Swiss Jews slam supermarket boycott of settlement products
06/12/2012 06:32
Jewish leaders say decision “purely political,” singling out Israel and not boycotting goods from other countries where human rights violations are taking place.
MIGROS Photo: REUTERS/Ruben Sprich
BERLIN – Swiss-Jewish organizations sharply criticized last week a full-page
advertisement in the Swiss paper Neue Zürcher Zeitung promoting the Migros
supermarket’s decision to boycott products from Israeli settlements.
A
Swiss Protestant aid organization sponsored the ad and urged readers to support
the boycott.
In a letter to Claude Ruey, the president of the
Zurich-based aid organization of the Protestant Churches of Switzerland (HEKS),
Swiss-Jewish leaders wrote, “We protest this discrimination against the State of
Israel and are disappointed that the HEKS as a recognized aid organization
fosters anti-Israel sentiments, which have a direct effect on us Jews in
Switzerland.”
The letter to Ruey was signed by Dr. Herbert Winter, Nicole
Poëll and Gabrielle Rosenstein.
The Jewish leaders added that the
decision is “purely political,” singling out Israel and not boycotting goods
sold in Migros from other countries where human rights violations are taking
place.
The Berlin-based office of the American Jewish Committee said in a
statement last week, that the “AJC has raised concern about the European
relationship to Israel, given the growing number of boycott and BDS [boycott,
divestment and sanctions] campaigns targeting Israel in Europe. In recent days,
the large Swiss supermarket co-op Migros began labeling products originating in
the West Bank and east Jerusalem, while the German branch of the church-based
peace organisation Pax Christi launched its ‘Occupation Tastes Bitter’ boycott
campaign against Israeli products.”
Deidre Berger, director of AJC
Berlin’s Ramer Institute for German- Jewish Relations, said, “Boycott campaigns
that target Israel hinder rather than promote peace. Organizations that promote
boycotts against democracies instead of censures for autocracies discredit
themselves.”
She added that “At the recent annual meeting of Deutsche
Bank shareholders, Pax Christi officials called on the bank to divest from
Israeli companies with business interests in the occupied
territories.”
In Friday’s Berlin daily B.Z., the popular columnist Gunnar
Schupelius critized Berlin Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki for remaining silent
about the Pax Christi boycott. Woelki told B.Z.
that he will not “assess”
the Pax Christi boycott against Israeli products. Critics in Germany told The
Jerusalem Post last week that Pax Christi is steeped in
anti-Semitism.
According to an article in Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Israel’s
Embassy in Bern condemned the boycott as a one-sided “political action” and part
of a “campaign.”