SU community members outline BDS movement’s goals
UPDATED: Sept. 25 at 11:59 p.m.
From September 22-24, SU’s Program for the Advancement of Research on Conflict and Collaboration (PARCC) is joining with Tel Aviv University to host the conference “Transforming Intractable Conflicts: Their Restructuring and Reframing.” Several panel descriptions specifically address “the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.” Framing the occupation as an “intractable conflict” or a timeless, ethnic clash obscures a highly asymmetrical relationship of Israel’s military occupation of Palestine. It also ignores the powerful political and economic forces that sustain it, including substantial U.S. military aid to Israel, recently increased to over $4 billion annually. These resources should be used to address racial and economic injustices within the U.S.–for instance, by addressing the demands of the Movement for Black Lives and rectifying the ongoing destruction of Indigenous land that the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and other Native nations are resisting.
The Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement has gained widespread global support, including endorsement by the Movement for Black Lives, Jewish Voice for Peace, the National Women’s Studies Association, American Studies Association, and Critical Ethnic Studies Association. As a political movement, BDS aims to pressure Israel to end its occupation of Palestinian land by demanding three goals: 1. dismantle the apartheid Wall and end the military occupation of Palestinian land, 2. cease legalized racial discrimination by recognizing the rights of Palestinian citizens of Israel to full equality, and 3. protect the right of Palestinian refugees to return home. Israel’s disregard for these goals puts it in violation of international law. The guidelines put forth by the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) call on people around the world to boycott and resist events that aim to create a facade of equality between colonizers and colonized.
The conference’s misguided framework and institutional partnership with Tel Aviv University are in direct violation of the Palestinian call for boycott. As PACBI states, “these nonviolent punitive measures should be maintained until Israel meets its obligation to recognize the Palestinian people’s inalienable right to self-determination.” The supposition that a military occupation can be resolved through dialogue ignores the structural root of the conflict. The BDS movement, on the other hand, rightly names Israeli occupation and apartheid as the root of the conflict and offers a realistic path toward ending Israeli apartheid by targeting its structural basis.
For more information on BDS, visit bdsmovement.net.
SIGNED (alphabetically)
Koy Adams, B.A. Sociology, Women and Gender Studies, Alum ‘16
Himika Bhattacharya, Assistant Professor, WGS
Hayley Marama Cavino, Program Coordinator, Democratizing Knowledge
Dana L. Cloud, Professor, Communication and Rhetorical Studies
Lisa Cohen, B.A. Global and International Studies, SUNY Oswego Alum
Hasmik Djoulakian, Undergraduate Student, Women’s and Gender Studies ‘17
Carol Fadda, Associate Professor, English
Tula Goenka, Associate Professor, Television, Radio & Film
Amalia Golomb-Leavitt, B.A. Psychology, SU Alum ‘15
Cecilia Green, Associate Professor, Sociology
Ken Harper, Associate Professor, Multimedia, Photography & Design
Jeanelle Hope, M.A. in Pan African Studies, SU Alum ‘14
Matt Huber, Associate Professor, Geography
Kulsoom K. Ijaz, Esq. (SU Law Alum)
Laura Jaffee, Graduate Student, Cultural Foundations of Education
Amy Kallander, Associate Professor, History
Vani Kannan, Graduate Student, Composition and Cultural Rhetoric
Michael Kelly, SU Alum
Jocelyn Killmer, PhD Candidate, Anthropology
Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Distinguished Professor, Women’s and Gender Studies
Jackie Orr, Associate Professor of Sociology
Tom Perreault, Professor, Geography
Brian Pickett, Palestine Solidarity Collective
Minnie-Bruce Pratt, Professor (retired), Composition and Cultural Rhetoric, Women’s and Gender Studies, LGBT Studies
Robin Riley, Director LGBT Studies
Mariel Rivera, PhD Candidate, Anthropology
Yanira Rodriguez, Graduate Student, Composition and Cultural Rhetoric
Manuela Ruiz, Graduate Student, Geography department
Kate Siegfried, M.A. Communication & Rhetorical Studies, SU Alum ‘16
Nikeeta Slade, Palestine Solidarity Collective
Kait Simon, B.A. Policy Studies and Political Science, SU Alum ‘14
Taveeshi Singh, Graduate Student, Social Science and Women’s and Gender Studies
Karrieann Soto, Graduate Student, Composition and Cultural Rhetoric
Fabiola Ortiz Valdez, Graduate Student, Anthropology
Susan S. Wadley, Professor, Anthropology
Sean Wang, PhD Candidate, Geography
Erin Abu-Rizq Welsh, Class of 2018, Political Science
CLARIFICATION: In a previous version of this Letter, the names were not alphabetized.
Published on September 23, 2016 at 12:21 pm