The Friday Edition
More than 200 liberal US rabbis want Israel to lift travel ban on BDS leaders
Source: JEWISH TELEGRAFIC AGENCY
Published August 9, 2017
(JTA) — More than 200 rabbis from the liberal movements of American Judaism signed a letter opposing Israel’s travel ban on leaders of the boycott movement against Israel.
The rabbis signing Wednesday’s letter were responding to an incident last month in which Rabbi Alissa Wise of Jewish Voice for Peace, which supports the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, was preventedfrom boarding an Israel-bound airplane leaving Dulles Airport in Washington, D.C.
Four other people traveling to Israel as part of an interfaith delegation, including two other Jews, a Christian and a Muslim, were also prevented from boarding the flight at the request of the Israeli government.
“We hold diverse opinions on BDS. Even though many of us have substantive differences with Rabbi Wise and other rabbinic colleagues who support the BDS movement in some or all of its forms, we believe that the decision to bar Rabbi Wise from visiting Israel is anti-democratic and desecrates our vision of a diverse Jewish community that holds multiple perspectives,” read the letter, which had been signed by 212 rabbis as of late Wednesday morning.
“Boycotts are a legitimate nonviolent tactic that have been used both in our own country and around the world in order to create justice for marginalized and oppressed communities. Whether we support boycott is a controversy for the sake of heaven. It endures because we struggle together and debate how we can create peace, justice, and equality for Israelis and Palestinians alike,” the letter said.
The signers included Rabbi Sharon Brous, of the independent IKAR congregation in Los Angeles; Rabbi Amy Eilberg of Los Altos, California, the first women ordained by the Conservative movement; and Rabbi Jill Jacobs, executive director of T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights.
In March, the Israeli parliament, or Knesset, amended the Law of Entry to prevent leaders of the BDS movement from being allowed into Israel. The amendment applies to organizations, as well as the leadership and senior activists of those groups, that take consistent and significant action against Israel through BDS and threaten it with material harm.
JVP said at the time of the incident that it was the first time the amendment had been enforced before passengers boarded their flights to Israel and the first time that Israel has denied entry to Jews, including a rabbi, for their support of BDS.
An anti-BDS bill making its way through Congress would expand existing law that bans boycotts imposed by foreign governments to include those imposed by international organizations like the European Union and the United Nations.
LATEST OPEN LETTERS
- 21-07Freedom
- 20-03Stand up to Trump
- 18-02Average Americans Response
- 23-12Tens of thousands of dead children.......this must stop
- 05-06A Call to Action: Uniting for a Lasting Peace in the Holy Land
- 28-05Concerned world citizen
- 13-02World Peace
- 05-12My scream to the world
- 16-11To Syria and Bashar al-Assad
- 16-11To Palestine
Latest Blog Articles
- 11-09Our Friday News Analysis | What the World Reads Now!
- 10-09Our Wednesday News Analysis | In Gaza, western colonialism has been unmasked
- 09-09In Gaza, western colonialism has been unmasked
- 09-09Opinion | We Israelis Are Part of a Mafia Crime Family. It's Our Job to Fight Against It From Within
- 09-09Forget symbolic statehood — the world must recognize Israeli apartheid
- 08-09The Evangelical Pope | Communication Brings Us Closer
- 04-09Our Friday News Analysis | What the World Reads Now!
- 03-09Our Wednesday News Analysis | US lifeline masks Israel’s economic freefall
- 02-09US lifeline masks Israel’s economic freefall
- 02-09Zikim: Where Gaza’s Starving Risk Death for a Bag of Flour
- 02-09Analysis | Netanyahu's Attack on the Gaza Famine Report Aims to Hide the Truth From Israelis