Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Unwanted opinion

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What does a teachers bargaining unit in Los Angeles have to do with Israeli policies and actions toward Palestinia­ns? We’re still trying to figure that one out and so, apparently, are upset members within United Teachers Los Angeles.

The union is in an uproar over a resolution to support the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel after the recent deadly violence between that country and Palestinia­n militants in the Gaza Strip. It took the approval of only two of the union’s eight units—involving a relative handful of teachers—to place the matter before UTLA’s governing House of Representa­tives for a vote in September.

Meanwhile, the union’s board of directors is planning to make a recommenda­tion on which way that vote should go.

Both it and the House should reject the measure, which can do no real good for the union or schools, and certainly could hurt both.

Meanwhile, according to a report in the Jewish news site the Forward, hundreds of UTLA members—a relatively small percentage of Los Angeles Unified School District’s more than 25,000 teachers—have mounted a campaign against the BDS resolution, and many are threatenin­g to quit the union.

Many Jewish parents and students— though not all by any means—see BDS support as inherently anti-semitic, even though it’s directed at Israel, not the Jewish people. They question why a movement targeting Israel receives support when other nations have less religious tolerance and worse human rights records. A vote to support BDS would be seen as hostile and undermine these families’ confidence in their teachers. Favoring BDS also would probably erode public support for the union in a metropolit­an area with the second-biggest Jewish population in the U.S.

Teachers and their union have many social concerns on which they could legitimate­ly take a stand. Lack of health care for impoverish­ed families, food insecurity, racism in America—all of these affect students and learning. And they all are areas in which lobbying could effect change.

But support for BDS wouldn’t accomplish a thing. The union would be better off keeping its nose out of Middle Eastern affairs that don’t affect its members or the schools, and in which it has no expertise.

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