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       BDS:  Permanent Address for Palestinian 
	  Solidarity 
  By Ramzy Baroud 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 23, 2013 
	     The intellectual dishonesty of Israel’s supporters is 
	  appalling. But in some odd way, it is also understandable. How else could 
	  they respond to the massively growing Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions 
	  (BDS) campaign?    When a non-violent campaign - empowered by 
	  thousands of committed civil society activists from South Africa to Sweden 
	  and most countries in between - leads a moral campaign to isolate and hold 
	  into account an Apartheid country like Israel, all that the supporters of 
	  the latter can do is spread lies and misinformation. There can be no other 
	  strategy, unless of course, Israel’s friends get their own moment of moral 
	  awakening, and join the BDS flood that has already broken many barriers 
	  and liberated many minds from the grip of Israeli hasbara.    
	  According to their logic, and that of the likes of Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, 
	  writing in the New York Observer on Dec 12, legendary musician and human 
	  rights champion Roger Waters is an ‘anti-Semite’. In fact, according to 
	  the writer, he is an ‘anti-Semite’ of the worst type. “I’ve read some 
	  heavy-duty attacks on Israel and Jews in my time, but they pale beside the 
	  anti-Semitic diatribe recently offered by Roger Waters, co-founder and 
	  former front man of the legendary British rock band Pink Floyd.”    
	  Of course, Waters is as far away from racism as Boteach is far away from 
	  truly representing the Jewish people or Judaism. But what has earned 
	  Waters such a title, which is often bestowed without much hesitation at 
	  anyone who dares to challenge Israel’s criminal policies, military 
	  occupation and insistence on violating over 70 United Nations resolutions, 
	  is that Waters is a strong critic of Israel. In a recent interview with 
	  CounterPunch.org, Waters stated the obvious, describing Israel as a 
	  ‘racist Apartheid regime’, decrying its ‘ethnic cleaning’ of Palestinians, 
	  and yes, refusing to perform in a country that he saw as an equivalent to 
	  the “Vichy government in occupied France.”    Boteach is 
	  particularly daring to go after Waters, a person adored by millions, and 
	  not only because of his legendary music, but also of his well-known 
	  courageous and moral stances. But once again, the panic felt in 
	  pro-Israeli circles is understandable. What Israeli officials describe as 
	  the de-legitimization of Israel is reaching a point where it is about to 
	  reach a critical mass. It is what Palestinian Gaza-based BDS activist Dr. 
	  Haidar Eid referred to in a recent interview as Palestine’s South Africa 
	  moment.    In an article in the Israeli daily Haaretz published on 
	  Dec 12, Barak Ravid introduced his piece with a dramatic but truthful 
	  statement: “Western activists and diplomats are gunning for Israel's 
	  settlements in the Palestinian territories, and if peace talks fail, the 
	  rain of boycotts and sanctions could turn into a flood.” Entitled “Swell 
	  of boycotts driving Israel into international isolation,” Ravid’s article 
	  establishes a concrete argument of why the boycott movement is growing in 
	  a way unprecedented in the history of Israel.    I am writing these 
	  words from Spain, the last stop on a European speaking tour that has taken 
	  me to four European countries: France, Switzerland, Luxembourg and 
	  Belgium. The purpose of my tour was to promote the recently published 
	  French edition of my last two books, the second being: My Father Was a 
	  Freedom Fighter, Gaza’s Untold Story (Resistant en Palestine, une histoire 
	  vrai de Gaza). But at the heart of all my talks was the promotion of what 
	  I call ‘redefining our relationship to the struggle in Palestine,’ based 
	  first and foremost on ‘moral divestment’ from Israel. Only then, can we 
	  change our role from spectators and sympathizers to active participants as 
	  human rights defenders. The main address of such activities can be summed 
	  up in the initials: BDS.    What I learned throughout my tour, well 
	  attended and also covered in French media, was even to surprise me. The 
	  BDS debate is at such an advanced stage and it has indeed surpassed my 
	  expectations. In my last European tour of 2010, many of us were attempting 
	  to push the boundaries of the debate facing much resistance, even from 
	  groups and movements that were viewed as progressive. The situation has 
	  now changed in such an obvious away that on occasions I was compelled by 
	  the audience to discuss the most effective BDS strategies, as opposed to 
	  defending the very virtue of the tactic.    And within the two weeks 
	  of my travels, there was a flood of news of western governments, companies 
	  and academic institutions either joining the boycott or deliberating the 
	  possibility of doing so. The Romanian government, for example, is refusing 
	  to allow its labors to work in illegal Jewish settlements. A few years 
	  ago, this kind of news was simply unheard of.    But what changed? 
	  In some respects, nothing, and that is the crux of the argument. The 
	  Israeli occupation is more entrenched than ever; the illegal settlements 
	  are increasing and expanding; and the so-called peace process remains a 
	  charade maintained mostly for political self-serving reasons – a cover for 
	  the colonial policies of Israel, and a condition for continued US-western 
	  financial and political backing of the Palestinian Authority – and so on. 
	  But other factors are changing as well. BDS activists have found a common 
	  strategy and are formulating a unifying narrative that is finally 
	  liberating the Palestinian discourse from the ills of factionalism, empty 
	  slogans and limiting ideology. The new platform is both decisive in its 
	  morality and objectives, yet flexible in its ability to encompass 
	  limitless groups, religions and nationalities.     Indeed, 
	  there is no room for racism or hate speech in BDS platforms. What is 
	  equally as important is that there can also be no space for gatekeepers 
	  who are too sensitive about Israel’s racially-motivated sensibilities, or 
	  those ever-willing to manipulate history in such a clever way as to 
	  prevent a pro-active strategy in being advanced. The ship has sailed 
	  through all of this, and the boycott is vastly becoming the new and 
	  permanent address of the international solidarity with the collective 
	  resistance and struggle of the Palestinian people.    Of course, 
	  when Roger Waters took the stances that he did, he knew well of the likes 
	  of Boteach who would immediately denounce him as ‘anti-Semite.’ The fact 
	  is, however, the number of ‘Roger Waters’ out there is quickly growing, 
	  and the power of their moral argument is widely spreading. Israeli smear 
	  tactics are not only ineffective but also self-defeating.    - Ramzy 
	  Baroud is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant and 
	  the editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is “My Father Was a 
	  Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story” (Pluto Press, London).     
       
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