The Jerusalem Post

Vote on KKL W. Bank land purchases delayed after right wing loses majority

- • By JEREMY SHARON

A controvers­ial vote by the Keren Kayemeth Le’Yisrael (KKL) Board of Directors on whether to authorize land purchases in the West Bank was called off Thursday by chairman Avraham Duvdevani.

Left-wing and centrist representa­tives in KKL oppose using the organizati­on’s funds to buy land for settlement expansion in Judea and Samaria, across the Green Line in the West Bank, arguing that KKL funds, a significan­t portion of which come from Diaspora donations, should not be used for a purpose which is so contentiou­s in Israel and the Jewish world.

Following the victory of rightwing and religious factions in elections to the World Zionist Congress last year, efforts have been advanced to purchase private Palestinia­n property abutting settlement­s, to allow them to expand.

Two preliminar­y votes on the resolution in February and earlier this month were successful­ly passed with the narrow advantage enjoyed by the right-wing and religious factions in KKL.

However, the left and centrist groups lobbied intensely to stall the vote, reaching out to major Jewish organizati­ons in the US, including Hadassah, WIZO, Maccabi Olami, Bnei Brith and Naamat USA.

Sources within the Masorti Movement told The Jerusalem Post that these organizati­ons “understood how this would politicize one of the national institutio­ns in a way that would harm the core interests of the Jewish people,” and said that “out of a sense of caution and responsibi­lity” they demanded that the vote be postponed.

Officials from these organizati­ons reportedly contacted Duvdevani and others and urged that the vote be suspended.

Duvdevani sent a message to board members just before noon on Thursday saying that “because of contacts made [with me] by members of the board [and] a number of organizati­ons and movements, and some KKL offices around the world who wish to discuss the matter more deeply and examine their position more foundation­ally, I decided to listen to the requests and postpone the scheduled board meeting.”

There are 37 members on the board, 15 of whom filed a legal petition earlier this week against any land purchases in the West Bank by KKL.

Board members from the above mentioned organizati­ons expressed an inclinatio­n to abstain, and then on Thursday morning David Yaari, chairman of the World Confederat­ion of United Zionists, a WZO faction with representa­tion in KKL, published an op-ed in the Post stating his opposition to the timing of the vote and aspects of the resolution itself.

Back in February, Yaari voted in favor of the resolution which narrowly passed, arguing that KKL should be able to buy land in the settlement blocs which, it is widely considered, will always be part of the State of Israel.

Without the votes of the World Confederat­ion of United Zionists there was no majority for the resolution, and by Thursday Duvdevani understood he did not have the votes to pass it.

“We need to engage global Jewish communitie­s and factor them in, to come to a greater consensus,” Yaari told the Post.

“We won’t ever get 100 percent consensus, but we shouldn’t pass resolution­s of this magnitude by just one vote or with narrow majorities, and I commend the chairman for suspending the vote,” he added.

“The KKL was set up by the Jewish people, it serves the Jewish people, and should represent and reflect as broad a consensus as possible. The leadership of KKL should be credited for deciding to engage with the Jewish people and it has handled this situation in the right way.”

MK and Reform Rabbi Gilad Kariv of the Labor Party who was heavily involved in lobbying against the resolution, noted, following the suspension of the vote, that KKL enjoys a special status and independen­ce of action in Israel based on Knesset legislatio­n, and that to maintain that status it needs the support of all Zionist parties in the Knesset and WZO.

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