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What's New?

June 23, 2014

Starhawk: Why I've joined Jewish Voice for Peace in Supporting The Presbyterian Divestment from the Israeli Occupation

We present ecofeminist-activist Starhawk's Action Appeal in support of Jewish Voices for Peace.

Hi friends,

If you're on this list, you know that I don't forward political appeals.  But this one is different.  I'm in the throes of trying to finish the sequel to The Fifth Sacred Thing before I start my intensive schedule of summer teaching and travels, so I don't have time to write a full blog about this.  But if you know me, you know that the issue of justice for Palestine is close to my heart, and one that I've been deeply involved in.

The Presbyterian vote for divestment is historic--the largest religious denomination yet to dare to come forward and support the nonviolent resistance to Israel's illegal and inhumane ongoing occupation of the Palestinian territories.  Jewish Voice for Peace represents the large number of Jews who refuse to be browbeaten into blanket support for actions that betray the deepest Jewish values of justice, compassion, and freedom.  They helped inform the Presbyterian decision, and stand against the rabid voices who are trying to quash any dissent.  

Please take a moment to stand with them, to let the Presbyterians know they have wide support.  This is vitally important--not just to make progress toward a nonviolent solution in the Middle East, but also to safeguard the rights and reputations of everyone who speaks out on this issue!

Thanks!

Starhawk

From: "Rebecca Vilkomerson, Jewish Voice for Peace" <info(at)jewishvoiceforpeace.org>

Subject: 5 Things you need to know about Presbyterian divestment.

Date: June 23, 2014 10:56:18 AM 

 

 

Action Alert

 

 


 

 

The Presbyterian Church is coming under an extreme attack for divesting from the illegal Israeli occupation. It's up to us to have their back.

Two members - Lutheran and Jewish - of our interfaith team

 

Help us say "Thank You" to our courageous allies. 

Take Action!


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Dear Miriam ,

I'm still breathless from last Friday's historic vote.

The Presbyterian Church (USA) voted to divest from Hewlett-Packard, Motorola Solutions, and Caterpillar - all companies with well-documented ties to the Israeli occupation. This is the biggest move yet by any institution in the US to take concrete, nonviolent action to end Israel’s occupation.

And now, a backlash unlike anything I have ever seen has begun. I can’t emphasize enough how important it is that the Presbyterian Church hear from all of us now.

Please show you stand with these brave advocates for true peace and justice by signing our thank you letter.

We want to triple the 7,000 signatures on this card before our July 3rd deadline.

Click here to say Thank You: jvp.org/thankyou

My jaw dropped when I heard Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu condemn the divestment vote on Meet the Press yesterday with the harshest words possible. Groups like the Anti-Defamation League and the Jewish Council of Public Affairs came out with similar statements.

At Jewish Voice for Peace we have been inundated with hate messages, but these attacks are certainly coming down even harder on Presbyterians.

Every member of the Presbyterian Church deserves our thanks for their thoughtful, open-hearted, principled process.

Please join more than 7,000 JVP supporters and add your name to our thank you card today. We will deliver it to the Church leadership in honor of an inclusive interfaith partnership dedicated to building peace for Palestinians and Israelis.

Click here: jvp.org/thankyou

And with such an uproar over this decision, here are five things you need to know about what really happened:

1. Presbyterian Church activists invited JVP to partner with them almost a decade ago when they began to search for a way to reconcile their values with their investments. Through extensive study, corporate engagement, and broad interfaith outreach, they crafted a unique resolution that is grounded in their own values and worldview - a stirring model for how other communities can take action. 

2. You helped make this happen. Whatever part of JVP’s work that you participate in  â€“ whether for decades or days - you made this victory possible. Now the opposition’s desperate talking point is that we are small and anti-Israel– but you know that neither is remotely true. Our membership, our donor base, our campus chapters continue to grow because we all believe a true peace based on equality and democracy for both Israelis and Palestinians is worth fighting for.

3. This process is an especially important model for Jewish communities and institutions. A recent study by the Jewish Council on Public Affairs (a harsh critic of divestment itself) shows that 25% of American rabbis are afraid to speak their real views on Israel. The Presbyterians' process stands in stark contrast to the status of open debate within Jewish communities, where critical conversation about Israel has been systematically censored.

4. This decision exposed an unspoken rule in the Jewish Community: it’s OK to oppose the Occupation, but forbidden to pressure Israel to end it. Rabbi Rick Jacobs, Chief Rabbi of the Reform Movement reiterated that cynical dictate last week, promising the Church a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu. (Nevermind that the US Secretary of State just spent a full year meeting with Netanyahu, only to see settlement expansion escalate). The question to always ask is: what concrete action to end the occupation are divestment opponents proposing?

5. Interfaith relationships don’t only happen between Christians and Jews, and don't only matter in the US. Presbyterians invited not just American Jews, but Palestinians – both Christian and Muslim – into their deliberations. For all their talk about the impact of this decision on interfaith relationships, Jewish institutional leaders who criticize the vote aren't mentioning the impact on relationships with Palestinians of any faith - a silence that speaks volumes. 

And this is just the beginning. In the days and weeks to come, I'm certain this resolution is going to lead to as-yet unimagined opportunities, and incredibly difficult challenges, for all of us motivated not simply to talk, but to act, for real justice.

But first things first: 

Please, join me in saying thank you to our Presbyterian allies.

Their work is an inspiration to us all.

In hope,

Rebecca Vilkomerson
Executive Director

 

 

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Jewish Voice for Peace
1611 Telegraph Ave, Suite 550
Oakland, CA 94612
510.465.1777
info(at)jewishvoiceforpeace.org

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