The mainstream media does not know it, and far too many high steeple church folk do not want to know it.
But in Tampa, Florida, this week, the General Conference of the United Methodist Church will make a decision.
They will spend the week writing and rewriting. Some, like Alissa Bertsch Johnson, a campus minister at Washington State University (at right), will passionately state their case.
Before the gavel falls on the last session of the 2012 General Conference, the people called Methodists will have responded, one way or another, to the call from Palestinian Christians that they take one small step toward ending the Israeli Occupation.
They may vote to endorse a targeted divestment resolution.
Or, they may declare that such action is not needed, forgetting that in doing so, they follow the path of those segregation-tolerating Birmingham church leaders who wrote to Martin Luther King, Jr., in words to this effect, “it is too soon to attack this evil. We must wait until our people are with us.”
A half century since King died in his battle with the evil of racism, we are still waiting for the end of yet another manifestation of racism, one which continues to be tolerated, and even worse, financially sponsored, by the spiritual heirs of those earlier Birmingham church divines to whom King wrote his historic letter from a Birmingham jail.
In Martin Luther King, Jr’s, time, the “go slow” church leaders tolerated the evil that was in Selma, Alabama, the suburbs of Chicago, and the dark, frightening country roads of Mississippi.
In our time, “go slow” religious leaders refuse to see the evil of a so-called security barrier, a wall built not for Israel’s security, but as a land-stealing, prison enclosure, of the Palestinian people.
The “go slow” church leaders, and the parishioners they lead, choose not to acknowledge that the evil of Selma, Alabama, the South Side of Chicago, or the country roads of Mississippi, are still with us in Palestine where US church funds are used to build and maintain an Occupation.
The final United Methodist divestment vote will involve a resolution that instructs the church’s financial managers to divest from three American corporations that have refused to cease from profiting from the Occupation.
Israel’s supporters who have infiltrated the United Methodist legislative body, both as delegates and observers, are waging the divestment effort with half truths and outright lies, the same tactic used by secular politicians for whom truth-speaking is an unknown language.
During the first week of the General Conference, delegates met in committees and sub committees to hassle over the wording of the final resolution. Occupation supporters want language in the resolution they can spin in their favor.
Above all, they want to remove the term “divestment”, which evokes the image of Israel as a modern day South Africa. In the past, one way to avoid this image is to employ evasive language like “constructive engagement”.
The winner of the resolution game will be the side that can spin the final action with its own special twist that produces a victory headline.
No matter how you spin it, as James Carville once said in an earlier political conflict, “its the Occupation, stupid”.
Opponents of the divestment resolution claim the church is endorsing a “boycott” of Israel. On the contrary, this resolution has nothing to do with boycotting. It is a divestment resolution that controls how the church invests its own funds, period.
Remember well the names of the three corporations which refused to listen to those for whom “going slow” has meant a continuation of humiliation and suffering.
They refused to listen to the case delegations of United Methodists have made to them to stop supporting the Occupation. Call this step, the failure of “constructive engagement”.
After several of these failed efforts to persuade the three corporations to cease and desist from causing the suffering of others, activist United Methodists decided to write specific divestment resolutions.
These resolutions were debated in local churches, then taken before regional conferences, and finally, this week, presented to the United Methodists’ highest legislative body, the General Conference.
The three US corporations targeted by this resolution are Caterpillar, Hewlitt Packard and Motorola, each of whom heard the pleas for support from Palestine, and hearing, passed by on the other side of the road.
United Methodists cannot halt the brutalization of the Palestinian people carried out by the Occupation.
Nor can they end the downfall of the state of Israel, a downfall most certain to take place unless this illegal and inhumane Occupation ends. No one knows this better than Jews who love Israel and hate what the Occupation does to both the Israelis and Palestinians.
Look not to the mainstream media for news of the internal conflict within world Judaism over this issue. Go instead to the internet and foreign media, and there you will find that the conflict is joined.
A respected Jewish writer and former New Republic editor, Peter Bienart, wrote a book he called The Crisis of Zionism, a plea for Israel to wake up from its nightmare of Palestinian oppression. He was viciously attacked by neo-conservatives and right-wing Jews.
Ha’aretz knows that New York Times columnist and Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman steers clear of this topic. His speciality is economics, not politics. But Ha’aretz reported a blog comment from Krugman which revealed his support for Beinart.
Paul Krugman believes that the policies of the current “narrow minded” Israeli government “are basically a gradual long-run form of national suicide.”
Writing in his New York Times blog “Conscience of a Liberal” about Peter Beinart’s controversial book The Crisis of Zionism, Krugman writes, “Like many liberal American Jews I basically avoid thinking about where Israel is going.
It seems obvious from here that the narrow-minded policies of the current government are basically a gradual, long-run form of national suicide – and that’s bad for Jews everywhere, not to mention the world.”
The battle also rages within the highest Israeli political circles.
Ha’aretz reports that former Shin Bet chief Yuval Diskin harshly criticized Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak on Friday during a meeting with residents of the city of Kfar Sava, Israel.
Diskin said the pair “is not worthy of leading the country”.
“My major problem is that I have no faith in the current leadership, which must lead us in an event on the scale of war with Iran or a regional war,” Diskin told the “Majdi Forum,” a group of local residents that meets to discuss political issues.
He also addressed the issue of racism in Israel.
“Over the past 10-15 years Israel has become more and more racist. All of the studies point to this. This is racism toward Arabs and toward foreigners, and we are also become a more belligerent society.”
Why do United Methodist delegates have to ponder more than a few seconds to realize that for the UMC to continue to support Israel’s Occupation with church funds, places the denomination on the wrong side of the battle for Israel’s soul.
Israeli blogger Larry Derfner writes a post this week, “Israelis are living in a fear society, not a free society”, which is another reminder that the Occupation is not in the best interest of either Israelis or Palestinians.
Enabling a “fear society” is not the way American religious communities can best serve the cause of either peace or justice.
British Parliamentarian William Wilberforce, whose political activism had been influenced by John Wesley, did not end slavery, but he did finally persuade the British Parliament to end the slave trade from British seaports.
It took him several decades to end the trade. During those decades, many slaves were transported to America from Africa as the British Parliament followed the political “go slow” policy in which evil flourishes.
American politicians, bought and paid for by forces that reward them for their absolute loyalty to the current right-wing Israeli government, have closed their minds, and most certainly, their hearts, to the injustices of the Occupation.
One day, when these politicians look back on their period of political service, they may recognize the evil they sponsored. And one day, when United Methodist delegates to the 2012 General Conference look back on how they voted on the divestment resolution, they will realize how their vote will follow them into the Hereafter.
And there, I truly do hope they will be invited to one of Brother John Wesley’s heavenly society meetings where they will be confronted by the reality of the evil Occupation they tolerated for the sake of what they liked to call, “the delicate fabric of interfaith relations”.
What Wesley will say to them about that delicate fabric is chilling to contemplate.
A good preparation for watching how the United Methodist General Conference delegates will conduct themselves in the week ahead, is to spend some time attending to a 25 minute newscast discussion produced by Al Jazeera.
You will find appearances by former President Jimmy Carter, two Jewish panelists, Max Blumenthal and MJ Rosenberg, and Walt Davis, a major leader in the Presbyterian Church, the second Protestant denomination to vote on a divestment resolution during their national meeting this summer.
In his brief appearance at the start of the newscast, President Carter corrected the Al Jazeera host who surprisingly used the lie that Israel wants the world to hear, “boycott”, in describing the United Methodist and Presbyterian resolutions, neither of which use the term.
Carter points out, in his careful manner, that the two denominations are calling on their own leaders to divest from three US corporations. He quietly notes that they are not calling for a boycott of the Israeli economy. It is obvious that Carter follows this issue closely.
Click on the screens below to view two videos. Watch them in segments, if you prefer. But watch them.
The picture at the top of this posting of Alissa Bertsch Johnson, a campus minister at Washington State University, is from the United Methodist News Service.
Well presented, Jim. I haven’t watched most of the Al-Jazeera video as yet, but it seems clear that President Carter hit the proverbial nail when he said (what the Methodists and Presbyterians are debating) “won’t have very much practical effect.” After all, I’ve seen photographic evidence of Daewoo and Volvo bulldozers at work in the illegally Occupied Palestinian Territories. May I suggest that, to any Palestinian, “practical effects” are needed — urgently, massively, unrelentingly…to assure the very survival of his or her polity and culture and land?
I also heard on the video that a full-spectrum regime of BDS would amount to “collective punishment” on all Israelis. The Israelis demonstrably know and have shown time and time again how to apply collective punishment on their captive victims. Perhaps if they were subjected to the old saw “turnabout is fair play,” we would see in very short order some amazing practical effects in the Holy Land.
Thank you, Jim, for raising the issue of the imminent Methodist and Presbyterian decision on BDS. These are very critical times, indeed.
Israel is playing a despicable psychological war game. After all, BDS is the most humble, meek, and gentle tap on a shoulder. However, Israel’s policy is to nip in the bud any such thoughts on the Christian side. Israel’s supporters will exert maximum pressure to ensure that no precedent is established and that other Christian denominations will think ten times before trying BDS again. This is precisely the same Israeli strategy used in dealing with Palestinian resistance.
What we need NOW is moral courage and tough love within our Christian leadership.
What is at stake?
Israeli occupation is an existential threat to the very existance of the native Palestinian people, including the descendants of the very first Christians in the Holy Land.
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This is a never ending argument. We forget that zionists pushed off the Palestinians from their land before any treaty had been worked out, They just bought weapons apparently from Czechoslovakia, and criminally pushed people off their land by violence and killing, without giving them any compensation.
The treaty had not been worked out The Balfour declaration stipulates that the native people should not be harmed. The whole thing was criminally conceived, rather than working with the U N to make a viable agreement.
It is a shame that supernatural belief and trying to go back 2000 years by force and violence should have put this situation into the wrong groove. Alas the U.S. encouraged and supported it with billions of dollars. (In the bible we read constantly of wars and killings, and savage behavior on all sides). I don’t see a solution, just either tragedy or explosion.
We are sick and tired in the occupied Palestinian territories of the fact that our future is determined by American elections. Year after year president after president, and it is the same old story with everybody trying to appease Israel for personal vested interests. Nobody has the guts to take a moral stand. It has been one disappointment after another from countries who claim to be champions of democracy. When the church realized that it was time to raise its voice, then hell breaks loose. If the church is not going to take a moral stand who else will? Or will interfaith be another cover up to go slow on the issue? The Methodist and the Presbyterian churches should not be apologetic that they are not divesting from Israel but from companies that benefit from the occupation. After all the occupation is an Israeli occupation and the day will come when friends of Israel will realize that they have done Israel wrong for allowing it to maintain that occupation. They have not only hurt the Palestinians but the Israelis as well. It is time to break the silence. Israeli soldiers are doing so and are paying heavily by going to jail for their stand. This is the least the church can do. Go for it Methodists and Presbyterians.
This is already a History in the Palestine’s History!
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