resources
Thursday, March 25, 2010 | return to: news & features, local


Share
 

UPDATE: U.C.Berkeley student president vetoes divest-from-Israel resolution

by amanda pazornik, staff writer

Follow j. on   and 

U.C. Berkeley student Will Smelko, president of the Associated Students of University of California, vetoed a resolution March 24 that urged U.C. divestment from two companies that supply war materials to Israel.

The latest decision has pro-Israel groups around the Bay Area urging its constituents to help sustain the veto, which could be over-ridden at the next student senate meeting, scheduled for either Wednesday, March 31 or early April.

The ASUC student senate approved the resolution — deemed "anti-Israel" by many on campus, in the local Jewish community and beyond — on March 17.

In essence, the resolution targets the university’s reported investments of $135 million in two U.S. companies, General Electric and United Technologies, that supply Israel with electronics and weapons.

The resolution pinpoints Israel as a perpetrator of war crimes throughout its 12 paragraphs, but before the final vote, a one-sentence amendment was tacked onto the end of the document. It noted that “this committee will recommend additional divestment policies” in places where companies are “aiding war crimes,” citing Morocco and the Congo as two examples.

In a statement explaining his veto, Smelko said that in an effort to maintain campus unity and peace, “the perception of the bill as a symbolic attack on a specific community of our fellow students and/or fears of the bill being used as a tool to delegitimize Israel cannot be understated.”

He also stated that the resolution failed to list effective divestment strategies for the university and the U.C. Board of Regents or examine the possible financial effects on U.C. and ASUC. Coming up with recommended divestment strategies would call for “substantial scrutiny and deliberation,” Smelko said.

“While the ASUC as a body has stated convincingly that it does not want ASUC and U.C. dollars going to fund weapons, war crimes or human rights violations, this veto has to do with the mechanism by which the ASUC achieves its mission of building peace and goodwill in a way that avoids the shortcomings of the bill (a selective, one-sided focus on a specific country that lacks important historical context and understanding),” Smelko said in the statement.

BAdivestment
Some 200 people packed a room in U.C. Berkeley’s Eshleman Library for a controversial student senate meeting last week. photo/courtesy of sandra cohen

More than 200 people attended a boisterous and contentious student senate meeting that began at 7 p.m. on March 17, with the resolution introduced on the floor around 9:30 p.m.

Speakers for and against the resolution voiced their opinions until approximately 2 a.m., and about half of the original attendees remained when the final vote, 16-4, was announced around 4 a.m.

“There were loud cheers on one side and tears on the other,” said Rabbi Adam Naftalin-Kelman, executive director of Berkeley Hillel. “Most who spoke in opposition felt incredibly defeated.”

Sandra Cohen was one of the four members of the Associated Students of the University of California senate who dissented. She voted no after her proposed amendments, including one to remove Israel as the specific perpetrator of war crimes from the resolution, were rejected.

She said she was one of two Jews who voted against the resolution.

“The authors [of the resolution] told me it would take the meat out if you don’t mention Israel,” the 20-year-old sophomore said. “It was clear that this was not about war crimes. It was about Israel.”

She added: “I was really let down by the student government. They are supposed to represent all students and approve resolutions for the general welfare of the student body.”

When asked why the original resolution mentioned only Israel, co-author Tom Pessah said it was “easier to focus on these two companies,” adding that the research to find them took him and the student-run U.C. Berkeley divestment task force months.

“Any political issue ultimately involves singling out,” said Pessah, a Jewish fifth-year sociology graduate student and native of Tel Aviv. “We don’t feel we can deal with all the issues all the time. If students want to do more, there are ways to take a stand. But our hands are full.”

In practical terms, the resolution had no implications, other than allowing the ASUC senate to voice its opinion to the university and the U.C. Board of Regents, which holds the purse strings.

According to the resolution, “the ASUC will further examine its assets and U.C. assets for funds being invested in companies that a) provide military support for or weaponry to support the occupation of the Palestinian territories; b) facilitate the building or maintenance of the illegal wall or the demolition of Palestinian homes; or c) facilitate the building, maintenance or economic development of illegal Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian territories.”

As with other divestment pushes, supporters of the measure contend that the investments enable Israel to commit atrocities and war crimes.

“We’re not just making some blanket statement to say Israel is bad,” said Pessah, a board member of the U.C. chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine. “We think war crimes were committed and economic activism can potentially be an effective tool in limiting harm to civilians in Gaza.”

Opponents claim that Israel is singled out for unfair treatment.

“The bill claims to ‘not be taking sides,’ but by exclusively focusing on Israel it does just that,” the S.F.-based Jewish Community Relations Council noted in an e-mail about the vote. “The only country accused of committing war crimes in the bill is Israel; the only country being divested from in the bill is Israel.”

Naftalin-Kelman pointed to the divisiveness of the resolution and called it a “sad statement about what the student government is doing.”

He added: “It’s not representing or supporting the interests of the students on campus. In no way are the interests of Israeli and Palestinian people served by a resolution that single-handedly and inaccurately identifies Israel as a committer of war crimes.”

The passage of the resolution caught the attention of national Jewish organizations such as the Los Angeles–based Simon Wiesenthal Center and Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life, headquartered in Washington, D.C. Both issued statements denouncing the actions of ASUC.

“The decision calling on the university to divest from several companies doing business with Israel is one-sided, divisive and undermines the pursuit of peace,” Hillel President and CEO Wayne Firestone said in a statement. “We applaud the pro-Israel students from across the ideological spectrum who stood up courageously in the face of provocation to oppose this measure.”

Famed attorney and author Alan Dershowitz, in conjunction with StandWithUs/Voice For Israel, also provided a statement.

“Divesting from Israel is immoral, bigoted and if done by a state university, illegal. It encourages terrorism and discourages peace,” Dershowitz wrote. “We will fight back against this selective bigotry that hurts the good name of the University of California.”

Meanwhile, Jewish Voice for Peace, an Oakland-based group that supports Palestinian self-control of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, issued a statement congratulating the student senate on what it deemed a “historic vote” and a “much-needed victory.”

“The resolution is very much in line with Jewish Voice for Peace’s current campaigns to support divestment from companies that profit from the Israeli occupation,” the statement said. “We draw inspiration from this victory and think that many people around the world, including Israelis and Palestinians who struggle every day to make democracy and equality a reality, will also take heart and redouble their efforts.”

This is not the first time a university’s student body has proposed and, in some instances, adopted a similar divestment resolution, according to Stephen Kuperberg, executive director of the Israel on Campus Coalition in Washington, D.C.

However, he noted, no university in the United States has ever divested from Israel. Moreover, he added, no resolution passed by university students has ever had an actual effect on any company with business ties to Israel.

In fact, he said, the adoption of such resolutions has often triggered a “call to engagement” among pro-Israel students.

“It tends to inspire and rally the local community to further action,” Kuperberg said, “which is the right thing to do.”


Comments

Posted by mtarses
03/25/2010  at  07:20 PM
Sorcery in Saudi Arabia

I was on the U.C. Berkeley campus the day after they voted to divest from Israel for ‘human rights abuses.’ I said to people working at an anti-Israel booth: “Why not also boycott Saudi Arabian oil? In Saudi Arabia, people are routinely publicly flogged (sometimes to death) and beheaded for heresy, witchcraft, or insulting the royal family. A man with 5 children is scheduled to be executed in Saudi Arabia this week for ‘sorcery.’ Sorcery!?! See story here: http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/meast/03/19/saudi.arabia.sorcery/index.html?eref=igoogle_cnn  They got angry at me and called me a ‘Zionist fanatic.’ Gee, I usually get criticized by my relatives for not being more ‘pro-Israel.’

The man who is facing execution for sorcery in Saudi Arabia is not an isolated case. Saudi officials have arrested Saudis and non-Saudis, Muslims and non-Muslims on sorcery charges. In recent months, a Saudi man was arrested for smuggling a book about witchcraft into the country. An Asian man was accused of using supernatural powers to solve marital disputes. Another man was given a death sentence for trying to learn magic tricks, and Saudi authorities executed an Egyptian pharmacist for sorcery.

Login to reply to this comment or post your own
Posted by peace
03/26/2010  at  01:00 AM
Sorry Mr. Kuperberg, but you stand corrected!

“However, he noted, no university in the United States has ever divested from Israel. Moreover, he added, no resolution passed by university students has ever had an actual effect on any company with business ties to Israel.”

In fact, Hampshire college became the first in the US “to break financial ties with companies specifically because they do business with Israel.”
Source: http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2009/02/hamphire_colleg.html
The issue is one of with-holding any form of support from human rights’ violators—any and all. Israel happens to be one of those states that have grossly violated human rights through its occupation practices and its defiance of international law and Geneva conventions. Divestment is one of the few effective and non-violent means of punishing its violations.
Simple as that!

Login to reply to this comment or post your own
Posted by sedelman
03/26/2010  at  02:13 PM
You are wrong Hampshire has never divested from Israel

You are absolutely wrong.  If you would have looked at later news coverage you would have seen that both the President and the Board of Hampshire College stated unequivocally that they never divested, never intended to divest from Israel.  They were simply removing companies from their portfolio that were not doing well and one of them was an Israeli company. Palestinian Students for Justice lied once again when they said in a press release you quote that Hampshire College divested. Kuperberg was absolutely correct and you are not. Get your facts right before you criticize others.

Login to reply to this comment or post your own
Posted by lrw
03/26/2010  at  06:29 AM
As an alumna of U.C.

As an alumna of U.C. Berkeley and a Zionist, I no longer financially support the U.C. system due its intolerance.  I urge all American Jews who love Israel and support its right to exist, to withhold financial support of the U.C. system until they demonstrate wisdom and discernment.

Login to reply to this comment or post your own
Posted by lbergmann
03/26/2010  at  07:44 AM
Jew for justice

Israel’s war crimes against Palestinians must not be justified.  The Goldstone report exposes truths that Israel’s government will not deal with honestly. All humans must have human rights or there will never be peace.

Login to reply to this comment or post your own
Posted by asmolkin
03/28/2010  at  01:44 PM
Par for the course for ASUC

As a Cal alum, this is par for the course for what is expected from the ASUC.  The Senate is largely made up of “activists” majoring in Political Science, “Random” Studies, and other soft majors they spend little time studying for.  These kids are more focused on “activism” than on school-work, and don’t represent the majority of hard-working students at Cal.  With too much time on their hands, pointless votes by a biased ASUC Senate are an all-too-common result.

Login to reply to this comment or post your own
Posted by Janice
03/28/2010  at  11:01 PM
Override the veto

As a former Cal student and a supporter of Jewish Voice for Peace I am distressed that ASUC president Will Smelko vetoed the divestment bill that had overwhelming support by the ASUC Senate.. It is to be hoped that the Senate will override this unfortunate veto.

Israel seems incapable of ending the decades- old brutal occupation of Palestinian lands and shows that it has little desire for peace as it continues to confiscate Palestinian lands and water resources and to build Jewish-only settlements, all of them illegal under international law..

Maybe divestment is the only way to bring Israel to its senses. Israel cannot continue to be an occupier and hope to live in peace or hope to be thought of as a democracy or as “light unto the nations.”

Login to reply to this comment or post your own
Posted by Cadance M
04/04/2010  at  11:45 AM
Best source of info on Divestment is "Divest this!"

from http://www.divestthis.com

Hampshire, a small, progressive liberal arts college in Western Massachusetts, has one of the smallest endowments in the country. But it stands as a symbol having been the first college to publically divest that small endowment from companies doing business in South Africa in the 1980s. Hampshire as a symbolic prize meant that divestment activists, in the form of a student group called Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), kept up its divestment crusade years after divestment had moved on at most other schools.

College administrators were respectful and polite to SJP, even if they made it clear they had no intention of joining SJP in denouncing the Jewish state as the next South Africa. But during the course of an outside consultant’s review of school investment holdings, Hampshire decided to sell shares in a particular fund identified as invested in companies that did not meet the school’s ethical investment guidelines (policies that included support for unions, and statements on issues such as Sudan/Darfur, but no stance regarding Israel). SJP, which had asked the school to divest in companies doing business with Israel (some of which turned out to be in the fund selected by Hampshire’s outside consultant), quickly declared victory, announcing to the world that Hampshire had become the first US college to openly divest from the Jewish state.

Given the importance of this alleged “victory,” it was curious why SJP made these public pronouncements on its own, rather than standing alongside college administrators and investment managers to announce this supposedly historic decision. The reason for SJP’s independent action quickly became clear when the administration announced that its investment decisions had nothing to do with Israel or the Middle East, and that SJP was deliberately misleading the public for its own political ends.

This confusion continued for several weeks as Hampshire College administrators tried to have it both ways, allowing the student group to declare victory while assuring the press and alumni that the school had not divested. Much is made of Alan Dershowitz’s call for a boycott of donations to Hampshire (where Dershowitz’s son attended), but in fact the prominent Harvard attorney only clarified that the school could not straddle this issue, leading Hampshire President Hexter to declare in no uncertain terms that (1) the school had not divested in Israel; (2) the school maintained investments in the very companies SJP claimed were being boycotted and would continue to invest in them in the future; and (3) that SJP was inappropriately speaking on behalf of the college, unacceptable behavior that could have consequences for the student group.

By then, SJP had already sent out press releases and public statements saying Hampshire had done what it clearly had not, taking advantage of the administration’s initial lack of clarity to encourage similar decisions at other schools. While they eventually modified their statements, moving from unequivocally declaring Hampshire was on their side to saying that SJP simply believed this to be the case (despite administration denials) with all their hearts.

Login to reply to this comment or post your own
Posted by Theresa
09/06/2010  at  09:33 AM
BDS Failure at UC Berkeley

A report from the front lines of the divestment battle at the University of California at Berkeley (known locally as “Cal”) has been published online . Ariel Kaplan, who graduated from Cal this past spring, is one of the founders of Tikvah: Students for Israel, the pro-Israel student group at Cal. This is his analysis of what happened this spring when the BDS movement unsuccessfully attempted to get the ASUC (the student government at Cal) to endorse a one sided anti-Israel resolution.  maybe this will be useful for students at other campuses, and community members who support them, in resisting attempts by the BDS (boycott, divestment, sanctions) movement to hijack student government organizations in support of their agenda of unending war against the existence of Israel.

http://www.bluetruth.net/2010/09/bds-movement-at-uc-berkeley-how-it.html

Login to reply to this comment or post your own



Leave a Comment

In order to post a comment, you must first log in.
Are you looking for user registration? Or have you forgotten your password?



Auto-login on future visits