BDS - The Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions Movement Against Israel - Explained
BDS - The Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions Movement Against Israel - Explained
BDS - The Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions Movement Against Israel - Explained
BDS has had some high-profile successes in recent months, such as when
the pop star Lorde canceled a concert in Tel Aviv in December in response
to pressure from BDS activists.
“Every time Israel blatantly violates Palestinian rights, there is another BDS
victory,” Noura Erakat, a Palestinian-American legal scholar of human
rights at George Mason University, told me.
The BDS movement says its goal is to push the Israeli government to
meet three main demands. In its own words, these are:
1. Ending its occupation and colonization of all Arab lands and dismantling the
Wall. International law recognizes the West Bank, including East Jerusalem,
Gaza and the Syrian Golan Heights as occupied by Israel.
BDS has been around for more than a decade, and it enjoys high levels of
support among Palestinians, in part because it seems to have better
prospects of effecting change than the divided and anemic Palestinian
political leadership. But it’s really in the past few years that it’s begun to
gain international prominence, evolving from a fringe movement to one that
worried Israeli and Jewish leaders are condemning more and more
strongly.
“Those who wear the BDS label should be treated exactly as we treat any
anti-Semite or bigot. They should be exposed and condemned. The
boycotters should be boycotted,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu said in a speech to the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee (AIPAC) in 2014.
The BDS movement has some wins on the world stage, including the
European Union’s creation of guidelines that require goods exported from
Israeli settlements in occupied Palestinian territories to be labeled as such
(as opposed to simply being labeled as from Israel), a policy that’s
expected to hurt Israeli exports. Norway’s $810 billion Government
Pension Fund Global, the world’s largest sovereign wealth
fund, blacklisted two Israeli companies over their involvement in
settlement building in East Jerusalem.
The movement’s impact in the US has been more mixed. The United
Methodist Church’s $20 billion pension board, the biggest pension fund
asset manager in the US, blacklisted the five largest Israeli banks.
In the aftermath of the Gaza violence, the White House didn’t echo
its European allies in condemning Israel or calling for an international
probe; it instead put all the blame on the Palestinians.
There are signs that BDS can do more damage to companies by harming
their reputations than by getting large numbers of people to boycott their
products.
SodaStream’s experience gets to the heart of the matter here. While BDS’s
actual financial impact on foreign and Israeli businesses in Israel so far is
extremely small, its campaigns can deal a significant blow to a brand’s
reputation over time. And that’s enough to change the behavior of
institutions that want to maximize their bottom line.
That’s fed concerns among some Israeli observers that the thrust of BDS
is ultimately at odds with a two-state solution. “Chief spokespeople for the
state of Israel argue that the Palestinians and their supporters are not
looking for freedom and to live peaceably within Israel, but that they’re
trying to take over all of Israel or wipe out the Jewish state,” Cohen says.
BDS advocates argue that the movement doesn’t stand by any specific
political future, and instead focuses on compliance with international law.
After she pulled out of the concert, a prominent American rabbi, Shmuley
Boteach, ran a full-page ad in the Washington Post calling her a “bigot,”
while a group of more than 100 musicians, actors, and directors signed a
public letter supporting her.
Israel’s recent victory in the Eurovision Song Contest — its first since 1998
— caused dismay among BDS advocates, some of whom basically
hoped that Israel would be barred from participating.
The fact that Israel, as the defending champion, will host next year’s
competition is angering them further.
“Israel will use next year’s Eurovision to try to legitimize its occupation,
ethnic cleansing and illegal annexation,” Ali Abunimah, founder of the
website Electronic Intifada, tweeted on Sunday. Europe, he writes, is
“giving this propaganda its full Trump-like support.”
The Genesis Prize, in a statement, said that “recent events in Israel have
been extremely distressing to her,” adding that “she does not feel
comfortable participating in any public events in Israel.” This was widely
interpreted as a reference to the crisis on the boundary between Israel and
the Palestinian-populated Gaza Strip, in which Israeli troops have shot a
number of Palestinians during occasionally violent demonstrations near a
border fence.
Israeli Culture Minister Miri Regev blasted the decision, saying Portman
had “fallen into the hands” of the BDS movement; Oren Hazan, a member
of Israel’s parliament from the Likud Party, called for Portman’s Israeli
citizenship to be stripped.
But Portman soon clarified that her action was targeted at Israeli
leadership, not the state of Israel as a whole.
BDS supporters hope hurting Israel’s economy will change Israeli policy
“It’s not just an impact of dollars and cents, but it’s an impact that is
psychological as well,” Yousef Munayyer, executive director of the US
Campaign for Palestinian Rights, told me in an interview in 2016. “It’s about
the effect of knowing that there are costs in the form of international
isolation to continuing down the road Israel is on.”
For both critics and supporters of the BDS movement, that level of Israeli
concern may be the clearest evidence that the campaign is picking up
momentum. Whether it will be able to change Israeli policy is a different
question entirely.