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Major US church votes to sanction Israel

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Presbyterians say move to pull investments modelled on campaign against apartheid in South Africa.

A leading Christian church in the United States has endorsed a policy of divestment to protest Israel's policies towards Palestinians, deciding to sell church stock in three companies whose products Israel uses in the occupied territories.

The Presbyterian Church (USA) general assembly voted on Friday by a razor-thin margin, 310-303, to sell stocks in Caterpillar, Hewlett-Packard and Motorola Solutions.

Carol Hylkema of the Israel/Palestine Mission Network, a Presbyterian group that advocates for Palestinians and spearheaded the drive for divestment, said their action was modelled on the divestment movement to end apartheid in South Africa.

It is not anti-Israel nor is it pro-Palestinian beyond the matter of human rights.

Bill Ward, Presbytery of the Inland Northwest

"It was because of divestment that we were able to break the apartheid in South Africa," Johnnie Monroe, a pro-divestment Presbyterian, told Al Jazeera. "The church has to make a moral stance for moral justice."

A church spokeswoman estimated the value of the Presbyterian holdings in the three companies at US$21m.

Two years ago, the general assembly rejected a similar divestment proposal by two votes.

Heath Rada, moderator for the church meeting held in the US city of Detroit, said immediately after the vote that "in no way is this a reflection of our lack of love for our Jewish brothers and sisters."

The decision is expected to reverberate well beyond the church.

"It was a vote heard halfway around the world in Israel," Al Jazeera's John Hendren, reporting from Detroit, said.

In a separate vote, the assembly also voted to re-examine its historic support for a two-state solution.

Intense lobbying

The vote comes amid discouragement over failed peace talks that have left activists desperate for some way to affect change and as the broader movement known as BDS, or boycott, divestment and sanctions, against Israel, has gained some momentum in the US, Israel's closest and most important ally.

Israeli officials, along with many American Jewish groups and their supporters, have denounced the campaign as an attempt to delegitimise Israel.

The top Presbyterian legislative body has been considering divestment for a decade and the vote was the subject of intense lobbying both from within and outside the church.

Rabbis and other members of Jewish Voice for Peace, which advocates for Palestinians, lined the halls of the meeting and prayed in vigils outside the convention centre wearing T-shirts that read, "Another Jew Supporting Divestment".

Rabbi Rick Jacobs, head of the liberal Union for Reform Judaism, which is the largest branch of American Judaism, addressed the delegates twice, urging them to vote against divestment.

After the vote, Jacobs said the denomination as a whole is no longer "a partner for joint work on Israel-Palestine peace issues."

Bill Ward of the Presbytery of the Inland Northwest, based in Spokane, Washington, argued the proposal, which reaffirmed Israel's right to exist, was not an attack on the country.

"It is motivated by stewardship integrity, not partisan political advocacy. It is not anti-Israel nor is it pro-Palestinian beyond the matter of human rights,'' Ward said.

source: Major US church votes to sanction Israel - Americas - Al Jazeera English
 
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Presbyterian Church USA votes to divest from Israeli occupation

In a historic step, the Presbyterian Church USA voted Friday to divest its holdings from three companies with links to the Israeli military and illegal West Bank settlements.
Commissioners representing the 1.9 million member denomination voted 310-303 at the annual General Assembly in Detroit, Michigan, to pull investments out of Caterpillar, Hewlett-Packard and Motorola Solutions.

Before the vote, the Church said Caterpillar provides bulldozers "used in the destruction of Palestinian homes", Hewlett-Packard "provides electronic systems at checkpoints, logistics and communications systems to support the naval blockade of the Gaza Strip", and Motorola Solutions "provides military communications and surveillance systems in the illegal Israeli settlements".

According to The New York Times, "large American Jewish organizations lobbied the Presbyterians furiously to defeat a divestment vote" in what was "their most determined campaign yet in the 10 years the Presbyterians have considered such a step".

Yet alongside human rights campaigners within the church, as well as Christian Palestinians, one of the strongest pro-divest voices came from Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP), who sent members to Detroit for the gathering. Reacting to the vote Friday, JVP welcomed the decision as "a major development", and said divestment sends "a strong signal of [the Church's] commitment to universal human rights".

The vote was also celebrated by the Presbyterians' Israel/Palestine Mission Network (IPMN), who noted that divestment followed "a decade of corporate engagement" which failed to produce a change in the companies' policies. The group quoted Rev. Dr. Walt Davis, Professor Emeritus at San Francisco Theological Seminary, who called it "a historic vote and the culmination of a long and deliberate internal process within the church".

Friday's vote came a week after the pension fund of the United Methodist Church divested from security firm G4S, in part motivated by the company's contract with the Israel Prison Service. The Presbyterians' support for divestment will be seen as indicative of growing support for tactics like boycott and divestment, as the Palestinian-led BDS campaign gains ground

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:tup:

Glad this church is siding with justice now. They deserve something in return from the American Muslim community in Michigan.

...........

@Aeronaut @Manticore

This turned out to be a repost, I apologize.
 
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They regularly call for Israel's boycott. In 2004 they boycotted Caterpillar over Israel. And their campaign miserably failed.

Looks like these guys desperately need attention since their youngest follower is 80 years old.
 
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They regularly call for Israel's boycott. In 2004 they boycotted Caterpillar over Israel. And their campaign miserably failed.

Looks like these guys desperately need attention since their youngest follower is 80 years old.

They're calling to boycott companies and corporations which directly support Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank. Boycotting something illegal is different than boycotting a nation.

Israel conducts illegal activities and some people don't want to aid that.
 
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As long as Israel has support of the Catholics and Lutherans there is no reason to worry for them.
 
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The good thing about US is, there is considerable difference between church and state.
 
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