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           |  | 
 Brutal Israeli Apartheid Regime:
 Non-Violent 
	BDS Should Be Welcomed, Not Condemned
 
 By Ramzy Baroud
 
 
  
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, April 18, 2016
 
 
  
 Palestinians lining up beside the Israeli Apartheid at a checkpoint in the 
	West Bank
 
 
 
 
		  
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 A thousand Israelis and their supporters gathered in 
	  Jerusalem’s International Convention Center on March 28 at a conference 
	  aimed at combating the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement (BDS).
 
 The conference was a display of “fear, paranoia, anger and 
	  determination,” as 
	  described by Antony Loewenstein, and featured top government 
	  officials, members of the oppositions and a strange conglomerate of 
	  guests, including celebrity has-beens like Roseanne Barr.
 
 Statements made at the conference were predictably frightening and 
	  antagonistic – they amounted to nothing more than a display of the 
	  language of blood and vengeance that people have grown accustomed to 
	  within the Israeli political discourse.
 
 One of the most alarming of the statements was made by Israeli 
	  Minister of Transportation, Israel Katz, who called for the “focused 
	  civilian elimination of the leadership of BDS.”
 
 We need to 
	  know how “to act against them, how to isolate them, also to transfer 
	  information to intelligence agents around the world, and other agents. We 
	  have to understand that there is a battle here. It is wrapped in many 
	  covers,” Katz said.
 
 Barr on the other hand, called 
	  for nuclear bombing the University of California-Davis following its 
	  students’ support of BDS.
 
 One must certainly have no illusions 
	  regarding the ferocity of the fight ahead - this is the nature of conflict 
	  between any popular movement, the objective of which is to put pressure on 
	  a state that violates international law with impunity, and a government 
	  that sees itself above and in no way bound by the law.
 
 The impetus 
	  behind the antagonism faced by the BDS movement is that it has in fact 
	  matured in its message and grown in size with its primary objective 
	  clear-cut - Israel, sooner or later would see BDS as a threat, and would 
	  move decisively to combat it.
 
 However, one can certainly not be 
	  oblivious to the internal challenges faced by BDS itself. While the 
	  movement is largely de-centralized, and local decisions are left to the 
	  numerous branches located throughout the world, speaking in one voice is a 
	  certain challenge. Of course, there are the guiding principles, but it 
	  remains essential to overcome the practical hindrances to an honest and 
	  transparent democratic dialogue in order to keep the movement strong and 
	  forward thinking.
 
 BDS was initiated after repeated calls from 
	  Palestinian civil society, especially in 2004 and 2005 to 
	  boycott Israel for its crimes against Palestinians, its violations of 
	  international law, its illegal occupation and its discriminatory, 
	  racially-motivated policies. The call found receptive audiences across the 
	  world, and over the last decade it became the primary platform, if not 
	  rally-cry for pro-Palestine activists confronting Israel.
 
 BDS did 
	  not expand so significantly in recent years only because of its own 
	  organization and successful branding. One cannot ignore the multiple 
	  crimes carried out by the Israeli army and armed Jewish settlers since 
	  then. One cannot overlook the many racist laws passed by the Israeli 
	  Knesset, targeting the country’s minorities. With every killing, every 
	  additional day of siege on Gaza, every war, and every abhorrent statement 
	  made by an Israeli official, BDS grew - significantly.
 
 BDS owes 
	  much of its success to an effective strategy that is predicated on 
	  harnessing the energy of civil society, but also to the fact that Israel 
	  is relentless in demonstrating the need for global action, to end the 
	  occupation, the discrimination and the impunity of an army that killed 
	  much too many Palestinians.
 
 Yet, not until recently did Israelis 
	  and their supporters begin viewing BDS with alarm, if not real concern. In 
	  the past, that job was left to Zionist student groupings in Western 
	  campuses. But they failed, and terribly so, to stem the flow of the 
	  pro-Palestine sentiments in US-Western campuses. As of last year, a large 
	  anti-BDS movement began forming with the sole purpose of crushing the 
	  budding BDS movement, but to no avail.
 
 The ‘big guns’ were 
	  summoned by two massively rich Zionists, casino mogul Sheldon Adelson and 
	  Haim Saban. They invited fellow millionaires to a June 2015 conference in 
	  Las Vegas in order to raise funds for an anti-BDS movement. Those invited, 
	  mostly rightwing zealots, went to the Venetian hotel, (also owned by 
	  Adelson) with the understanding that a minimal acceptable donation is one 
	  million dollars.
 
 Anti-BDS activists and government officials who 
	  travelled to Las Vegas for the event were promised 
	  by an Israeli-American businessmen, Adam Milstein thatthey “no longer 
	  have to worry about financing and fundraising. You just need to be 
	  united.”
 
 Galvanizing on the momentum, Hillary Clinton, who is now 
	  leading in her party’s primaries as a precursor for presidential elections 
	  in November, sent Saban a letter that could serve as a glaring example 
	  of a politician groveling to a rich funder with no regard for morality 
	  or self-respect:
 
 Under the letter heading, ‘Hilary 
	  for America,’ she wrote to "express her alarm" over BDS, insisting 
	  that countering the movement must become a ‘priority’. "I am seeking your 
	  advice on how we can work together to reverse this trend," she wrote.
 
 “As a Senator and a Secretary of State, I saw how crucial it is for 
	  America to defend Israel at every turn. I have opposed dozens of 
	  anti-Israel resolutions at the UN, the Human Rights Council and other 
	  international organizations," she boasted, going as far as condemning the 
	  Goldstone Report which accused Israel of committing war crimes in Gaza.
 
 Clinton is not alone. In June 2015, soon after the anti-BDS 
	  millionaires’ club concluded its gathering in Las Vegas, President Barack 
	  Obama signed into law a measure specifically 
	  designed to combat BDS.
 
 “The Trade Promotion Authority 
	  legislation .. contained the anti-BDS provisions, which make rejection of 
	  the phenomenon a top priority for US negotiators as they work on a more 
	  distant free trade agreement with the European Union,” the Times of 
	  Israel reported.
 
 Within months, the flood-gates had opened, and a foray of BDS 
	  condemnations followed. Yet, this was largely a farce. The calls from 
	  Western governments, originating from the UK, the US, Canada and others to 
	  criminalize the boycott of Israel have hardly slowed down the momentum of 
	  the movement. On the contrary, it has accelerated it.
 
 History has 
	  taught us that criminalizing civil society and outlawing ideas, especially 
	  those that are guided by moral principles, is never a good idea. Nor is 
	  calling for ‘eliminating’ 
	  civilian society activists and bombing their universities.
 
 The 
	  only sensible strategy to combat BDS is one that not a single speaker in 
	  the anti-BDS gatherings had raised: ending the very criminal and racist 
	  policies that inspired BDS in the first place.
 
 BDS has, thus far, been the most 
	  successful strategy and tactic to support Palestinian steadfastness 
	  while, at the same time, holding Israel accountable for its progressively 
	  worsening policies of apartheid.
 
 International pressure is 
	  building up, placing the ball 
	  firmly in the Israeli court, and no amount of bombs or firepower can 
	  ever solve Israel’s quandary this time.
 
 – Dr. Ramzy Baroud has 
	  been writing about the Middle East for over 20 years. He is an 
	  internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of 
	  several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books include 
	  ‘Searching Jenin’, ‘The Second Palestinian Intifada’ and his latest ‘My 
	  Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story’. His website is: www.ramzybaroud.net.
 
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