The Jewish Chronicle

Many UK Jews privately avoid settlement goods

- BY COLIN SHINDLER

SUPPOSE YOU were given two tomatoes of equal size, quality, taste and price. Suppose you were told that one was from an Israeli kibbutz and the other from a West Bank settlement. Would you choose to eat one and not the other?

Some would undoubtedl­y be indifferen­t and choose either — a tomato is a tomato is a tomato. Others would discern. For some, it would be an unflagging endorsemen­t of the right of Jews to settle in Judea and Samaria. For others, it would be a demonstrat­ion of opposition to the settlement drive on the West Bank. According to several scholarly analyses, those British Jews who oppose the settlement­s are the overwhelmi­ng majority.

Does a private refusal to eat a settlement tomato therefore constitute a boycott of the state of Israel? Or is it a personal choice — and for some, a moral choice — about a controvers­ial government policy?

All this resonates in the recent call of Lisa Nandy, the Shadow Foreign Secretary, for a boycott of settlement produce. Many communal organisati­ons rightly feared that this would be the first step in a process, leading to a boycott of Israel itself. It is also the rationale of why many British Jews who refuse to buy settlement produce do not publicise it. It is one thing to make a private protest, it is another to publicly become a poster person for the BDS campaign.

Three years ago, the Knesset amended the Entry into Israel Law of 1952 which barred anyone — including diaspora Jews — who makes “a public call for a boycott”. Indeed a senior member of the New Israel Fund was detained for a short period at the airport by confused officials. In March 2017, emboldened by the recent election of Donald Trump, Bezalel Smotrich, a leader of the far right in Israel and the former Minister of Transport, introduced a further clause which referred to “any area under Israel’s control” — meaning the settlement­s on the West Bank.

A sizeable minority of Knesset members opposed this amendment and strongly argued that this violated freedom of speech — a view voiced by the American Jewish Committee. Many believed that this was a method of cracking down not on BDS adherents, but on diaspora critics of the West Bank settlement drive.

Jewish academics who studied Israel, in particular, were incensed. The Haifa-based Associatio­n of Israel Studies which boasted many American members, commented: “There can be no checkpoint of ideas. Security forces and defences are essential for deterring actual attacks. But it is fantasy and misleading to think that interrogat­ing academics at the country’s gates contribute­s to national security. Ideas, good and bad, have no borders.”

While diaspora reaction has so far inhibited the implementa­tion of this law, it remains on the statute book and still opens up the possibilit­y that the Shadow Foreign Secretary, Lisa Nandy — despite her clear, unreserved opposition to BDS — could be barred from Israel because of her call to boycott settlement produce. Since the new Labour leader and possible next prime minister, Sir Keir Starmer, has backed her approach, would he also be stopped at Ben-Gurion airport?

As with the debate on annexation, many communal organisati­ons are beginning to recognise that unity of purpose is not served by uniformity of views. However, they still dither in taking a lead on difficult questions.

Many fear the settlement goods ban would be a step towards a boycott of Israel itself

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