General
Assembly backgrounder: Israel-Palestine
Investment-monitoring
panel recommends continued engagement; some presbyteries propose
stronger action
by Jerry Van Marter,
Presbyterian News
Service
[6-4-08]
LOUISVILLE — June 4,
2008 — Sixty years after the partition of Palestine to create the
modern state of Israel, peace in the Middle East remains elusive, as
does consensus on how the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) can
contribute to just peace between Palestinians and Israelis.
The
Mission Responsibility Through
Investment Committee (MRTI) — which coordinates the PC(USA)’s
engagement with companies doing business in Israel-Palestine — is
recommending continuation of a policy approved by the 2006 Assembly
“that financial investments of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) as
they pertain to Israel, Gaza, East Jerusalem and the West Bank be
invested only in peaceful pursuits.”
Other proposals to
the PC(USA)’s 218th General Assembly, June 21-28 in San Jose, CA,
suggest various approaches to peacemaking in the region, ranging
from comprehensive studies of the region’s issues to an overture
(resolution) from Newark Presbytery calling on Arab nations and the
U.S. government to “do all possible” to prevent arms smuggling into
the occupied Palestinian territories and urges the U.S. government
to suspend military aid to the Israeli government until it complies
with U.S. law.
The Newark overture
also reaffirms the right of Israel to exist and deplores suicide
bombings and other terrorist attacks.
Another overture,
from the Presbytery of San Francisco, asks MRTI to take a closer
look at the business practices of Motorola and Caterpillar in Israel
and the occupied territories and authorizes the General Assembly
Council (GAC) — which governs the denomination between biennial
meetings of the General Assembly — to take action, including
divestment procedures, if it determines that their business
activities are not in compliance with General Assembly policy.
If adopted, the
Newark and San Francisco overtures could rekindle disputes between
the 2.3 million-member PC(USA) and a number of Jewish groups — and
between Presbyterians — that followed the 2004 Assembly’s decision
to “initiate the process of selective, phased divestment” from
corporations the Assembly perceived were contributing more to
further violence than to peace.
GAC leaders insist
the PC(USA)’s goals are to build bridges and bring peace to the
region, in which Arab Christian communities are increasingly caught
in the middle of the continued violence. Jewish groups and their
Presbyterian allies counter that taking specific actions against
Israel promote continued violence and threaten that country’s
security.
Affirming the
“customary corporate engagement process” of MRTI — which includes
dialogue with corporations about their business practices, filing of
shareholder resolutions and divestment as a last resort — the 2006
Assembly also acknowledged “the hurt and misunderstanding among many
members of the Jewish community and within our Presbyterian
communion” that the 2004 decision produced.
Greater Atlanta
Presbytery wants resources to guide congregations in engaging in
dialogue with Jewish, Islamic, Palestinian, Israeli and human rights
communities on what constitutes a just peace in the region. The GAC
is seeking authorization to conduct a comprehensive study “that is
focused on Israel/Palestine within the complex context of the Middle
East.”
Chicago Presbytery is
calling for “a culture of just peace” built upon the U.N.’s 1948
“Universal Declaration of Human Rights.” It urges the U.S.
government and Presbyterians to support the declaration and asks
Presbyterians to “talk honestly about and encourage an open and
honest discussion of the two-state solution” guaranteeing both
Israeli and Palestinian states.
Similarly,
Susquehanna Valley Presbytery seeks Assembly endorsement of the
“Amman Call,” the product of a World Council of Churches-sponsored
international peace conference held in Jordan in June 2007. The call
backs a two-state solution, an open Jerusalem, and the removal of
Israeli settlements and the “Separation Barrier” from pre-1967
Palestinian territory.
East Iowa Presbytery
has submitted an overture encouraging Presbyterians to travel to
Israel-Palestine and to meet with local Christians, spend
significant time in the occupied territories and to talk with both
Israeli and Palestinian peacemakers.
National Capital
Presbytery wants the Assembly to “condemn all acts of violence in
both Israel and Palestine” and seeks to focus the PC(USA)’s
attention on persuading the U.S. government to take a more active
peacemaking role. It urges Presbyterians to be “non-partisan
advocates for peace” who will not “over-identify with the realities
of the Israelis or Palestinians.”
All matters related
to Israel-Palestine will be considered by Assembly Committee 11:
Peacemaking and International Issues.