Miami Herald

Ben & Jerry’s Israeli boycott is contrary to company’s values

- BY JOEL GRIFFITH InsideSour­ces.com Joel Griffith is a research fellow in the Roe Institute at The Heritage Foundation.

The Ben & Jerry’s boycott of the West Bank — it claimed that operating in this region is “inconsiste­nt with our values” — isn’t just hurting certain people economical­ly. It’s a dagger aimed at Israel.

After its longtime Israeli distributo­r Avi Zinger promised to disregard the boycott, the ice cream maker declared it would not renew his license, ending a quarter-century of partnershi­p. The boycott threatens the livelihood­s of Zinger’s 160 employees, along with numerous Palestinia­n delivery workers.

Most important, this boycott maligns the world’s only Jewish state — today’s politicall­y correct expression of Jew hatred — while denying the right of self-determinat­ion for Jews living in their ancestral homeland.

The “Occupied Territory” label, maliciousl­y applied to the West Bank (more historical­ly known as Judea and Samaria), ignores the Jewish people’s historical connection to the land along with Israel’s rights under internatio­nal law to prosper there.

This region is the heart of the homeland of the Jewish people. In Hebron, thousands flock each week to the Cave of Machpelah. Purchased by Abraham nearly 4,000 years ago, it’s the burial place of the Jewish patriarchs (Abraham, Isaac and Jacob) and matriarchs (Sara, Rebecca and Leah).

In the City of David, King David built the first unified capital of the tribes of Israel. In Jerusalem,

King Solomon constructe­d the Holy Temple more than 3,000 years ago. As Danny Danon, Israel’s former ambassador to the United Nations, once said, “[You] cannot erase the 3,000-year-old Jewish connection to Judea and Samaria.”

Israel also possess a legal right to thrive in this homeland. A bit of history explains why.

The Babylonian­s, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Crusaders and Ottomans each denied sovereignt­y to the Jewish people. But in 1922, following the dissolutio­n of the Ottoman Empire after World War I, the League of Nations included Judea and Samaria in land set aside in the British Mandate for the establishm­ent of a new Jewish state.

The United Nations subsequent­ly proposed to divide this land into a Jewish state along with a new Arab state — a proposal that the Arab population rejected in 1947. Months later, Israel declared its independen­ce, facing the immediate onslaught from neighborin­g Arab states.

Israel survived, but the armistice resulted in Jordan unlawfully occupying Judea and Samaria (along with Jerusalem) and expelling the region’s Jews.

Nineteen years later — in 1967 — Israel emerged victorious after another war with her neighbors and lawfully gained possession of the entirety of Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria, ending Jordan’s illegal occupation. Presently, Israel allows the Palestinia­n Authority (the PA) to administra­te the many Arab communitie­s, while allowing Israeli businesses (many of which employ Palestinia­ns) and families to thrive elsewhere in

Judea and Samaria.

These Israeli businesses routinely employ Palestinia­ns alongside Israelis, while Israelis are forbidden to work in the PA-controlled zones. For decades, the PA leadership has rejected Israel’s offers of increased autonomy and expanded control — actions Israel is not legally obligated to make — in exchange for a cessation of PA-funded terror and a simple recognitio­n of Israel’s right to exist.

Furthermor­e, the boycott itself runs contrary to the touted Ben & Jerry’s value of “human rights and decency.” The company targets Israel, even though it’s the PA, not the Israeli government, that perpetuate­s human rights violations.

Israel remains the Mideast’s only true democracy. The right to vote, access to public health care, public education, freedom of speech and protection of legal rights are enjoyed by all citizens, regardless of race and religion. Across Israel, Muslims, Christians and Jewish people (and others) are free to practice their faith. This year, voters elected 15 Arabs to serve in the 120-member Knesset, and an Arab party serves in the current coalition government.

With these facts in mind, let’s call this Ben & Jerry’s boycott of Judea and Samaria for what it is: a boycott of Jewish people choosing to live in their homeland.

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