BDS in the USA, 2001-2010
Noura Erakat
AUTHOR ID: Noura Erakat is a human rights attorney and adjunct professor of international
human rights law at Georgetown University.
On April 26, 2010, the student senate at the University of California-Berkeley upheld, by one
vote, an executive veto on SB 118—the student body resolution endorsing divestment of
university funds from General Electric and United Technologies, two companies that profit from
the Israeli occupation of East Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Proponents of the
resolution needed 14 votes to override the veto and, as 16 senators had spoken in favor of doing
so, it appeared a simple task.
But the vote in Berkeley had shifted the gaze of national pro-Israel organizations from
Capitol Hill westward and begotten an unlikely alliance between the hawkish American Israel
Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and its self-proclaimed liberal rival, J Street. The two groups
collaborated in lobbying efforts on campus to sustain the veto. Ultimately, two senators changed
their votes and a third abstained, bringing the final count to 13 in favor of overriding the veto and
five opposed. While adherence to student body procedure has blocked the divestment measure,
the numbers indicate the strong support for divestment on Berkeley’s campus and can be
regarded as an additional milestone in the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement.
The strident response to Berkeley’s resolution from off campus was not without
precedent, but it, too, reflects a sort of coming-of-age for the BDS movement, which is being
taken more seriously by its opponents than ever before. Berkeley students have been at the
forefront of BDS efforts since February 6, 2001, date of Ariel Sharon’s initial ascension as
Israeli prime minister, when they erected a mock checkpoint on campus and unfurled banners
exclaiming, “Divest from Israeli Apartheid.” Within the span of three years, this first universitybased divestment campaign spread onto dozens of other American campuses as well as into
churches and community organizations. Yet the movement did not gain international legitimacy
and provoke serious treatment until a call for BDS came from Palestinian civil society in 2005.
Since then, and especially since the resounding failure of the international community to
hold Israel to account for war crimes committed during Operation Cast Lead, the assault on Gaza
in the winter of 2008-2009, the notion of extra-governmental tactics aimed at restraining Israeli
human rights violations has permeated mainstream institutions. No longer the passion of
idealistic students alone, BDS victories have reverberated within American retail stores,
corporations and international multilateral organizations.
The movement’s deepening acceptance among mainstream stakeholders correlates with
the steady decline of faith in efforts to achieve a negotiated two-state solution to the IsraeliPalestinian conflict. While heads of state fail to extract the most modest commitments from
Israel, such as a settlement freeze, BDS activists have increased compliance (albeit
incrementally) with international law among corporations and institutions that have distanced
themselves from, or divested their holdings in, settlement-related enterprises.
BDS victories to date, at least in the United States, have targeted Israeli policies in the
Occupied Territories, the notion being what should be boycotted and sanctioned is the
occupation, rather than Israel itself. But the movement’s inspiration by similar efforts aimed at
apartheid South Africa, coupled with the 2005 call from Palestine that includes a demand for
equality for Israel’s Palestinian citizens and the right of return for Palestinian refugees, makes
BDS abhorrent to many loyalists of the two-state solution. J Street, for example, sees the
movement as an attack on Israel’s character as a Jewish state. In his blog entry opposing the
Berkeley resolution, Isaac Luria of J Street complains that the movement “fails to draw a clear
distinction between opposition to the post-1967 occupation and opposition to the existence of the
state of Israel itself as the democratic home of the Jewish people. Even if it was not the intent of
the students who drafted this bill, its passage is now being seized on by the global BDS
movement as a victory in its broader campaign.” BDS activists insist that they emphasize rights,
as opposed to political solutions, precisely to escape the debate over whether Israel and Palestine
should be one or two states. They recognize, however, that the fruition of the 2005 call’s
demands may lead to an Israel that is a state of all its citizens irrespective of religion. Hence it is
inevitable that BDS will be anathema not only to AIPAC, but also to J Street and Arab American
partisans of the two-state solution like Hussein Ibish of the American Task Force on Palestine.
In arousing the ire of both the right and the left ends of the spectrum of permissible
opinion on Israel-Palestine in Washington, the BDS platform and movement cuts to the heart of
the conflict over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict—and could become central to the conflict itself.
Visions of Justice
The tripartite strategy of boycott, divestment and sanctions is rooted in economic logic: Israel
must comply with international law because non-compliance is too politically and economically
costly to maintain. Divestment pressures institutions with stakes in Israeli companies, or in
companies that sustain Israeli human rights abuses, to drop their holdings. Boycotts encourage
consumers to “let the market decide” upon justice by refusing to buy goods made by companies
that benefit from the occupation or inequality in Israel. Sanctions, on the other hand, are trade
restrictions imposed by governments upon others.
In the US, BDS is associated with the solidarity movement aimed at ending apartheid in
South Africa during the 1980s. That movement is widely credited with helping to topple
apartheid and elect Nelson Mandela, a political prisoner for 27 years, as the first black president
of South Africa. The African National Conference of which Mandela was a part called upon the
world to boycott, divest from and sanction apartheid South Africa in 1958. Due to the South
African experience, BDS is seen as a grassroots strategy that works. According to Abdul Minty,
secretary of the British Anti-Apartheid Movement, “The worldwide movement was effective
because it was a coalition of committed governments and people’s movements in the West that
managed to influence policy at the national level, as well as institutions like the UN.”
As with South Africa, the impetus for a global BDS campaign against Israel came from
Palestinian civil society. On July 9, 2005, a year after the International Court of Justice’s historic
advisory opinion declared the route of Israel’s wall illegal, 170 Palestinian civil society
organizations issued a call for boycott, divestment and sanctions. The call gave voice to a
growing movement that began, appropriately, in Durban, South Africa at the 2001 World
Conference Against Racism, where non-governmental organizations and activists equated
Israel’s racially discriminatory policies throughout Israel proper and the Occupied Territories
with apartheid and advocated BDS as the strategy of choice for fighting back. In Durban and
subsequently, the activists have drawn upon the general definition of apartheid laid out in the
1973 International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid:
policies “designed to divide the population…by the creation of separate reserves and ghettoes for
the members of racial groups, …[or] the expropriation of landed property...[or] the persecution
of organizations or persons…because they oppose apartheid.” Directly preceding the 2005 call,
which emanated from Palestinians everywhere, including the diaspora, a group of Palestinian
intellectuals and academics issued a call for the academic and cultural boycott of Israel in 2004.
The Palestinian Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel’s (PACBI) fundamental principles
ultimately formed the basis for the 2005 document, which demands that Israel comply with
international law and uphold universal human rights by:
Ending its occupation and colonization of all Arab lands and dismantling the wall; recognizing
the fundamental rights of the Arab-Palestinian citizens of Israel to full equality; and respecting,
protecting and promoting the rights of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes and properties
as stipulated in UN Resolution 194.
The 2005 call marked a significant shift in the movement for Palestinian self-determination.
Most importantly, it emphasized the rights of Palestinians everywhere irrespective of which state
they live in today or which they envision living in tomorrow. Omar Barghouti, a founder and
steering committee member of PACBI and a drafter of the 2005 document, explains that “the
fundamental pillar of the BDS call was its rights-based approach that does not endorse any
particular political solution to the Arab-Israeli colonial conflict, but insists that for any solution
to be just and sustainable it must address all three basic rights stated in the call.”
Not everyone considers the affirmation of all three rights to be neutral act. The likes of J
Street view it as threatening to Israel’s self-proclaimed identity as a Jewish state, because the
return of refugees in appreciable numbers would render Jews a small minority. Those committed
to the two-state solution on the “pro-Palestinian” side, like Ibish, have interpreted the call as a
repudiation of the state-building project in place since 1993 and a return to the liberation model.
It was important, however, to the BDS drafters to represent the interests of all Palestinians, and
not just those living within the elastic boundaries of a future Palestinian state. Hence the call’s
second clause demanding the full equality of Israel’s non-Jewish Palestinian citizens.
It is logical that this clause would be inserted, given the participation in the drafting of
Ittijah, the umbrella network of Palestinian NGOs in Israel, which demanded equal treatment
before the law irrespective of race, ethnicity, national origin and religion. From the perspective
of the BDS organizers, therefore, objecting to this clause amounts to rejecting Palestinians’ selfdefinition as a unified national body. Still, for supporters of Palestinian human rights who prefer
to indict the occupation only, the second clause is an affront to their solidarity. For these
supporters, ending Jewish privilege within Israel may be desirable, but it exceeds the mandate of
a movement for Palestinian self-determination. Despite its best efforts to transcend political
solutions, therefore, the BDS call has been read as an implicit endorsement of the one-state
solution.
Perhaps surprisingly, several Palestinian NGO representatives within the Occupied
Territories initially opposed the BDS call as well. They viewed the comprehensive approach to
Palestinian rights as a veiled endorsement of the one-state solution, and hence a blow to the
Palestinian Authority and a subversion of the strategic direction of the Palestinian national
movement since the late 1980s and enshrined by the “peace process” of the 1990s. Drafters of
the call, including PACBI, Ittijah, Badil and Stop the Wall, invested a tremendous amount of
time and energy in explaining that the fundamental emphasis on rights was necessary to redress
the concerns of a cohesive Palestinian national body as opposed to endorsing a particular
political solution. Ultimately, the Council of National and Islamic Forces in Palestine, the
coordinating body for the major political parties in the Occupied Territories, along with the
largest Palestine Liberation Organization mass movements, facilitated the acceptance of the BDS
call by major sectors of Palestinian civil society within the Territories and beyond. Constricted
by the parameters of the “peace process,” the Palestinian Authority has neither endorsed nor
repudiated the BDS call. They have, however, launched a narrower boycott of settlementproduced goods. In January 2010, Prime Minister Salam Fayyad staged the burning of $1 million
in settlement products and created a National Dignity Fund to support the production and
distribution of Palestinian-made goods. Unlike the 2005 call, the PA initiative perpetuates a
state-centric approach to resolving the conflict and as such does not attempt to represent the
rights of a unified Palestinian national body.
Barghouti explains that until today the call for equality within Israel remains the least
popular element of the call among solidarity activists, even more controversial than the right of
return, because it goes beyond calling on Israel to rein in its occupation policies in the
Palestinian territories and demands that Israel rectify its domestic policies to afford non-Jewish
Arab citizens full equality. But as Barghouti asks: “If a political system is built on a foundation
of inequality and would collapse if equality set in, is it a system worth keeping?”
Mainstreaming BDS
Barghouti’s rhetorical question is precisely what makes BDS so controversial. Though BDS is in
fact a reform movement, one that seeks to alter corporate and state behavior, it has been viewed
as radical. Mark Lance, a Georgetown philosophy professor and co-founder of Stop US
Taxpayer Aid to Israel Now (SUSTAIN), explains that when his group first approached cohorts
with the idea of divestment in 2001, they were hostilely dismissed as naïve. The established
solidarity organizations feared such a tactic would alienate average Americans who were ready
to support a Palestinian state but not to criticize Israel or call its internal policies into question.
Lance continues that SUSTAIN redirected its energy at young global justice groups and waited
for the time for BDS to ripen. Within two years, the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation,
the “connective tissue” of American Palestine solidarity groups, had incorporated numerous BDS
activists.
Established in 2001 with a $20,000 grant and a few dozen member organizations, today
the Campaign has grown to more than 300 members and boasts a budget of $250,000. In 2005,
the Campaign endorsed the BDS call and mounted a campaign against Caterpillar, manufacturer
of the heavy bulldozers used by the Israeli army to raze Palestinian homes. Phyllis Bennis, a
Campaign co-founder and steering committee member, explains that Caterpillar emerged as a
target for its role in the destruction of Palestinian olive trees and the murder of Rachel Corrie, the
Evergreen State College student run over by a bulldozer in 2003 trying to prevent a home
demolition. Soon, Bennis says, “the discussion moved from the tactical, targeting Caterpillar, to
the strategic—an effort to build a campaign against corporations profiting from occupation.”
The Campaign’s focus, which reflects its member groups’ prerogatives, has continued to
shift. In 2006, the coalition adopted an anti-apartheid framework, which expounds on the
discriminatory treatment of Israel’s non-Jewish citizens, and in 2009, it endorsed the academic
and cultural boycott of Israel, another controversial strand of the BDS movement. The
Campaign’s progression from divesting from occupation to boycotting Israel may be a
bellwether of change in mainstream organizations that have joined the BDS movement but have
limited their activism to targeting war-profiteering corporations involved in the occupation.
Code Pink, the women’s peace group notorious for head-to-toe pink attire and unabashed
disruption of business as usual on Capitol Hill, coalesced in opposition to war in Afghanistan and
Iraq. According to member Nancy Kricorian, Code Pink expanded its mandate to include the
occupation of Palestine when it joined the Campaign in 2006—but the gesture was largely
symbolic, as the group’s work remained focused on Afghanistan and Iraq. This quiet engagement
became much louder in the aftermath of Operation Cast Lead, when Code Pink brought Palestine
to the front and center of its agenda, to the dismay of several members and funders. Undeterred,
the women’s group has since taken two solidarity delegations to Gaza, co-led the Gaza Freedom
March in February 2010 and launched Stolen Beauty, a boycott of Ahava, the settlementmanufactured cosmetics line. Since its inception June 2009, Stolen Beauty has pressured Oxfam
into suspending its goodwill ambassador, “Sex and the City” starlet Kristen Davis, for the
duration of her contract as an Ahava spokeswoman and pushed Costco, a national wholesaler, to
take the product off its shelves.
Despite these achievements, which have been covered in the New York Post and
elsewhere, Kricorian shares that her group still uses the “A-word” gingerly. While BDS can be
presented within the framework of corporate accountability and war profiteering, the term
“apartheid” is controversial. “This word still triggers people’s emotions in a way that shuts off
dialogue. It is a trigger because of its history in South Africa, but in the case of South Africa,
most people would not have dreamed of saying that apartheid was necessary for security’s sake,
or that it was a good idea to keep blacks in bantustans.”
Fayyad Sbaihat, a former University of Wisconsin student and a leading member of alAwda Wisconsin, which garnered faculty senate and union endorsement of divestment across the
25 University of Wisconsin campuses in 2005, explains that the first and strongest opposition to
BDS came from long-time allies who feared that the movement would drive away liberals or
induce a backlash in Israel. “It was a hindrance in the short term,” says Sbaihat. “Not only was
BDS too much to ask of the ‘fair-weather friends’ of Palestine, but also it was too much for them
to accept or live with the apartheid analogy. However, part of the appeal of BDS as we
recognized it was getting the uninterested to begin asking questions and then questioning Israel’s
character, and using the apartheid analogy was a way to provoke questions from the casual
observer.”
Glenn Dickson hopes to present precisely this challenge to the Presbyterian Church USA.
At its 2004 general assembly, the 2.3 million-strong church endorsed divestment from companies
profiting from Israeli occupation by an overwhelming vote of 460-41. Despite horrific
retribution, including threats to burn down houses of worship and pressure from Congress to
rescind the resolution, the church has reaffirmed its commitment to corporate engagement at
subsequent general assemblies where support for divestment has only increased. In 2006, 17 of
the 170 overtures submitted to the assembly opposed the divestment resolution, while in 2008
only two overtures protested the church’s stance. Today, the Presbyterians’ Mission
Responsibility Through Investment Committee has denounced Caterpillar for profiting from the
non-peaceful use of its products and continues to explore divestment from Motorola, ITT,
Citibank and United Technologies for their role in sustaining the occupation.
Dickson is the retired Presbyterian pastor who introduced the 2004 divestment resolution.
He did not consider including boycott at the time because he felt that unlike divestment, which
lends itself to corporate engagement, boycott precludes dialogue. He rightly predicted
divestment’s potential to excite controversy notwithstanding the church’s legacy of principled
divestment from South Africa, Indonesia and Sudan, among other human rights violators.
Indicative of the continuing shift within the church, Dickson and his colleagues are now thinking
of introducing the concept of apartheid at the 2010 General Assembly because “it will help
people to realize that Israel is as bad as South Africa in its poor treatment of people of color….
Because most people in the US see Israel as a benevolent democracy and see Palestinians as
terrorists, reframing who Israel is will help us.”
Blessing or Burden?
Notwithstanding its popular association with South Africa’s experience, the term “apartheid” is
not a requisite element of the BDS strategy, though it may be a useful instrument of branding in
and of itself. Like the US Campaign, Code Pink and the Presbyterians, activist groups have
launched BDS campaigns without adopting the loaded term, only to adopt it later as their
advocacy efforts developed. Even Students Confronting Apartheid by Israel, a group at Stanford
University for whom the term was obviously central, has used it tactically at most.
According to Omar Shakir, a founding member of the group who is now at Georgetown,
the Stanford students wanted to make apartheid central to demonstrate the power disparity
inherent in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and move beyond the language of “two sides,” which
can imply that Israel and the Palestinians have equal resources to draw upon. When campus
opposition focused on the asymmetry between the South African and Palestinian cases, however,
Shakir and his colleagues dropped the framework and focused instead on divestment criteria,
including disparate treatment of Israel’s non-Jewish Arab citizens. The method here was to
describe the violation rather than call it by name. “In the beginning,” Shakir comments, “the
opposition focused on apartheid more than our goal of divestment…. We liked the way we did it
because we could pick and choose; we weren’t wedded to apartheid.”
The apartheid framework is both a blessing and a burden. On the one hand, because the
South African experience is so well known and so roundly condemned, mere mention of
apartheid puts Israel on the defensive, forcing pro-Israel advocates to defend an entrenched
system of racial discrimination and oppression rather than rally support for Israel’s security. On
the other hand, the two cases are far from identical. No South African blacks were allowed to
vote or participate in government, as are Palestinian citizens in Israel. Nor were they subject to
military offensives or debilitating humanitarian blockades as are Palestinians in the Gaza Strip,
and nor were tens of thousands exiled as refugees to raise subsequent generations in the diaspora.
Notwithstanding these differences, in the BDS movement there is general consensus that the
apartheid framework is effective, especially in the symbolic realm. As Lisa Taraki, a Birzeit
University professor and PACBI steering committee member, comments, “All historic analogies
are fraught with problems, but in this case…I think this line of argument has been very
successful on the whole, and has put Israel’s supporters in a very uncomfortable position, to put
it mildly.”
That activists deploy the “A-word” tactically does not diminish its applicability to IsraelPalestine or the sincere belief among organizers that the framework is apt. To the contrary,
Shakir and Taraki’s attitudes are responses to detractors whose focus on the analogy’s fine print
is an attempt to dismiss it for lack of perfect symmetry. Such attempts are misguided because
although the South African experience makes the apartheid paradigm more compelling, it is by
no means the yardstick against which to measure all occurrences of apartheid, whether in IsraelPalestine or elsewhere. Perhaps only a legal forum like the International Court of Justice can
settle this tension. In the meantime, public discussions of Israeli apartheid continue to be a battle
for domination of the symbolic world.
Strategic Considerations
Activists have waged this battle offensively for six years in their organizing of Israeli Apartheid
Week. Originally a week of educational activities in Toronto and New York, today it spans 40
cities worldwide, including, for the first time in 2010, Beirut.
Adalah-New York’s BDS campaign is an organic outgrowth of Israeli Apartheid Week
organizing. Unlike other groups, Adalah-NY began with the apartheid framework first and
moved toward the divestment tactic later. The success of its campaign against Lev Leviev, an
Israeli diamond mogul whose companies support the expansion of settlements in East Jerusalem
and the West Bank, has made it a premier example of BDS organizing in the US. Lubna
Ka‘abneh of Adalah-NY explains that the apartheid analogy constituted a cornerstone of the
group’s outreach work “so that our [US] audience could make the connection to their own
experiences.” Ka‘abneh and her cohorts have discovered that American audiences relate much
more easily to narratives of institutionalized racial discrimination than those of occupation.
Hence they work to draw parallels between the civil rights movement and the Palestinian
movement to achieve freedom and equality.
Since launching its campaign in 2008, Adalah-NY has effectively pressed Danish Bank
Dankse and the Danish pension fund PKA to exclude Leviev’s enterprise, Africa-Israel, from its
investment portfolio, encouraged the second largest Dutch pension fund to divest from AfricaIsrael, and convinced UNICEF, Oxfam, the British government and several Hollywood stars to
distance themselves from the entrepreneur. Adalah-NY’s success in simultaneously highlighting
Israel’s discriminatory character while choosing the occupation as its BDS target both captures
the movement’s strategic possibilities and reflects political maturity in the movement.
The history of efforts at Berkeley is very telling as well. While originally written to
combat Israeli apartheid and therefore target all companies with subsidiaries worth $5,000 or
more within Israel, the student body resolution SB 118 eventually limited itself to two American
corporations that profit from Israel’s military occupation. “Divestment is ultimately about
students engaging the administration,” comments Abdel-Rahman Zahzah, a founding member of
the Berkeley campaign and now a leader of similar efforts in Beirut. Zahzah notes that Berkeley
students did not start out with a political strategy in 2001. Instead they issued abrupt threats to
the administration: “Divest all your holdings from apartheid Israel or we’ll take over academic
buildings.” While activists did occupy Wheeler Hall twice, they did not come close to achieving
divestment until nine years later when students introduced SB 118 in the student senate.
The tactical shift is derived in part from Hampshire College’s monumental success in
becoming the first American institution of higher education to divest from Israel in 2009. Ilana
Rosoff, a leading student organizer at Hampshire, explains that their campaign was a direct
response to the Palestinian BDS call. Her fellows were motivated by the opportunity “to stand
behind and re-empower Palestinians in their own national struggle.” Still, to avoid debilitating
opposition, the students developed a strategy that targeted Israel’s occupation “but did not try to
make moral arguments about Israel as a nation-state.”
The students won over the college’s board of trustees when in February 2009, trustees
voted to divest Hampshire’s holdings from Caterpillar, United Technologies, General Electric,
ITT and Terex, companies that supply the Israeli military with equipment and services for use in
the Occupied Territories. Under pressure from Alan Dershowitz, one of several self-appointed
policemen of American discourse about Israel-Palestine, Hampshire’s administration denied that
its decision was linked to Israeli human rights abuses and trumpeted its other investments in
Israeli firms. The minutes of the board of trustees’ meeting nevertheless reveal an explicit link;
the college president “acknowledged that it was the good work of Students for Justice in
Palestine that brought this issue to the attention of the committee.” And, of course, the students
took care to claim that Hampshire was divesting from Israeli occupation, not from Israel.
The Logic of BDS
While the Hampshire and Adalah-NY successes have made indelible marks, most campaigns
cannot demonstrate their work’s impact in measurable units. Instead, the virtue of BDS has been
its ability to challenge Israel’s moral authority, arguably the most coveted weapon in its arsenal.
Israel was not a major recipient of US aid dollars until the aftermath of the Six-Day War, which
greatly enhanced Israel’s image as a David facing down an Arab Goliath. In June 1968, the
Johnson administration, with strong support from Congress, approved the sale of supersonic
aircraft to Israel and established the precedent of US support for “Israel’s qualitative military
edge over its neighbors” (actually, any possible combination of its neighbors). Since then, no
American politician seeking high office has spoken of Middle East peace without first stressing
US commitment to the security of Israel.
BDS campaigns puncture holes in this security narrative by assuming an offensive
posture. By asserting that Israel is worthy of BDS treatment, activists compel Israel’s defenders
to explain the logic of its policies, such as the imprisonment, at one time or another since 1967,
of 20 percent of the entire Palestinian population. When the conversation is taken to its logical
end, as it is more and more often, pro-Israel spokespersons are forced to declare that
Palestinians’ mere existence is a security threat.
In a recent address in Herzilya, site of an important annual security conference in Israel,
Harvard fellow Martin Kramer leapt straight to the bottom of this slippery slope. Kramer argued
that when the proportion of adult men in the Arab and Muslim world reaches 40 percent of the
population, their propensity to violence increases, because they have become “superfluous” in
society. Kramer not only dismissed political explanations for radicalization in favor of simple
demography—dubious social science, to say the least—he concluded by encouraging the
deliberate stunting of population growth among Palestinians as a matter of national security
policy. The address, as Kramer said himself, was “memorable.”
Its legitimacy continually eroded by such pronouncements, Israeli structural
discrimination and occupation will still find allies among Christian Zionists, beseeching God and
Israel to hasten Armageddon, and the defense industry, protecting their net earnings, as well as
those American Jews who, for one reason or another, remain blind to Palestinian suffering.
These allies are formidable, but they are not the broad spectrum of Americans whose backing
Israel wants to safeguard its moral authority. For this reason, AIPAC’s executive director,
Howard Kohr, dedicated his address at the group’s 2009 annual conference to warnings of the
dangers of BDS, which he lamented is “part of a broader campaign not simply to denigrate or
defame Israel but to delegitimize her in the eyes of her allies.”
The Reut Institute, an Israeli think tank, concurs. In its 2009 study, “Building a Political
Firewall Against Israel’s Delegitimization,” Reut concludes that a network of activists working
from the bottom up and from the periphery to the center has succeeded in casting Israel as a
pariah state and warns that, within a few years, the campaign may develop into “a
comprehensive existential threat.” In its presentation to the Knesset, the institute recommended
that the government mitigate this threat with a multi-pronged strategy, including ending its
control of the Palestinian population in the Occupied Territories.
Taraki says that such statements show BDS is having an effect. Unlike efforts at
dialogue, which reinforced power discrepancies by creating “a false sense of symmetry [that]
does not acknowledge the colonizer-colonized relationship,” BDS tackles Israel head on. The
proper response to ending Israel’s impunity is the application of pressure and “the logic of BDS
is the logic of pressure.”
On the horizon is the burgeoning movement for academic and cultural boycotts.
Although launched a year before the 2005 BDS call, academic and cultural boycott does not
enjoy the support of economic BDS campaigns. Some argue that culture should be immune from
politics and that boycotting intellectuals infringes upon academic freedom. Others contend that
Israeli intellectuals are the best allies in Israel of the global movement for peace with justice. A
close examination of the PACBI call makes it clear that boycott is restricted to Israeli institutions
and entities that are complicit in justifying, promoting, supporting or otherwise perpetuating
Israel’s occupation, colonization and apartheid. Today, this call could not be more relevant as
Israel rolls out its “Brand Israel” campaign, meant to rehabilitate its hobbled image through the
media of popular culture. Irrespective of form, Barghouti says, BDS is “the most effective form
of solidarity with the Palestinian people today.” Its non-violent and universal nature makes it
“Israel’s worst nightmare.”