go to Watan TV for coverage, media dissemination, and
providing volunteers who assisted with logistics.
This report was prepared by the
Conference Steering Committee.
For review and endorsement of the
2005 Palestinian BDS Call, see: www.bds-palestine.net
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