For decades, Arabs boycotted Israel, at least on paper. They encouraged companies like Pepsi or Asian car manufacturers to do the same.

And today? Well, I challenge you to name me one large automobile outfit that is not present in Israel with an r&d centre. Did you know that participation requests were received from 22 Arab countries to attend the Our Crowd Investment Summit in Jerusalem two weeks ago?

Why continue to ask for a boycott? On behalf of the Palestinians or the Israeli Arabs? Have a look at these news items from this month.

Start off with J.P. Morgan, which is beginning to expand its presence in the Holy Land on a very prominent scale. Their head of tech in Israel, Dr. Yoav Intrator, observed that:

……we have set a target of increasing the diversity of the human element in the center’s work teams. We have already begun taking steps to achieve this target, both by including women in our teams and by including Arab staff, mainly Israeli Arabs. I think that the lack of diversity in this area is one of the main problems in the Israeli economy, and there is potential for redressing the situation. For example, there is currently a high proportion of Arab women among engineering and computer science students at universities in Israel.

Similarly, Bank Hapoalim is heavily involved in the development of the Arab incubator in Nazareth.

However, most striking for me is the news that “Israel and the Palestinian Authority appeared to have come to an agreement to end a major trade dispute in which both sides placed sweeping restrictions on some of each other’s goods.”

It appears that:

Palestinians exported around $100 million in agricultural products in 2018, including dates and olive oil. About half went to Israel while the rest was sent to other countries, according Abu Laban. In contrast, Palestinians imported approximately $300 million in agricultural goods from Israel in 2018.

Imagine how that can figure can grow. And we all know that trade usually improves bilateral relations between sides. Why boycott in the first place?

And why continue to advocate for a boycott when the people on the ground – those involved – clearly do not advocate for it?

Boycotting Israeli businesses has been a policy of Arab nations since May 1948, when the State of Israel was founded. Just how effective is it today, nearly 70 years on, in a period of globalisation?

The boycott has seen many forms. Initially, the Arab League simply adopted the methodology of the Nuremberg Laws from Nazi Germany. And for decades, most Japanese companies stayed away from the Holy Land. Since the year 2000, the BDS campaign has taken up the call, demanding a disassociation from anything to do with Israel, including overseas players who visit the country.

Surely, over the years, there has been an unmeasured level of success of the messages of such policies entering the minds of neutral thinking people. The result is an increased distrust or worse of Israelis for some. But more than that?

My wife was recently talking to a leading techie in one of Israel’s premier IoT companies. He frequently travels to exhibitions, where Israeli companies are sought after. Any talk of a boycott is simply a joke. Business is business, and political vicissitudes have no place. And that is good for all of us.

As proof of that, look at today’s announcement by SAS to relaunch its flight schedule between Sweden and Israel. Now the Scandinavian country is no friend of Israel’s on the diplomatic scene, to say the least. However, the combination of tourism and business disrupts those paths towards hatred.

To quote from today’s announcement coming out of Israel’s Ministry of Tourism:

The following companies (have also) announced the opening of new routes(to Israel): WOW, Ryanair, Wizz Air, Hainan Airlines and Air India………..Incoming tourism increased 24% in the first quarter 2017 on the same period in 2016.

“Boycott” was a term born in violence in the 1880s. It was hijacked by the revolting racism of the Nazis. It is now employed by the enemies of Israel, hatred wrapped in politically platitudes. Ironically, BDS has a lot of support amongst leading Swedish politicians.

Let us hope the new trade and transport agreements show the way forward for all towards peace for all.

A fascinating review of how Israeli tech is core to the performance of smart TVs has let the cat out of the bag. Despite the malicious efforts by international activists to boycott and to sanction Israel , the talents of the Holy Land are now willingly accepted by billions globally. Samsung and LG users can testify outright to that.

The fact is that this capability is but one of several ways that Israel is now making its mark on international television. For example, it is about four years ago that Cisco bought out a Jerusalem tech company called NDS, which had once been partially owned by Murdoch. Amongst the company’s many offerings, it designs the encryption packages for use by SKY TV and others. This is of immense value for such media giants.

Next in line is the small but rapidly growing crop of Israeli productions that have been picked up by larger studios in more dominant markets such as America, France and China. I think the most notable of these was the emmy-winning programme, “Homeland“.

And then of course, we have the ad industry, crucial to any media outfit. Taboola and Outbrain are probably the two largest content discovery platforms. Their success has sprung out of nothing to billions in less than five years, starting from small offices in the Tel Aviv region.

Finally, to cap everything off, it was announced last week that two Israeli actors will be taking part in the next series of the television blockbuster, Game of Thrones.

The message here is that Israeli innovation is not just restricted to the world of mobiles or biotech. Entrepreneurship is about pushing boundaries. This is what Israel is now doing successfully on your TV, in the comfort of billions of living rooms around the globe.

The campaign to boycott and to sanction Israel and Jerusalem argues that such actions will promote the rights of Palestinians. As I and many other commentators argued earlier this week, the politically correct elements of this statement are actually coated in the repulsiveness of raw racism.

With no small amount of irony, this week has also seen the release of two news items that must count as ‘big fail notices’ in the BDS corner. First, Jordan and Israel have released the details for a tender to build a canal together that will link the Red Sea to the Dead Sea. In parallel, it appears that during the Paris conference of world leaders,  the honoured guests were protected by a healthy chunk of Israel aerial technology.

And then there are ‘the gates of the righteous’ in Jerusalem.

This is the translation of the phrase “Sha’are Zedek“, which is the name of what is probably Jerusalem’s biggest hospital. And it is an institution that I have written about before. In a city of around 850,000 citizens, they carried out around 3,000 operations in November alone.

Walk into the hospital, you see visitors and patients of all persuasions from ultra-orthodox Jews in their own garb to observant Muslims with their own dress code. In the children’s dialysis unit, the receivers of treatment from whatever their socio-ethnic-ethnic background sit side-by-side for weeks and become ‘almost’ friends.

As for the doctors, there are around 25 Israeli non-Jews. In addition, there are about 20 Palestinian doctors, who are receiving training and then return to the various towns and cities in the West Bank. And you will find these post grads in most parts of the hospital; gastro, diagnostic imaging, surgery, etc. And I should quickly add that Sha’are Zeek is not alone in this multicultural approach, even when it comes to treating terrorists.

There is an alternative to these practices in a hospital in Israel: A boycott. But then how many lives – in Israel, in the Palestinian territories or even elsewhere – would be lost? How many families would suffer? So BDS is not just racism, it can kill. That to me is a double evil.

A recent call by UK academics to boycott Israel has been treated by many as just a ‘politically correct version’ of modern anti-Semitism. Interestingly, the EU civil servants in Brussels have delivered a far more proactive response.

About two years ago, Israel was encouraged to join the EU’s Horizon 2020 programme. This is designed to bring together the worlds of academia and commerce from member countries in order to develop the technologies of the future. Several other states are all allowed to participate, including Israel.

The approval of the most recent set of proposals has been announced. These include eleven, which feature an Israeli team. The total value of the investment from Brussels is estimated at over 200 million Euro. And at least three of the projects include a top Israeli university.

Dr Neta Erez from the University of Tel Aviv is part of MetCAF, which will consider molecular changes in cells disturbed by cancer.

Waste2Fuels features participants from both the Weizman Institute and the University of Ben Gurion in Beersheba. They have set out to convert food and agricultural waste into biomass, which will then be used for car engines.

Gravitate has come out of the Technion in Haifa, known in recent years for its Nobel Laureates. It is developing a software to help archeologists to recreate broken artifacts. Interesting that the British Museum is also featured in the grouping.

So what now? Well, I hope all the projects succeed. The alternative is that the boycotters could have their way. Europe would be worse off. Hate will have triumphed. And peace will not have arrived in the Middle East.

Outside Iceland, the country is usually known for its Viking history, geysers, tourism and fishing. To that list, can we now add a hatred of Jerusalem? In a most bizarre act, the council of Reykjavik, the capital city of Iceland, decided this week to boycott all Israeli products. Thus, for these people, anything to do with the one Jewish state in the world of about 200 countries has become no-go territory.

Hmmm!

Let us understand this fully. We know that this is not a national policy of Iceland. Yet, we also know that no other country has been signaled out like this. Strange. For example, also this week, Sky TV analysed those countries, which carry out executions. Saudi Arabia, Iran and the USA lead the stats. And even Palestine had the number 2 against its name. But not a murmur about all this from our councilors in the North.

So what do they wish to boycott – an act, which by the way is a complete abrogation of the terms and spirit of the World Trade Organisation?

About a year ago, Michael Ordman helped to create a wonderful post, which set out to explain what would happen if you really tried to boycott Israel. For example: –

  • Throw out most Intel computers
  • With them will go ALL mobile phones
  • Voice messages, VOD packages, leading generic drugs, and a host of fruits and vegetables just will not enter your home

Assumedly, these are changes that the people of Reykjavik are happy to adopt at the behest of their leading councillors. However, the list would not stop there. Israel is arguably the leading supplier of water tech to dozens of third world countries.

One friend commented to me on Ordman’s list.

This is fascinating and mind blowing, but missing 2 major pieces. First, the invention of exelon, the drug at the forefront of the world’s attempt in managing Alzheimers diseases. It was invented by Professor Marta Rosin. And second, the invention and original patented technology to shrink a JPEG pics. This enables a photograph to be sent via email, whatsapp, face book. It is used by… well almost everyone. It was developed by “Picture Vision”, a Jerusalem based company, who’s CEO was Yaacov Ben Ya’acov.

Mobile, cyber, nano techs – there is no end to the involvement of the Holy Land in this industrial revolution.

And to give this some perspective, Giulio Meotti, an Italian journalist, surmised: For all the triumphs of Israel, “I don’t know another nation on earth which provides its own enemy with water, electricity, food, weapons, and medical treatment.”

If the council of Reykjavik are serious, then good luck to them in their boycott. I hope their voters and their families do not suffer too much. But I wonder if anyone will have the strength and honesty to call this act for what it is – anti-Semitism, just as practicised as far back as the eighth and ninth centuries in the days of the Vikings.

The BDS movement – Boycotting, Divestment, Sanctions – was founded by Omar Barghouti in 2005. An Israeli Arab, who received his degree from Tel Aviv University, he launched an international campaign to ensure that all Israeli products and services, commercial or cultural, are simply not available.

Theoretically, if Israel were to achieve peace through giving up the West Bank and Gaza, then BDS would lose its raison d’etre and close down. As BDS leaders oppose Israel’s very existence, that is unlikely.

It is estimated that a full economic boycott would cost Israel around 1% of its annual GNP, forcing a rise in interest rates and a potential destabilisation of the shekel. However, if peace were to be achieved, it is further estimated that this would boost the economy of the Holy Land by over US$100 billion in a decade. In parallel, the Palestinian economy would receive a 50% fillip.

Last week, the CEO of Orange, Stephane Richard, had to clarify recent remarks, which suggested that his telecom company had bowed to pressure from Qatar and was to leave Israel. Two days earlier, the National Union of Students in the UK had voted to enforce BDS regulations. In February, hundreds of artists committed themselves to refraining from any association with Israel.

I will leave aside the hypocrisy of the issue. After all, none of these boycotters have uttered criticisms of Saudi Arabia and assumedly continue to use plastic products made in Chinese sweatshops. Nor will they complain of the mistreatment of Palestinians by Palestinians or by other Arab regimes. And of course, the similarity of the BDS campaign to the 1936 Nuremberg laws is completely ignored.

However, what I find amazing is how BDS proponents appear to be oblivious to how their actions actually impact negatively on the Palestinian economy and society. Bassam Eid, a Palestinian social activist observed:

I’m opposed to the boycott because it only ends up harming the Palestinians themselves. Take, for example, the SodaStream plant in Mishor Adumim that is now moving some of its operations to Be’er Sheva. I’ve met with Palestinians who worked at the factory and were fired because of the move. They told me they were earning an average of NIS 5,000 a month there, and that today they are being offered salaries of just NIS 1,400 in the PA.

To give some perspective of the numbers of Palestinians involved, companies located in the Barkan industrial park in the heart of the West Bank have long been a target of the European Union. Yet of the approximately 20,000 employees, around 50% are Palestinians. Sanction these firms and you will hit those people you ware trying to help. And that is only one of many sectors.

Also forgotten in the inferno of politically-correct rhetoric is the impact BDS may have on fragile economies overseas. Consider the UK, which is still trying to emerge from the 2008 credit crunch. Sajid Javid, the Secretary of State for Business, is wholly aware that bilateral trade amounts for around US$7.0 billion, and growing. Tamper into that and that means lost jobs. Ouch!

Actually, it means more than that. Referring back to the NUS, if the lunatics at the student HQ were to implement their own resolution, they would have to throw out all computers with Intel technology. In fact, a similar threat would hang over their smart phones with GPS applications. And as if this was not making them thirsty, they would also have to stop using all water, as many authorities in the UK are now using Israeli tech to protect supplies or purify sources. And the list goes on.

This summer, Israel is hosting a roller-coaster of performing artists – One Republic, Bon Jovi, Dionne Warwick, etc. In England, the Curzon Cinema chain has refused to heed calls for a boycott of Israeli films. A conference in Jerusalem this coming September of Cognitive Behaviour will feature a spectrum of overseas speakers and will include an address how Palestinian children are effected by violence. The list of BDS rejection is thankfully still long and strong.

To close, I am bound to refer to the head of Google, Eric Shmidt, who ironically found himself visiting Israel earlier this week.

The impact Israelis are having on science and technology is immense, so that’s why I’m here and why I’m investing here. (In the modern world, for an economy to grow, there is a need for innovation and the establishment of new companies.) For this to happen, a country must invest in several areas – education, high-speed Internet connections, an open immigration policy that allows leading minds to move between countries, and also an environment that encourages entrepreneurship.

So what is the true cruel and despicable reason that BDS supporters want to hide and then to destroy this human triumph, otherwise known as Israeli society? And why do I suddenly hear echoing in my mind the song from Cabaret, when he whispers that “J” word?

There is much talk these days of the potential of a widening boycott against Israeli businesses, because……well, it sounds politically correct.

Israeli advocates point to the hypocrisy of the situation. The boycott campaign proponents (BDS) do not advocate an equivalent boycott of China or elsewhere. Two Israelis, resident in New York, have just concluded a US$100 million property contract on behalf of the government of Qatar, no problems there apparently. A Palestinian survey reveals that 70% of respondents declared a preference for Israeli products. And for all the controversy of Scarlett Johansson’s advert for SodaStream during the Superbowl and the subsequent venom of Oxfam, Palestinians clearly enjoy working for Israeli employers in the West Bank.

OK, but what about encouraging the Arab sector in Israel?

Well, in the past two years, the Prime Minister’s Office has initiated a couple of seminars promoting the issue. Further, a technology incubator has been created in Nazareth, a city combining Jews, Moslems and Christians. Similarly, so few people know about the Al Bawader investment fund, set up in 2010 through an initiative of the Israeli government and the Israeli venture capital group, Pitango. It has a fund of over US$50 million to invest specifically in Arab ventures within Israel.

Al Bawader has a current crop of seven start-ups on its books. A typical example is Ms. Mass Watad, born in 1980 and who studied at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. She currently owns a chain of diet clinics and in addition has developed a massage therapy. She  intends to set up a series of franchises in the Arab world.

Datumate Ltd, very clearly in the high-tech sector, was founded by Dr. Jad Jarroush. Employing ten people and benefitting from the marketing reach of Pitango, it offers software applications for customers in the area of land surveying, civil engineering and architectural planning.

As I write this, there is a very active television campaign in Israel, rejecting racism in all its forms. So few of Israel’s detractors will tell you about this prime-time effort. So few will report on the successes of Al Bawader. There again, so few of them reside in countries with similar adverts.

Brighton is a picturesque seaside resort in southern England. About three months ago, the Israeli company, Sodastream, opened its first UK branch in the city. This sparked a constant flow of anti-Israel demonstrations. The protesters demand that the public boycott Israeli-made products. And their prime argument is that Israeli aggression against whoever should not be rewarded.

Why this protest on behalf of peace should see just today 15 demonstrators take on the police, I do not understand? I note that the same people are happy to buy plastic products from China or drink Russian vodka, governments not known for their delicate handling of protests. And I gather that there were few words uttered on the picket lines against the 1,000 plus rockets that have landed on Israeli civilians from Gaza during 2012.

Hypocrisy? Let’s go one step further. If the organisers were to boycott all Israeli associated products and technology, the soldiers of the seafront would not even have received their marching orders. You see in 2012 vast parts of Microsoft, Intel and mobile technology emanates from r&d centres inside Israel. That’s right, your computer and cell phone are full of made-in-Israel code.

And just how much does the world look to, support and need Israeli products and services? Just peek at these news items from last week.

  • Protalix, which has proven a unique treatment for Gaucher’s Disease, is to sign a major agreement with Brazil.
  • Sanofi-Aventis, one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies, has authorized Sanofi-Aventis Israel Ltd. to acquire a consumer healthcare products company for several tens of millions of dollars.
  • LiveU, which provides live video transmissions from any location with wireless networks and played a significant role in the global coverage of the London Olympics and American elections, has raised a further US$27 million.
  • P2W (pollution to water) has signed a major contract with in South Africa for purifying water in a large mine.
  • By the end of this decade, Israel will be a net exporter of gas and maybe oil energy.

And so the list goes on. In the words of the governor of the Bank of Israel, Israel’s economic growth for 2012 and 2013 is expected to beat current predictions of around 3%.

So, while the vocal and violent proponents of open speech voice their concerns on the coast of Britain, the world as a whole is benefitting from the successes of the one democratic country in the Middle East. Now, what kind of person would want to boycott that?

It’s almost Christmas time, the season of smiling at your fellowman…except if they are Israeli?

The year of 2010 was marked by an increase international campaign to delegitimize Israel. The musicians, Elvis Costello and the Pixies, cancelled a concert in Tel Aviv at the last moment. This week in Seattle, a series of adverts were placed on public buses, decrying so-called Israeli war crimes. In London, there are now regular demonstrations outside retailers stocking Israeli products. And so on, at great length.

Years ago, if you wanted to protest about Israel, you stopped buying Jaffa oranges. So what would happen today, if you were to ignore deliberately Israeli products?

Teva is considered the second largest manufacturer of generic drugs in the world with facilities in Europe and in the USA. Many of their products end up in the bodies of the poor on all continents. I suppose you could just avoid the company, and either suffer or hope that you could afford the alternatives.

What about Argo? Their equipment is helping thousands of people confined to wheelchairs to start walking again. One application was featured recently on Glee, the award-winning tv programme. Of course, paraplegics in Seattle may wish to remain immobile, but me thinks this unlikely.

And then we have fans of Lady Gaga, Bruce S or U-2. These artists and others depend on technical support from Waves Audio, based near Tel Aviv. Like the music or not:

Waves Audio … will be presented with a prestigious Technical GRAMMY® Award during the GRAMMY Week celebration in February 2011. ……With this presentation of the Technical GRAMMY®, Waves joins a prestigious list of previous recipients which includes such well-known names as Apple Computer, Inc., Sony/Philips, Shure Incorporated and Yamaha Corporation.

And we must not forget Intel. 95% of people reading this item will have a computer whose chip tech had been developed in the Holy Land. And the next generation is already in the planning stage. So, switch off your computers and stop listening to most modern music?

So what is the boycott all about?

The true hypocrisy of the boycott was exposed on a picture of the front page of the newspaper Yediot, this Christmas Eve. The reader saw a stream of illegal refugees from Sudan and other parts of central Africa hiking across the Negev desert into Israel.

You have to conclude that Israel is not that bad for these people to come here. And, assuming that they are persecuted in their home countries, why are those protesters against Israel not uttering a word of behalf of these poor souls. Anti-Israel or just old-fashioned hatred?

I have just read a bizarre banner, beaming out political correctness: “Gaza seize isn’t sweet. Boycott Israeli chocs“.

This was all to do with a small protest in New York. It follows similar efforts led by activists, primarily in Europe. They claim that Israel is not interested in peace with the Palestinians, and therefore should be isolated. Sounds cool, until you examine the childish if not racist hypocrisy of the newspeak.

First, consider how these groups spread the word. Obviously, they use computer and mobile tech. Open up these machines of wonder, anywhere in the world, and you will find loads of Israeli tech inside. Yes, Intel’s current and next round of microchip was developed in Israel.

Try googling www.soluto.com. This Tel Aviv start up has just won Tech Crunch’s prestigious 2010 Disrupt competition. Soluto has designed a software to make computer’s work faster. How long will it take for a hate-Israel activists to latch on to that?

Israel’s tech pervades many aspects of life overseas without people being aware of it. Better Place is a prime exponent of battery cars, maing their way into Europe. The country has the top brains in solar and wind tech. The irony is that green politicians, often noted for their criticism of Israel, have consistently failed to reconcile their rhetoric with facts on the ground.

Palestinian President, Abbas, has claimed this week that he “will deal with the USA but not with Israel”. Bravo, a true practioner of the boycott policy.

And here’s the catch! I thought that making peace was all about getting together, finding a way to talk to each other. Rather than boycotting products, surely it would be preferble to arrange joint exhibitions and displays. I is time for Abbas to sit down with his Israeli conterparts. 

If the Palestinians and their supporters are so afraid of letting Israel’s pluralistic society be exposed to others, what are they afraid of? What hatred is their spin covering up?

In September 2000, Yasser Arafat launched the Intifada. An  immediate result of the security concerns was that Israel ceased to employ 125,000 Palestinians from the territories. 125,000 employees  – well paid compared to similar positions in Gaza and in Hebron – lost their wage packet almost instantly.

9 years later, supporters of human rights are asking British customers not to buy Israeli agricultural products. They intend that such a boycott will bolster the livelihood of Palestinians.

Just as the Intifada saw a sharp drop in Palestinian GDP, which is only just showing signs of a full recovery, so too will a boycott of Israel have an equally devastating effect. How so?

Simple – every day, tens of thousands of Palestinians work on Israeli farms. As increasingly supported by Israeli civil law, their conditions are improving annually. Just as with a decade ago, these are comparatively high salaries. Unemployment in the Palestinian territories is still over 20%. They are unlikely to find alternative jobs.

To take the argument one step further, most of Israel’s agricultural exports herald from peripheral areas, where wages are already comparatively low. So a boycott is going to effect Palestinians, along with Bedouin, Jew, Arab and Christian, all re-entering together the poverty trap.

For some, no work is often leads to the path of extremism, a horrible and useless experience for all sides.

With some irony, it is the British themselves who will also suffer from any such boycott. Aside from being deprived of excellent produce, they will create unemployment for their own folk.

Israel is Britain’s largest trading partner in the Middle East – excluding Saudi Arabia with its sales of oil and purchases of armaments. Imagine how many homeland-based British livelihoods a boycott would threaten! Billions of pounds of trade dumped into the sea, only to be trawled away by hungry competitors.

The hypocrisy of the boycott argument is further exposed by its own advocates. They do not call for an imports on Saudi oil not a ban on the use of cheap toys from China, despite the oppressive regimes. And they disseminate their information by e-mail, when their computers are run on Intel tech created in Israel.

Even the spin lacks credibility. For example, such people claim that Israel syphons off water from Palestinian towns, when the opposite is true.

When a political call for action is based in disinformation and will only wound those it is supposedly trying to help, then others must consider the true motivation of hate behind such a movement.

The following article was first published in Hebrew on 23.9.09. He was written by Joshua Sobol, one of Israel’s most popular playrights and long associated with left-wing issues.

The British trade unions decided last week to call for a boycott of Israeli goods produced beyond the Green Line.  They added, in the same decision, a call for a general boycott on the transportation and sale of Israeli products in Britain.  Likewise, they are calling to freeze contacts regarding the upgrading of Israel’s relations with the European Union until the Palestinians receive justice.

 

There is a reasonable chance that the decision to impose a boycott on Israel by British unions will achieve two results.  On the one hand, it will strengthen the Israeli Right, because the boycott will undoubtedly be perceived by the majority of Israelis as an expression of hate towards Israel by the European Left.  Thus, this pathetic boycott will award another merciful blow to what remains of the Israeli Left which, beaten and wounded, has been crawling towards the right since the Al-Aqsa intifada (which, actually, is the second Naqba that the Palestinians have brought upon themselves).

Additionally, this boycott will spur and develop the special Israeli talent to make the most out of pressured situations.  It already happened in the past when [French] President de Gaulle imposed a total embargo of weapons shipments to Israel as punishment for embarking on the Six Day War against his advice.  This same French embargo instigated the awesome development of Israel’s military and air force industries.  If Israel became a major power in the production of UAVs, anti-missile missiles and a wide ranging arsenal of the most sophisticated weapons of war, indeed it is thanks to the boycott which de Gaulle imposed on us.

Another fact, which until now has perhaps not been given sufficient exposure, is in connection to the contribution of the Arab boycott to the development of the Israel pharmaceutical industry.  I heard from a man who headed one of the flourishing medical industries, that after European pharmaceutical corporations capitulated to the Arab boycott in the first years after the establishment of Israel, the Israeli pharmaceutical industry had no alternative other than to expediently fill the shortage of medicines that was created as a result of the boycott.

Thus, the Arab League contributed to the establishment of Teva Pharmaceuticals, and it turned into a flourishing international giant, which competes globally and, with great success, crushes the same corporations that capitulated 50 years ago to the Arab boycott.

Jews have always been the target of boycotts, imposed on them from time to time by the hateful and the mighty.  It is no wonder, indeed, that we have learned how best to profit from malicious boycotts that have been imposed on us.  It is possible to say that an anti-Jewish boycott is Jewish oxygen.  Even the relationship between the Israeli people and their God is a relationship of uncountable shunnings and bans.

The bans which God imposed upon his people gave birth to two Jewish reactions to this divine ban: Orthodox Jewry repeatedly knocks every day of the year, but especially during the Days of Awe, on the gates of heaven requesting that the divine ban be repealed; whereas atheistic Jewry departed, sighing, from God and his bans, and decided to make the best possible advantage of this essential disadvantage.  From this position was born political Zionism.

Perhaps an intelligent Englishman will be found who, armed with these facts, will enlighten the heads of the British trade unions who rushed with elation in their hearts and pen in hand to sign this new boycott of theirs; perhaps someone will be found who will enlighten them as to the extent of the responsibility which they share for participating in the foiling of Obama’s initiative.  Because they, with their theatrical gesture, have succeeded once again to imbue the Palestinian leadership with the delusion that they have someone to count on in perfidious Albion, and as a result the Palestinians will harden their terms and torpedo the resumption of talks, to the delight of the Israeli Right, which can once again claim that there is no one to talk to.

Once again, the miserable Palestinians are paying the price for the empty gestures of the irresponsible European Left, which derives satisfaction from the very gestures it makes.

As Jews to prepare to celebrate their New Year and Muslims conclude the fasting period of Ramadan, I have prepared a series of article on what you may not know about Israel.

The first text questions if Israel is really interested in helping the Palestinian economy.

Early next week, the ad-hoc liaison committee monitoring international aid to the Palestinians will meet in New York. Israel prepared a submission, heavily reliant on stats supplied from the Palestinian Bureau of Statistics.

Some the highlights of the report reveal that:-

  1. Since 2008, foreign investment in the West Bank has risen by 600%. (You have to ask why the same is not true for Gaza.)
  2. The IMF estimates that GDP in 2009 will climb by 7%. To Matching this, unemployment dropped from 20% to 16% in 2Q09.
  3. Direct and indirect trade between the two territories continues to climb. In fact dozens more roadblocks were removed this week.
  4. The number of work permits and the accredited business cards issued for Palestinians in Israel is rising almost daily.
  5. Cooperation over tourism, VAT collection, fiscal issues and other commercial matters have been launched from Jerusalem in the past year.
  6. Despite the Hamas authoritarian rule in Gaza, humanitarian supplies are continuing almost daily and at a growing rate. This includes nearly 3,500 tons of medical equipment delivered in the first 6 months of 2009.
  7. In June 2009 alone, 1,700 residents of Gaza received medical treatment in Israel. Under the Oslo Accords, Hamas is responsible for health policy and its implementation.

As I was writing this, news came through from the United Kingdom that the Trades Union movement has voted to boycott some Israeli goods, following Israel’s policy towards Gaza. Ironic? Or a reminder of a sinister past based on ignorance?

The weband utube is flooded with calls to boycott Israeli goods. They are frequently racist, masking behind politically correct statements. They are inherently hypocritical.

Do the Palestinians boycott the Israeli economy? Well, we know that extremists like Hamas for years have tried to ensure that Israeli consumer products, especially food items, have no place in Arab shops. Obviously, this kind of ethnicity is morally justifiable, isn’t it.

On the other hand, we know that every day, tens of thousands of Palestinian workers voluntarily enter Israel, primarily as manual labour. Remember, relative to what can be earned in Gaza or in Jenin, they high salaries.

OK, well that may be an economic necessity, but what about trade?

This week, a seminar was held near the Allenby Bridge between the Palestinian and the Israeli business community. Did you know that in the year 2008 alone, the two economies created 20 billion shekels of volume?

Do you know how many jobs that is worth? Do you what that represents in terms of investment for small businesses?

The Netanyahu government is committed to ensuring this trade surges forward. In London, the Israeli Prime Minister stated at a press conference that: –

We have already moved: my government has removed, to be precise, 147 checkpoints and roadblocks. The 14 remaining checkpoints, 12 of them are manned 24 hours a day, seven days a week, to facilitate movement. I have extended the time of passage on the Allenby Bridge on the Jordan River in order to facilitate movement in and out of the Palestinian territories. I chair a ministerial committee that seeks to remove and has removed roadblocks to economic activity in the West Bank. We’ve moved on the ground.

In parallel, much will be determined by the ability and desire of Palestinian leaders to reign in the terror machines. In the West Bank, there are clear successes here for the short term.

Unfortunately, Hamas has allowed a continuation of shelling, as residents in Zikim, Ashkelon and other Israeli towns can testify this week. Thus, they are ensuring that the passage of trade is minimal at best.

So, next time you hear about calls for a boycott of Israel, ask the proponent why Palestinians do not join in. And then point out a few home truths.

The British Trades Union movement is a fussy character. It demands that other countries open up their markets to British goods. In return, more and more of its member organisations are campaigning against Israeli products.

Naturally, those who will suffer first are the Israeli working classes, as they could lose their jobs. But that is irrelevant for the big chiefs of the Labour.

Also ignored is the fact that there is no mutual condemnation of Palestinian violence. Neither is there a word of protest against the lack of human rights in Palestinian society. 2010 elections will be delayed. Or see the latest report from the  Independent Commission for Human Rights.

So, it came as a pleasant surprise to me, when I encountered a local London street market, where at least two of the stalls are openly selling Israeli consumer products. Such markets are very popular in London and are gradually emerging in more and more places.

I checked the labels – the place of origin was clearly marked. As I approached during the lunchtime period, there were several active buyers in the vicinity. Yup, and many of the vendors looked as if they would welcome trades union support for better conditions etc.

Maybe the unionleaders should evaluate the true level of their hypocrisy. Their campaigns are planned on computers and mobiles, loaded with Israeli tech. Many of their largest unions, such as hospital workers, operate machines built in Israel. And their anti-Israel rhetoric can be traced to that which was shouted at them by facists in the 1930s.

Spin is a soothing drug, which helps us to forget and to ignore the lessons of history.

Ken Loach is a brilliant British film director. That is a precious skill, because cinematography is a key medium to ensure that holders of differing opinions communicate with each other. And Loach has an excellent history of bringing difficult subjects to the attention of big screen viewers.

This week, Loach spat in the eyes of his own profession. He actively and successfully campaigned to ensure that the Edinburgh International Film Festival did not receive a small grant to feature an Israeli film.

The film is a romance set in a sex-therapy clinic, and makes no reference to war or politics. It recently won an award for Best Film at Israel’s International Women’s Film Festival. The film is produced by a Tel Aviv University student

So what? Loach was looking to ban Israeli participation.

EIFF had commented that: “Not accepting support from one particular country ‘would set a dangerous precedent by politicising what is a wholly cultural and artistic mission. We are firm believers in free cultural exchange, and do not feel that ghettoising filmmakers or restricting their ability to communicate artistically on the basis that they come from a troubled territory is of any benefit.”

A few days later, the organisers capitulated, pathetically.

The actions of Loach are detestable. He claims that his argument against Israel is based on the country’s excessive force. If that were true, why does he not complain about Palestinians to the same degree? With true irony, as he was campaigning, rockets landed on people’s homes in Sderot, southern Israel.

Loach is a hypocrite. By isolating one group of people in the global society to relieve his hatred, he opens himself to the accusal of racism. He copies tactics employed by those who have hated Jews over the centuries, and wraps in acceptable 21st century spin.

The acclaimed director has learnt how to control the communication of others.

I bet that Ken Loach cultivated his political activism partially on the works on George Orwell, the author of 1984.

One key message of Orwell’s philosophy was the need to speak out when people try to clamp dows on freedom of expression. Loach has crossed that line of human decency.

I am increasingly asked why people want to boycott Israel.

Ignoring outright anti-semites, what makes somebody deliberately want to isolate the sole proclaimed democracy in the Middle East? So I invite you to take a few minutes and join me in analysing the background and to come up with a solid intellectual argument.

Background:

Briefly, Arab countries have been demanding a boycott of Israel, even prior to its creation in 1948, at least 19 years before the issue of the West Bank cropped up. And this demand includes a wish to force non-Arab countries to comply with sanctions against Israel.

Skipping forward to the current decade, left-wing activists have taken the lead in calling for a boycott, primarily in Britain.

1)      Trades Unions have repeatedly called for universities not to employ Israeli academics, specifically if they do not comply with a set political point of view.

2)      NGOs have encouraged the British government to demand from retailers that all goods manufactured in Palestinian territories are clearly labeled, way beyond what the EU has agreed with Israel. (The government has reverted to the spin of saying it is responding to consumer pressure, although that abstract has never been proven).

3)      The influential Cooperative Movement in the UK, which sponsors several MPs, is under increasing pressure to boycott Israeli goods.

4)      Where the UK leads, Canada follows. There is a growing movement to launch an academic boycott and stop the import of Israeli wines.

5)      A few Australian professors have also felt a need to climb on to the bandwagon.

6)      In America, Motorola (Israel) sales have been plagued by Palestinian campaigners.

7)      You can search utube for films of how campaigners violently tear Israeli goods of the shelves of French supermarkets or terrorise vendors of Israeli products in UK shopping malls.

8)      The Dutch Labour Party is demanding that Israel talks to Hamas or face sanctions.

So Why Boycott:

Let’s look at 4 possible reasons.

1)      To promote human rights.

Well in that case, there would be calls to boycott 50% of the countries in the world, yes? Type the word “boycott” into google. Around 95 out of the first 100 entries refer to Israel – note “Israel” and not just a call to boycott goods made in the Palestinian territories alone.

It can be assumed that most of these activists are content to accept the repression in Zimbabwe, the slaughter of Christians in Sudan, the racism of Venezuela, or even the totalitarianism of several Islamic regimes including Hamas. For example, the Dutch Labour Party has made no equivalent demand on any Arab party in the conflict.

2)      To help Palestinians.

Israel’s trade union organization, the Histadrut, has a long and strong tradition of working with minority sectors, including Palestinians. They have estimated that a boycott of Israeli products manufactured in Palestinian territories will immediately affect approx 25,000 Palestinian workers.

·         This figure does not include dependants and family member, ensuring that the figure rises towards 150,000.

·         Behind the stat is the fact that these wages are relatively high for the Palestinian sector.

·         Threatened economic instability will threaten new investment.

·         And a boycott of Israel is likely to hit at those sectors that employ tens of thousands of Palestinians working within the pre-1967 armistice agreements.

 

3)      To stop Israel’s violence towards the Palestinians.

This is certainly a noble objective. However, the narrative ignores that fact that most of Israel’s policy in Gaza or elsewhere is based on response. For example, the military action in Gaza in January 09 followed a refusal by Hamas to renew a ceasefire and after 8,000 rockets had landed in Israel over 8 years.

Sanction supporters might have created some credence if they issued a similar demand to boycott Fatah, Hamas and Hizbollah for their violence against Israeli and local civilians. But that balance is consistently lacking in all the arguments.

4)      To help peace

Again highly praiseworthy: But we know that trade between nations and peoples helps to foster understanding and progress. A boycott seals off those very opportunities for all sides.

Boycott’s Raison d’Etre:

So, once you tear away the spin of all these excuses, what are you left with? I looked at the website of Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC). The senior team reads like a “who’s who” of participants of trendy causes since the early 1960s. With a couple of exceptions, I would not associate any of them with being anti-semitic. There are even some non-practicising Jews.

BUT, if you compare the language of the website, it reads strikingly similar to that of the Arab League of the 1940s. Then, these people called for: –

 “Jewish products and manufactured goods shall be considered undesirable..” thus declared the Arab League Council on December 2, 1945. All Arab “institutions, organizations, merchants, commission agents and individuals” were called upon “to refuse to deal in, distribute, or consume Zionist products or manufactured goods.”

 

And the difference with today’s cries against Israel? Very little, as PSC site describes. It is the same venomous hatred as 60+ years ago, except that the spin today is more subtle and comes from politically acceptable Western celebs.

History will judge any future boycott as a triumph of evil; a deliberately racist tool, based on a combination of misinformation, phobias and enmity.

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