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A NONVIOLENT RESPONSE TO THE OCCUPATION:
A Call for Morally Responsible Investment
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Palm Sunday 2005 |
The movement towards a resolution of the Israel-Palestine conflict
through nonviolent means is now accelerating. There is a window
of opportunity to reach a just settlement. In spite of past setbacks
and much skepticism, many people on both sides of the conflict cling
to the hope for peace. As people of faith, the God we believe in
is the God of hope and peace. We must not give in to despair.
Regardless of whether this new opportunity bears fruit in the political
arena, we believe that serious ethical and moral issues pertaining
to the occupation still need to be addressed by people of faith.
Hence the challenge is for churches to consider seriously the issue
of morally responsible investment.
Political Background
The State of Israel was established in 1948 on 78% of historic
Palestine leading to the displacement of most of its Palestinian
inhabitants who became refugees. Since 1967, Israel has occupied
the Palestinian territories – the West Bank including East
Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip. This area constitutes approximately
22% of historic Palestine and has a population of almost four million
people. During this period, Israel has consistently refused to implement
United Nations Resolutions and International Law. Israel stands
in violation of over 60 UN resolutions and has been protected by
a United States veto over 30 times.
For many years the Palestinians rejected the establishment of the
state of Israel because it was founded on the denial and violation
of Palestinians’ rights. In 1988, and for the sake of peace,
the Palestinian National Council accepted UN Resolution 242 thus
clearly expressing its willingness to recognize the state of Israel
provided it withdraw from all the occupied territories.
Similarly, in 2002 the Beirut Arab League Summit officially extended
full recognition to Israel on condition that it withdraw from all
occupied Arab land. Israel rejected the offer without even considering
it officially
We believe that peace is not only possible but within reach. The
peace we are talking about guarantees the security and territorial
integrity of the state of Israel within its 1967 borders and allows
the Palestinians to establish their own independent and sovereign
state on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Jerusalem will have to
be shared and all other issues can find appropriate solutions based
on international law.
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Moral Reasons for Responsible Investment
Sabeel is a Christian organization. As such, it emphasizes the
importance of faithfulness to God – the God of love, justice,
mercy, and peace. All people are created in God’s image and
are loved equally and unconditionally. We also believe that the
creator God has sanctified humanity through the Incarnation of Jesus
Christ. The dignity of every human being is precious in the eyes
of God.
Furthermore, God in Christ has given us life. “…in
him was life, and the life was the light of all people” (John
1:4). God’s will for all people is, therefore, to have life
and to have it “more abundantly.” Jesus said, “I
have come in order that you might have life – life in all
its fullness” (John 10:10). For people to enjoy life in its
fullness, they must live in peace and justice, in dignity and harmony
with each other. Their God-given human worth must be respected.
We must do everything we can to remove any obstacles that prevent
human beings from achieving life in its fullness. God must be sovereign
over all aspects of our lives including our politics, work, and
investments.
From this faith perspective, we call attention to the ethical and
moral imperatives that must guard and guide all people and institutions
including governments. As people of faith we see them expressed
in biblical injunctions such as, “Love your neighbor as yourself
” (Mark 12:31); “In everything do to others as you would
have them do to you”(Matthew 7:12). We also believe that the
best embodiments of such laws as they apply in the international
arena are enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and International Humanitarian Law, which includes the Fourth Geneva
Convention, as well as other universally accepted principles of
international law protecting human rights and human dignity.
There are multiple examples of violations of human rights in the
Israel-Palestine conflict. International Humanitarian Law specifies
that people living under occupation (like the Palestinians on the
West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem) must be protected until
the occupation comes to an end. It is illegal to build on or confiscate
their land. It is illegal to kill or harm innocent civilians (whether
Palestinian or Israeli). It is forbidden to employ collective punishment,
degrading treatment and torture. It is illegal to transfer parts
of an occupying powers’ civilian population into occupied
territories. International Law also forbids the acquisition of territory
through war.
From the standpoint of faith, we believe that we must recognize
and name the evils that are facing the peoples of Israel-Palestine
on both sides of the conflict. We must act responsibly under God.
God calls us to value all people and stand up for all who are suffering
and oppressed regardless of their nationality. Such a stand leads
us to responsible stewardship in the investments we make as individuals,
churches, institutions and corporations. As Christians we object
to all those who carry out violent, unethical, immoral, and illegal
actions. We have a God-given responsibility to act. At a minimum
we cannot ourselves participate even indirectly in supporting and
enabling unjust policies.
In this context, therefore, we need to consider the following:
- Earning money through investment in companies whose products
and services are used in such a way as to violate International
Law and human rights is equivalent to profiting from unlawful
acts and from the oppression of others.
- Investment in such companies can be seen as condoning the harm
of innocent civilians under occupation and the illegal Israeli
settlement policies that lead to human rights violations.
- Investment in such companies enables the government of Israel
to sustain the ongoing violation of human rights of innocent civilians.
- Continuing such investments, once the facts are brought to our
attention, constitutes deliberate condoning of the evil practices.
[God] judges the nations with justice.
The Lord is a refuge for the oppressed
a place of safety in times of trouble…
God remembers those who suffer;
He does not forget their cry,
and he punishes those who wrong them…
The needy will not always be neglected;
the hope of the poor will not be crushed forever”
(Psalm 9:8-9, 12, 18).
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The Legal Call for Morally Responsible Investment
Harm against all innocent civilians is unjustified and a serious
violation of human rights. According to International Law countries
are not allowed to cause harm to populations under their control.
The de-development, impoverishment, and hardships inflicted on the
Palestinians as an occupied people cannot be ignored. Our goal is
to insist on Israel’s compliance with international and humanitarian
law. Morally responsible investment is a means of enacting our obligation
to prevent any assistance or participation in the violations of
these basic human rights. All those who believe in a just resolution
to the conflict also have an ethical duty to prevent unlawful harm
to civilians.
- It is clearly demonstrated that Israel, in its continued occupation
and the practices associated with the occupation, is in open violation
of International Law and specifically the provisions of the Fourth
Geneva Convention. Violations of these articles, specifically
the grave breaches (Art. 147) have been defined as war crimes.
Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 (to which Israel is
a signatory) states:
Article 1: The High Contracting Parties undertake to respect
and to ensure respect for the present Convention in all circumstances.
Article 27: Protected persons are entitled, in all circumstances,
to respect for their persons, their honour, their family rights,
their religious convictions and practices, and their manners
and customs. They shall at all times be humanely treated, and
shall be protected especially against all acts of violence or
threats thereof and against insults and public curiosity.
Article 47: Protected persons who are in occupied territory
shall not be deprived, in any case or in any manner whatsoever,
of the benefits of the present Convention by any change introduced,
as the result of the occupation of a territory, into the institutions
or government of the said territory, nor by any agreement concluded
between the authorities of the occupied territories and the
Occupying Power, nor by any annexation by the latter of the
whole or part of the occupied territory.
Article 147: Grave breaches to which the preceding Article
relates shall be those involving any of the following acts,
if committed against persons or property protected by the present
Convention: willful killing, torture or inhuman treatment, including
biological experiments, willfully causing great suffering or
serious injury to body or health, unlawful deportation or transfer
or unlawful confinement of a protected person, compelling a
protected person to serve in the forces of a hostile Power,
or willfully depriving a protected person of the rights of fair
and regular trial prescribed in the present Convention, taking
of hostages and extensive destruction and appropriation of property,
not justified by military necessity and carried out unlawfully
and wantonly.
- Out of this follows the concept of Ownership Responsibility.
Within the structure of corporations, shareholders are theoretically
the true owners of a corporation and are ultimately responsible,
legally, politically and morally, for the actions of the corporation,
which are done on their behalf, for their benefit and in their
name.
No shareholders can avoid legal or moral responsibility once
the issue has been brought to their attention. If they cannot
direct the management of a company to change its actions, they
are still responsible for such actions as long as they own shares.
When the church controls through its pension funds and investments
large numbers of shares, its impact can be significant.
When the company is involved in violations of International
Law -- child labor, pornography, apartheid practices, or settlement
building -- the owners (shareholders) are morally responsible.
To the extent they cannot prevail on the other shareholders
and the management to end their evil practices, they must disinvest
and seek other investments that are more in line with their
beliefs. Even if such action is numerically insignificant, it
is morally essential in terms of the witness of the church itself.
- In 2004, the International Court of Justice reaffirmed these
requirements of humanitarian law and stated again that the building
of the Wall violates international law, and has called on the
international community to refrain from assisting these violations
in any way.
Until the international community takes up its legal responsibility
and its obligations to put an end to these violations, organizations
and individuals are required, at a minimum, to refrain from
giving any material or political support. Therefore the duty
to withdraw any existing support becomes a legal obligation
under the provisions of the law.
The International Court of Justice Ruling on the Wall (July
9, 2004) states:
Construction of the wall within the Occupied Territories
severely impedes on the Palestinian people's right to self-determination
and is therefore a breach of Israel's obligation to respect
that right.
The International Court of Justice announced that all states
are under an obligation:
- not to recognize the illegal situation resulting from the
wall and not to render aid or assistance in maintaining the situation
created by such construction. (Passed by a vote of 13 to 2)
- to ensure compliance by Israel with international humanitarian
law as embodied in the Convention. (Passed by a vote of 13 to
2)
- to bring to an end the illegal situation resulting from
the construction of the wall and the associated régime,
taking due account of the present Advisory Opinion. (Passed by
a vote of 14 to 1)
We are concerned about the delegitimization of International
Law that Israel models when it ignores the International Court
of Justice, the Geneva Conventions and United Nations resolutions.
The potential for these institutions and laws to resolve conflicts
is weakened globally when one party chooses to selectively ignore
its rulings.
We recognize that regardless of our position on the political
resolution, we should not permit ourselves to have any involvement
to facilitate or provide resources that would be used to inflict
unlawful harm on people. This is a general principle that we
stand for universally.
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Bringing an End to Israel’s Illegal and
Immoral Behavior
African National Congress President Oliver Tambo said in 1987 at
the height of the system of apartheid: “trade and foreign
investment have bolstered the apartheid economy and added to the
resources which apartheid State has recklessly wasted in the pursuit
of inhuman schemes…furthermore this trade and investment has
enabled the apartheid economy to fund ever increasing expenditure
on the State’s coercive machinery which is aimed at internal
repression and external aggression; and the flow of technology from
outside helps to refine that apartheid machinery and make it more
efficient…These international connections have helped sustain,
and continue to sustain the apartheid system.”
Currently a system of international economic support for the occupation
exists as multinational corporations build franchises in the occupied
territories, supply military goods, and provide material for the
construction of the settlements and Separation Wall. Although numerous
U.N. resolutions have been passed and many countries have pleaded
with Israel to change its policies, the “facts on the ground”
of occupation grow worse year by year. The goal to end the occupation
has never seemed farther away.
At this point in time, having assessed the international community’s
failure to persuade Israel to comply with the United Nations and
the International Court of Justice, we must look at other options.
Around the world people are beginning to speak of selective divestment
from Israel as a method of creating the change that is needed. One
Israeli human rights lawyer, Shamai Leibovitz, put it succinctly:
“As an Israeli thoroughly familiar with Israeli politics,
I believe that selective economic pressure is the most effective
way to end the brutal occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, and
bring peace and security to Israelis and Palestinians. If the Jewish
people are ever to become ‘a light of all nations’ (Isaiah
42:6) and return to their core values of justice and human dignity,
Israelis and Jews of conscience must call now for effective measures
to end the occupation of millions of Palestinians.”
Sabeel believes that the divestment issue opens up a larger conversation
about the immorality of occupation that has not been emphasized
enough in the past. In its statement, the Israeli Committee Against
House Demolitions (ICAHD) calls for sanctions: “The moral
dimension led to a delegitimization of the very apartheid system
that left no room for “reform.” Carried over to Israel’s
Occupation, the moral element in a larger political condemnation
of Israel’s policies could delegitimize the Occupation to
the point where only its complete end is acceptable. A campaign
of sanctions which highlights the moral unacceptability of Israel’s
Occupation could have a great impact, eventually impelling governments
to impose economic sanctions while creating a climate difficult
for businesses (beginning with Caterpillar) to continue function.”
(www.icahd.org)
As responsible owners and investors, the churches have multiple
economic options. The dictionary defines divestment as “to
free of,” “to sell off,” “to dispossess”.
Today, there are many methods of investment and divestment including
these five strategies:
- Avoidance strategy, i.e. avoiding investment in companies
on moral grounds.
- Involvement strategy, i.e. exercising influence and pressure
on companies and corporations in shareholder meetings to actively
promote moral and social responsibility and accountability.
- Alternative strategy or selective investment, i.e. establishing
alternative investment funds that promote justice and peace.
- Withdrawal strategy, i.e. simply pulling investments on moral
grounds.
- Reinvestment strategy, i.e. moving the money on moral grounds
from investments in corporations complicit of wrongdoing to
organizations that engage in morally responsible business, or
to reinvest in the organization or company after positive change
occurs.
What Methods Does Sabeel Recommend?
As the next logical step, we encourage morally responsible investment
along the lines of the above mentioned points which basically translates
into selective divestment -- the model that has been advocated by
the World Council of Churches, the Presbyterian Church USA, the
Episcopal Church (USA), as well as other organizations working for
a just peace in the region. As the U.S.-based organization, Jewish
Voice for Peace, states: “At JVP, we fully support selective
divestment from companies that profit from Israel's occupation of
the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem. This includes American
companies like Caterpillar who profit from the wholesale destruction
of Palestinian homes and orchards. It also includes Israeli companies
who depend on settlements for materials or labor or who produce
military equipment used to violate Palestinian human rights.”
(www.jewishvoiceforpeace.org)
1. Therefore, Sabeel calls on churches to exert pressure on
companies and corporations to divest from business activities that:
- provide products, services or technology that sustain, support
or maintain the occupation;
- have established facilities or operations on occupied land
- provide products, services, or financial support for the establishment,
expansion, or maintenance of settlements on occupied land or settlement
related infrastructure;
- provide products, services or financial backing to groups that
commit violence against innocent civilians; or
- provide finances or assist in the construction of Israel's
separation wall or settlement infrastructure.
(adapted from the criteria set by the Presbyterian Church USA)
2. When such pressures fail to yield positive results, Sabeel
calls on churches to divest from companies and corporations that
do not respond and comply with morally responsible investment.
“We do not believe that such investment plans are, by their
very nature either anti-Semitic or anti-Israeli. On the contrary,
the Occupation is destroying Israeli society by increasing poverty,
violence, and insecurity. Therefore actions that oppose the Occupation
are, in fact, pro-Israeli. Furthermore, we believe that such actions
are in keeping with our vision of a Judaism that is based on the
principle of justice.”
Not in My Name Statement of Support for Selective Divestment
(http://www.nimn.org)
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Obstacles and Challenges Facing the Churches
Blessed are you when people revile you and speak all manner
of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad for
great is your reward in heaven, for in the same way were the prophets
persecuted before you (Matthew 5:11-12).
There are obstacles that make it difficult for some churches to
carry out divestment even when it is particular to companies operating
in, benefiting from or financing the occupation; companies that
are aiding and abetting activities prohibited by the Geneva Conventions.
Apologists for Israel’s illegal practices will challenge
the churches – and Sabeel offers the following responses:
- Historical, psychological, biblical, theological, and even
social reasons make it difficult for many western Christians to
confront the unjust policies of the government of Israel. The
evil of anti- Semitism, which has marred Christian-Jewish relations,
still looms strong and the tragedy of the Holocaust remains a
source of guilt for many Christians.
Sabeel's response:
We are promoting the same values as those who struggle against
anti-Semitism. No group of people, simply due to their ethnicity
or nationality, should be excluded from the protections of International
Law. Morally responsible investment is a Christian imperative
and a nonviolent method aimed at ending the illegal occupation.
We are calling for divestment from targeted companies that benefit
from the violation of human rights and refuse to alter their
behavior once confronted. This pressure must continue until
the occupation ends.
We must advocate for upholding International Law specifically
because these laws were designed to protect all civilians. It
is precisely because we care about the legacy of the Holocaust
and other international violations of human rights that we strongly
believe that when we see indiscriminate violations of International
Law, we must take a moral stand.
- Apologists will ask church officials who are critical of
Israel’s violations of International Law to enter with them
into dialogue that drags on and on. All kinds of justifications,
excuses, and rationales are presented which can create fear and
reluctance within Christians and result in undermining their initial
commitment.
Sabeel's response:
Sabeel takes this stand for morally responsible investment in
an effort to create a real dialogue about peace with justice.
We ask churches to have "clean hands" and to stop
supporting proven violations of International Law that have
been well-documented by both Israeli and Palestinian human rights
organizations in the last 38 years. (www.btselem.org;
www.hamoked.org.il;
www.alhaq.org; www.pchrgaza.org)
Learning the facts is important. Engaging in dialogue is useful
– but the best dialogue is done from an informed perspective
with a goal of bringing the suffering to an end. Sabeel provides
opportunities to visit and learn first-hand about the impact
of the occupation on the daily life of the Palestinians. (www.sabeel.org)
- The apologists will bring up the question of Palestinian
violence. They claim that if the Palestinians would stop their
“terrorism” there could be peace and security.
Sabeel's response:
The use of violence against civilians represents the problematic
proliferation of contempt for the basic tenets of International
Law in the area. Putting an end to violence against civilians
requires addressing both the state and individual violence in
the region and all responsible parties.
Sabeel decries all violent acts against civilians and has made
that clear in previous statements that are available on line
(www.sabeel.org). At the
same time both Palestinian and Israeli civilians have the same
human rights to security as all people and Sabeel stands by
and for their inherent rights. Our call for morally responsible
investment includes disinvesting from any organization or corporation
that supports or promotes in any way violence against civilians.
The government of Israel has shown no intention or effort to
date of complying with International Law. The international
community and the leading powers, for their own political reasons,
have been unwilling to enforce International Humanitarian Law.
Therefore, it is left, for us as faith communities, to do what
our political representatives are not doing on our behalf. Violations
of human rights can never be justified.
- It is also probable that the apologists will use the Christian
Zionist voice against the mainline churches in an attempt to discredit
them and to show that millions of Christians accept and approve
of Israel’s actions which violate International Law.
Sabeel's response:
Standing alone for justice is not new for Christians. We may
be a voice in the wilderness but when we act out of the conviction
of our faith then mountains can be moved.
Sabeel understands that within every denomination comes a wide
variety of perspectives on the conflict. A decision like this
can and will cause denominational disagreement. Yet, we encourage
churches to use this process of discussing morally responsible
investment to better understand both the history of the Israel-Palestine
conflict and our obligation to live by ethical standards with
our resources. The Presbyterian Church USA (PCUSA) has prepared
an informational DVD that can be used as a congregational resource
(see www.pcusa.org).
- It is likely, due to the various types of pressure that
will be placed on a church that takes this step, that most churches
may be tempted to back down or dilute their divestment strategy
to an extent that would make it ineffective.
Sabeel's response:
As Christians we have to ask ourselves if statements are all
that we can give as help to resolve this conflict. It is time
to take a clear stand for human rights and dignity. If the rules
of International Law were adopted by Israel, there would be
an automatic resolution to the conflict and a just settlement
would emerge. While we understand the political dimension, our
clear stand as Christians comes from our belief in the dignity
and well-being of all people. Too many precious children of
God, Palestinians and Israelis, have been lost due to our unwillingness
to forthrightly address the moral issues.
- Why target divestment of firms actively engaged in violations
of International Law in Israel rather than of firms actively engaged
in violations of International Law in China or Saudi Arabia?
Sabeel's response:
If, for example, a firm is complicit in violation of child
or prison labor, U.S. and E.U. law boycotts those firms. If
a firm violates standards for trade, they are subject to countermeasures
by governments. When the U.S. or the E.U. is not diligent, then
movements of conscience step in and press for such action, while
carrying out their own citizen actions – boycotting or
targeting firms that are especially complicit. To some degree,
these other countries are being acknowledged and pressured for
their human rights violations by the U.S. and the international
community already. Unlike Israel, they are not being protected
or insulated from the application of International Law. The
Security Council has been prevented, again and again through
the U.S. veto, from taking action against the acknowledged violations
by Israel of International Law.
We at Sabeel encourage churches to put pressure on and/or divest
from any and all companies and corporations that are involved
in practices that violate human rights. It is important to note
that our call for morally responsible investment is specifically
focused on companies directly involved in illegal practices
in the Occupied Territories and not in Israel itself.
Sabeel believes that any divestment must be done from moral
obligation – the same moral obligation that obliges us
to struggle against and separate ourselves from anti-Semitism.
The blessing that is promised in the Sermon on the Mount is
for those who are falsely accused. We must be sure that
we are acting solely as a result of moral constraints.
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A Call to the Churches
| “In the center stands faith, on the periphery you
have works; in the center the gospel, politics on the periphery;
in the center salvation, on the periphery the well being of
our neighbor. Between the center and the periphery our human
life revolves, on the periphery is decided and revealed what
has happened at the center.” Helmut
Gollwitzer |
The mainline churches in the West have, by and large, maintained
a very balanced position vis-à-vis the Palestine/Israel conflict.
On the one hand, they have always affirmed Israel’s right
to exist. On the other hand, they have been clear that Israel must
withdraw from all territories that it occupied in the 1967 war and
allow the establishment of an independent Palestinian state.
The churches repeatedly and categorically have stood on the side
of a just peace for the Palestinians in accordance with UN resolutions
and International Law. International, regional, and national councils
of churches around the world have asserted this same position. Through
their statements and representations, the churches were encouraging
their national governments to pressure Israel to implement International
Law, all to no avail. Indeed, the international community has been
helpless to prevail upon Israel to halt its oppression of the Palestinians.
As churches examine their own investment policies and show willingness
to take moral and ethical investment decisions, they pick up where
the political global community has failed to date. It is important
to demonstrate by our own example that, just as we are prepared
to bear burdens to maintain our own respect for international law,
so Israel must accept these same burdens. Churches, by moving from
statements to direct action and adopting appropriate financial policies
that are in line with their moral and theological stance, create
an example for the international community, even if it means incurring
and absorbing some financial loss.
We applaud the decision of the World Council of Churches Central
Committee, meeting in February 2005 which called on the churches
to:
- encourage member churches to work for peace in new ways
and to give serious consideration to economic measures that are
equitable, transparent and non-violent;
- persuade member churches to keep in good contact with
sister churches embarking on such initiatives with a view to support
and counsel one another;
- urge the establishment of more and wider avenues of
engagement between Christian, Muslim and Jewish communities pursuing
peace;
- remind churches with investment funds that they have
an opportunity to use those funds responsibly in support of peaceful
solutions to conflict. Economic pressure, appropriately and openly
applied, is one such means of action.
| “The end of apartheid stands as one of the crowning
accomplishments of the past century, but we would not have succeeded
without the help of international pressure – in particular
the divestment movement of the 1980s. Divestment from apartheid
South Africa was fought by ordinary people at the grassroots.
Faith-based leaders informed their followers, union members
pressured their companies’ stockholders and consumers
questioned their store owners. Students played an especially
important role by compelling universities to change their portfolios.
Eventually, institutions pulled the financial plug, and the
South African government thought twice about its policies. Similar
moral and financial pressures on Israel are being mustered one
person at a time. If apartheid ended, so can this occupation,
but the moral force and international pressure will have to
be just as determined. The current divestment effort is the
first, though certainly not the only, necessary move in that
direction.” Archbishop Desmond
Tutu |
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A Call from Palestinian Christians
The Palestinian Christian community in Palestine is very small
in number. We are less than 2% of the population. Although we are
fully Palestinian and an integral part of the Palestinian people,
we are distinctly Christian.
Since the inception of the conflict one hundred years ago, the
Christian community has been playing a very active role in championing
justice for all the people of the land. In fact, some of the main
advocates for peace have been Palestinian Christians. We continue
to take a stand on behalf of our brothers and sisters in Palestine
so that all of us can enjoy freedom.
Although we work for peace alongside our Muslim and Jewish brothers
and sisters, we are blessed by our links and partnership with a
“great cloud of witnesses” throughout the world that,
like us, are members of the Body of Christ. Biblically and theologically
we stand together:
- For just as the body is one and has many members, and all
the members of the body, though many, are one body, so it is with
Christ. For in the one Spirit we were all baptized into one body
(1Corinthians 12:12-13).
- If one member suffers, all suffer together with it; if one
member is honored, all rejoice together with it (1Corinthians
12:26).
- We are called by God to work for justice: He has told you,
O mortal, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you
but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with
your God? (Micah 6:8).
- We are called by Christ to work for peace: Blessed are the
peacemakers, for they will be called children of God (Matthew
5:9).
We are, therefore, pleading with our brothers and sisters all over
the world to invest their God-given material resources in morally
responsible activities that would contribute to the achievement
of a just peace in Israel-Palestine. Furthermore, we ask them to
continue to pray for all the inhabitants of our land so that peace
will be achieved and the way for reconciliation will be opened.
We are reminded of the words of the Latin American theologian, Leonardo
Boff: “If we want to serve the true God, we must break out
of the circle of self-absorption and pay heed to the bloodied faces
of our fellow human beings. If we do not share life with the oppressed,
we do not share life with God.”
A Closing Prayer for Guidance
Almighty God, who created us in your own image: Grant us grace
fearlessly to contend against evil and to make no peace with oppression;
and, that we may reverently use our freedom, help us to employ it
in the maintenance of justice in our communities and among the nations,
to the glory of your holy Name; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who
lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and
for ever. Amen.
Sabeel Ecumenical Liberation Theology Center
PO Box 49084
91491 Jerusalem
Sabeel@sabeel.org
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Resources for further study:
Christian Statements:
Jewish Statements:
For a complete list of products manufactured in illegal Israeli
settlements: www.gush-shalom.org
For additional information on the struggle against the occupation:
www.endtheoccupation.org
*Episcopal Church in the United States has stated the following:
It is the intent of the Social Responsibility in Investments
Committee to undertake the following:
- Over the next twelve months, SRI will investigate what corporate
actions (including corporate dialogues and shareholder resolutions)
might be appropriate with (1) companies that contribute to the
infrastructure of Israel's ongoing occupation of the West Bank
and the Gaza Strip and (2) companies that have connections to
organizations responsible for violence against Israel.
- In doing this work, SRI will work in partnership with the Episcopal
Church in Jerusalem and the Middle East and with the Anglican
Peace and Justice Network, the latter of which is preparing a
report for the Anglican Consultative Council in June 2005. It
will also seek dioceses and congregations that may be interested
in being partners in corporate actions designed to promote peace
in the Middle East.
- In doing this work, SRI will also seek input from the wider
church, from ecumenical and interfaith partners (including the
American Jewish community), and from Jewish and Palestinian groups
in the Middle East.
- SRI will report back to the Executive Council with recommendations
on this work at its October 2005 meeting.
The Social Responsibility in Investments Committee—which
while monitoring what other church bodies like the Presbyterian
Church (USA) are doing, understands that its primary responsibility
is to implement existing Episcopal Church policies—will interact
with as many groups as possible to better understand the underlying
issues and how corporate actions in the Middle East may be impediments
to peace. Further, the emphasis of this process is not likely to
be divestment from companies whose actions are morally questionable,
but rather engagement with them. In so doing, the Episcopal Church
is acting in ways consistent with its own policy statements on the
Middle East, with our participation in the wider Anglican Communion,
and its call to peacemaking in the world.
**Christian Council of Sweden has appealed to their member churches
and their aid organisations to participate in the campaign, Support
a Just Peace in the Middle East - End the Occupation of Palestine.
Many churches and organisations support this campaign, among them
Caritas, Diakonia, Evangelical Alliance, Swedish Organisation for
Individual Relief (SOIR), YWCA-YMCA, The Swedish Fellowship of Reconciliation,
Student Sweden Christian Movement, Church of Sweden, Church of Sweden
Women, Mission Covenant Church of Sweden and Baptist union of Sweden.
The Swedish campaign is a response from churches and Christian organisations
in Sweden to the invitation from the World Council of Churches to
work towards an end to the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian
territories.
The campaign includes:
- Co-ordinated, focused work to raise opinion and lobbying
- Support for the Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme, EAPPI.
- Exerting political pressure to make the EU suspend its free
trade agreement with Israel.
- Specific action: Boycotting produce from the illegal settlements
on occupied territory.
*** New Profile aims to transform Israel from a highly militaristic
society to a civilian society dedicated to equality of gender and
ethnicity and firmly based on universal human rights.
One of several characteristics of militarism is the use of force
to obtain political objectives. New Profile deems Israel’s
occupation of the Palestinians to be a use of force to obtain the
political objective of creating the ‘greater Israel.’
New Profile opposes the Occupation on three counts:
1. Its destruction of Palestinian life, society, land, and property.
2. Its role in maintaining militarism in Israel.
3. Its erosion of Israel’s socio-economic and moral fabric.
We therefore seek non-violent means of ending this catastrophic
Occupation. One such means is using economic sanctions to pressure
the government to change its policy. To this end New Profile welcomes
and supports selective divestment aimed at divesting from companies
that contribute to the continuation of the Occupation by supplying
arms, other equipment, or staff.
We welcome all such endeavors, believing firmly that ending the
occupation is not only to the benefit of the Palestinians but also
necessary for the welfare of Israel, its youth, and future generations.
Over 20,000 Israeli soldiers have died in its wars since 1948. Enough.
It is time to beat our swords into ploughshares, to bring security
to Israel by giving the Palestinians their freedom and recognizing
their absolute right to exist, and to build a future for today’s
Israeli youth and generations to come by creating a civilian society
whose underpinnings are equality of gender and ethnicity and universal
human rights.
New Profile: Movement for the Civilization of Israeli
Society
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