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Revised Call for Comprehensive Academic Boycott of Apartheid Israel
The Palestinian Call for Academic Boycott Revised:
Adjusting the Parameters of the Debate
Update, PACBI, 28 January 2006
The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and
Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) has decided to
omit from its 2004 Call for Boycott (enclosed
below) an exclusion clause which has been
justifiably misunderstood by supporters and
misrepresented by critics as inconsistent with the
institutional boycott advocated by PACBI. With
this revision, PACBI sincerely hopes that, rather
than being sidetracked by discussions on a formal
and unintentional discrepancy in the drafting of
our Call, the debate will once again focus on the
very real grounds for this boycott Call, namely
Israel's military occupation and colonization, its
denial of refugee rights and its system of racial
discrimination against its own Palestinian
citizens.
The PACBI Call, which was the basis for the
academic boycott briefly adopted by the British
Association of University Teachers (AUT) in April
2005, urged academics, intellectuals and artists
around the world to "comprehensively and
consistently boycott all Israeli academic and
cultural institutions as a contribution to the
struggle to end Israel's occupation, colonization
and system of apartheid." PACBI proposed a number
of measures to realize this Call, including the
rejection of all forms of cooperation with Israeli
institutions; suspension of funding and subsidies
to these institutions; divestment initiatives; and
the adoption of resolutions by academic,
professional, and cultural bodies condemning
Israeli policies.
Since the Call was issued, PACBI has been very
consistent -- in its statements, press releases
and articles published in the media -- in
highlighting the institutional nature of the
boycott. This resulted from a strong underlying
belief that boycotts, divestment initiatives and
sanctions ought to be directed against Israel as a
state and those institutions that have been
complicit in perpetuating the occupation,
oppression and persistent violations of
Palestinian human rights.
However, the fourth clause in the PACBI Call,
excluding from the proposed measures against
Israeli institutions "any conscientious Israeli
academics and intellectuals opposed to their
state's colonial and racist policies," has caused
some confusion about the nature of the boycott
advocated by PACBI and has also inadvertently
allowed boycott opponents an opportunity to
question PACBI's consistency. The two most common
questions in this regard were:
(a) Isn't it inconsistent for a clearly
institutional call for boycott to exclude
individuals who struggle against their state's
policies?
(b) Doesn't this exclusion open the door to "political tests" and the drawing of lists of
"good" and "bad" individuals?
PACBI admits that there is an unavoidable
inconsistency in advocating an institutional
boycott and then excluding individuals.
Nevertheless, this clause was intended to address
the inevitable grey-area situations where it is
not clear whether academics or intellectuals are
acting in their personal capacities or as
representatives of institutions subject to
boycott. Since all institutional boycotts
ultimately hurt individuals, PACBI felt the need
to add this clause in order to nuance its Call and
to avoid harming progressive Israelis whom we
consider allies in the struggle for justice,
equality and genuine peace. However, since this has been misunderstood as a
position condoning a boycott of individuals or
supporting "black-listing" or "political tests,"
both of which are entirely incompatible with
PACBI's position, PACBI has decided to delete the
exclusion clause from its Call.
PACBI's Call, similar to the wider Palestinian
Civil Society Call for Boycott, Divestment and
Sanctions (BDS) against Israel, is motivated by
the need for the international community to hold
Israel accountable for its crimes and breaches of
international law in order to bring about the
possibility of a just peace. Only with wide
support from international civil societies for
this non-violent form of resistance to oppression
can we all hope for a better future in our region,
anchored in justice, equality and peace. Call for Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel
Whereas Israel's colonial oppression of the
Palestinian people, which is based on Zionist
ideology, comprises the following:
Denial of its responsibility for the Nakba -- in
particular the waves of ethnic cleansing and
dispossession that created the Palestinian refugee
problem -- and therefore refusal to accept the
inalienable rights of the refugees and displaced
stipulated in and protected by international law;
Military occupation and colonization of the West
Bank (including East Jerusalem) and Gaza since
1967, in violation of international law and UN
resolutions;
The entrenched system of racial discrimination and
segregation against the Palestinian citizens of
Israel, which resembles the defunct apartheid
system in South Africa;
Since Israeli academic institutions (mostly state
controlled) and the vast majority of Israeli
intellectuals and academics have either
contributed directly to maintaining, defending or
otherwise justifying the above forms of
oppression, or have been complicit in them through their silence,
Given that all forms of international
intervention have until now failed to force Israel
to comply with international law or to end its
repression of the Palestinians, which has
manifested itself in many forms, including siege,
indiscriminate killing, wanton destruction and the
racist colonial wall,
In view of the fact that people of conscience in
the international community of scholars and
intellectuals have historically shouldered the
moral responsibility to fight injustice, as
exemplified in their struggle to abolish apartheid
in South Africa through diverse forms of boycott,
Recognizing that the growing international
boycott movement against Israel has expressed the
need for a Palestinian frame of reference
outlining guiding principles,
In the spirit of international solidarity, moral
consistency and resistance to injustice and
oppression,
We, Palestinian academics and intellectuals, call
upon our colleagues in the international community
to comprehensively and consistently boycott all
Israeli academic and cultural institutions as a
contribution to the struggle to end Israel's
occupation, colonization and system of apartheid,
by applying the following:
Refrain from participation in any form of academic
and cultural cooperation, collaboration or joint
projects with Israeli institutions;
Advocate a comprehensive boycott of Israeli
institutions at the national and international
levels, including suspension of all forms of
funding and subsidies to these institutions;
Promote divestment and disinvestment from Israel
by international academic institutions;
Exclude from the above actions against Israeli
institutions any conscientious Israeli academics
and intellectuals opposed to their state's
colonial and racist policies;
Work toward the condemnation of Israeli policies
by pressing for resolutions to be adopted by
academic, professional and cultural associations
and organizations;
Support Palestinian academic and cultural
institutions directly without requiring them to
partner with Israeli counterparts as an explicit
or implicit condition for such support.
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