Paul Richards
Dividing the Lib-Con coalition
Kate Green MP
Jonathan Reynolds MP
James Plunkett
Nur Laiq
Steve Cockburn
Louisa Thomson
Alex Bigham
Rupa Huq
Hannah Blythyn
Rachel Reeves MP
David Chaplin & Jamie McMahon
Maria Carolina Latorre
Judith Fisher
Theo Blackwell
David Hencke
Liz Kendall MP
News and views from the education frontline
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Labour links
- The Labour party
- Young Labour
- Labour Students
- The Co-op party
- European Parliamentary Labour party
- Party of European Socialists
- Unions Together
- LGA Labour Group
- Change we see
Blogs
- Alastair Campbell
- Anthony Painter
- Bloggers4Labour
- Comment is free
- Conor Ryan
- Cllr Bob Piper
- Boris Watch
- The Daily Dish (Andrew Sullivan)
- Dave Hill's London blog
- Darren Murphy
- David Hencke
- Denis MacShane
- Emma Reynolds MP
- Engage
- The Euston Manifesto
- Fox in parliament
- Euston Manifesto
- Freemania
- Gareth Butler History Trust
- Go Fourth
- Greater Manchester Fabian Society
- Harry's Place
- The Honeyball Buzz
- Hopi Sen
- Kate Green MP
- Kerry McCarthy
- Kezia Dugdale
- LabourHome
- LabourList
- Labour Matters
- LabourWomen
- Left Foot Forward
- Liberal Conspiracy
- Liz Kendall
- Luke Akehurst
- Mark Bennett
- Mike Ion
- Next Left
- Nick Cohen
- NormBlog
- Oliver Kamm
- OpenLeft
- Pat McFadden
- Phillipe Legrain
- Pickled Politics
- Political Hack UK
- Politics for People
- Political Scrapbook
- Rob Carr - A Novocastrian Abroad
- Rob Chesworth
- Robert Sharp
- Rupa Huq
- Sadiq Khan
- Sarah Hayward
- Seema Malhotra
- Stephen Beer
- Tank the Tories
- Theo's Blog
- The Audacity of Pope
- Tim McLoughlin
- Tom Harris
- Tory Stories
- Tory Troll
- ToUChstone blog
- Tygerland
Progressive links
- Christian Socialist Movement
- Democratiya
- Demos
- Fabian Society
- Foreign Policy Centre
- ippr
- Jewish Labour Society
- Labour Campaign for International Development
- Labour Friends of Iraq
- Labour Friends of Israel
- Labour Friends of Palestine & the Middle East
- Labour Humanists
- Labour Uncut
- New Local Government Network
- Policy Network
- Scientists for Labour
- Social Market Foundation
- Smith Institute
- Stephen Twigg for West Derby
- Unions 21
Other Labour Parties
- Irish Labour Party
- Dutch Labour Party
- New Zealand Labour Party
- Australian Labour Party
- Israeli Labour Party
- Maltese Labour Party
Opposition links
Other political links
False analogies
Israeli boycotters are wrong to compare the Jewish state with apartheid South Africa
It is easy to make the case for a boycott of Israel. You start by saying that Israel is an apartheid state. You 'demonstrate' this fact by giving some examples of institutional racism against Palestinians and you tell some harrowing stories of real injustices done to Palestinians. And we know what to do with an apartheid state, don't we? The successful boycott of apartheid South Africa shows us the way.But Israel is not South Africa. The conflict between Israel and Palestine is a territorial conflict between two peoples, both with tear-stained histories, struggling to maintain, or win, national independence. Apartheid in South Africa, where a small elite lived off the labour of a large and disenfranchised black population, ended when the majority won a democratic constitution. In contrast, the Israel/Palestine conflict can only be settled by an end to the Israeli occupation, and the foundation of an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel.
Use of the apartheid analogy is intended to make us want to take sides with Palestine against Israel. But the left ought to be taking sides with those who fight for peace against the chauvinists and fundamentalists within both Israel and Palestine. The boycott campaign gives up on the project of peace and instead encourages the view that Israel can be defeated or even got rid of. The boycotters have given up on any possibility of normalising relationships between Israelis and Palestinians and they give up the hope for a peaceful Middle East.
Academics and trade unionists should be organising exchange programmes; they should be teaching in Palestine and Israel; they should be supporting Palestinian hospitals, sending books, money, equipment and friendship. Palestinians need political and practical solidarity. They need us to campaign against the occupation, against the Israeli regime in the West Bank. They need for us to campaign for freedom of expression and freedom of movement for Palestinian academics and students. We should campaign for our governments to do what they can to help and encourage and coerce the two peoples to come to a peace agreement.
But a boycott of Israeli Jewish academics, thinkers, writers, musicians and artists would help nobody. We should encourage engagement and communication rather than erecting even more artificial barriers to go with the ones that already exist.
Trade unions need to have a consistent policy with regards human rights violations in the world. The boycott campaign treats Israel as though it were a unique evil while it treats other human rights abusers, some responsible for violence on a hugely greater scale, much more leniently. There is no boycott campaign against Sudan, North Korea, Congo, Zimbabwe, China, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Britain, USA, Sri Lanka, Syria, Turkey - even though all are equal or worse human rights abusers.
A boycott of the Israeli academic and cultural community holds filmmakers, philosophers, footballers, choreographers and sculptors responsible for the actions of their state. We do not hold cultural producers anywhere else similarly responsible. The academic and artistic spheres in Israel are amongst the spaces were anti-racism is the norm and where peace is taught, practiced and struggled for.
The boycott campaign damages the unity of our own trade unions. Instead of proposing campaigns that can unite British trade unionists in support of peace, it proposes strategies that divide our unions. It asks us to exclude Israeli Jews from our campuses and from our theatres, from our journals and from our concert halls. Which trade unionist will feel comfortable picketing a lecture given by an Israeli Jewish scholar or organising a protest against an Israeli Jewish dancer? The boycott campaign talks of an 'institutional' boycott, but lectures are not given, ballets are not danced, by institutions.
http://www.engageonline.org.uk/home/
David Hirsh is editor of Engage and a lecturer at Goldsmiths College, University of London
13 Sep 2006 00:00
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