A recent
high-level United Church of Canada report recommends that the United Church
should confirm its hostility to Israel. Written by three prominent United
Church officials, the Report of the Working Group on Israel/Palestine Policy
endorses Palestinian “resistance” to Israeli occupation.
The church officials do specify that such
resistance should be non-violent, but as with much in their report, the call
for non-violence means less than it might.
I’ve never worried that United Church
ministers might strap on suicide vests and blow up busses in Jerusalem. But
while officially condemning such violence on the part of Palestinians, the
United Church also vigorously promotes the Palestinian Kairos Document. Written
by Palestinian Christians, the Kairos Document explicitly okays terrorism,
calling it “legal resistance.” (More on the Kairos Document here.)
Do ordinary members of the United Church share
the anti-Israel obsession of the clique at the top? Not at all. And I think
they’d be appalled if they noticed what their leaders were up to.
In the
most offensive paragraphs, the report compares the Palestinians to Holocaust
victims. Usually, such comparisons come from obvious antisemites. In this case,
I think the church officials are simply so self-absorbed, so wrapped up in
anti-Israel politics, so shuttered from reality that they’re unaware of their
offensiveness, like a four-year-old who’s overheard the word ‘nigger’ and
admires his own cleverness as he runs about shouting it.
On the plus side, the report does notice that
the BDS movement – the movement for boycott, divestment and sanctions against
Israel – “sometimes” crosses the line to “delegitimize Israel’s existence,”
which the church rejects.
Unfortunately, this again means less than it
might. Because in truth, the only point of the BDS movement is to delegitimize
Israel.
The BDS movement is purely a propaganda
offensive. It has no economic effect and never will. Yet the report recommends
joining the BDS movement through a boycott of Israel, specifically of “all
products produced in the settlements.”
Does this mean that the United Church will
boycott Agrexco, which exports agricultural products from the West Bank? The
British BDS movement does – even though the Palestinians are 100 per cent
dependent on Agrexco and similar Israeli companies to export their olives and
other agricultural products.
While acting in a way that would crush
Palestinian farmers if their efforts were successful, the boycotters get to
tell themselves they’re fighting the evil Israelis. And this is what the United
Church wants to be part of.
The report claims to take “seriously questions
about why Israel is the only country in the world being challenged by a global
BDS movement.”
Seriously? The report’s rationalizations are
laughably thin. It notes that the Israeli occupation has lasted a long time.
Well, yes, ever since 1967 when Jordan invaded Israel and Israel occupied the
West Bank in its counter-attack.
Israel has a claim to this territory, which
Israelis know as Judea and Samaria, but rather than unilaterally exercising its
claim, Israel has maintained a perfectly legal defensive occupation while
waiting for the Arabs to negotiate.
In 1994, Jordan finally signed a peace treaty
with Israel. But Jordan had previously renounced its claim to the West Bank in favour of
the Palestinians, who haven’t been so reasonable.
With the exception of United Church officials who remain willfully ignorant,
everyone familiar with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict knows that Israel has
offered several comprehensive peace plans, but that the Palestinians have
refused them all and made no counter offers.
The United Church’s report calls for an end to
the occupation. Fine. But talk to the Palestinians. They won’t even discuss
peace. And the United Church report doesn’t suggest they ought to.
By way of rationalizing its singling out of
Israel, the report also argues that Israel is a democracy, and therefore,
should be held to a higher standard than the autocracies that surround it. To
me, this seems rather hard on the downtrodden people of the region.
Syrians are being slaughtered in the thousands
by their despotic ruler. But the United Church’s stance is that Syria isn’t a
democracy, so too bad for the Syrians.
Or what about the Palestinians of Gaza? Ruled
by the despotic fanatics of Hamas, Gazans have no free speech or free press and
face arrest for crimes such as dressing immodestly.
Does the United Church find this problematic?
Apparently not.
The territory is ruled by a terrorist group
that’s not just dedicated to destroying Israel, but openly proclaims its goal
is genocide against the Jews.
Will the United Church boycott Gaza? Not a
chance.
Instead, the United Church proposes boycotting
Israel – because it’s a democracy. Well, so is Canada! Also, like Israel,
Canada has a long-standing dispute over land claims: Israel with the Palestinians,
ours with First Nations. Also, like Israel, Canada is trying to negotiate a
settlement.
Seems to me that these similarities make
Canada a perfect target for a United Church boycott. Unless of course the
United Church really is boycotting Israel just because it’s a Jewish state.
P.S. At
least one United Church minister, Rev. Andrew Love, is trying to counter his
church’s anti-Israel stance. (See here.)
This piece
was previously published in the Jewish
Tribune. And on Harry's Place blog in Britain.
And here are the comments from Harry's Place, preserved here, because at HP, they get deleted after a week:
What surprises me still is that the congregants don’t stop it. When will we see some action, on the part of honest, well-meaning, pious church-goers?