JEWISH VOICE FOR PEACE PRESS
RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- Hillary Clinton's
United
Methodist Church reaffirms opposition to Israeli
occupation at General Conference
- Overwhelmingly
affirms divestment as an option for pressuring for an end to
Israel's
occupation
- Creates task force
to set human rights criteria for church investments/divestment in the Middle
East, Darfur and China.
- Begins direct
corporate engagement with Caterpillar, Inc to discuss role in the Palestinian Occupied Territories
JVP's Sydney Levy: "This is an important step
forward for a major US church that has a longstanding
history of opposition to the Israeli occupation."
[San Francisco, May 2,
2008] Delegates at the
United
Methodist Church's General Conference in Fort Worth
TX (April 23-May 2) did not get to
directly consider a range of selective divestment proposals this week.
Nonetheless, in a stunning rebuke to anti-divestment groups, Methodist delegates
voted by 763-38 to keep divestment from Israel's occupation on the table as
an option. Delegates also resoundingly rejected a petition to
support Israeli settlements.
Further, a
proposal to divest from Caterpillar was shelved prior to the conference in favor
of open talks with the company, marking the first time since JVP started our
Caterpillar campaign that the company has agreed to talk directly with groups
about their role in human rights abuses in the Occupied Territories.
Finally,
Methodists voted to create a task force to consider global human
rights issues in the Middle East, Sudan and China with the
goal of "establishing, implementing and promoting a common standard for
determining prohibited investments and positive investment principles that
are consistent with The United Methodist Social Principles." It is expected that
the committee will seriously examine further selective divestment initiatives as
a way to bring about an end to the occupation.
The Institute for
Religion and Democracy (IRD), a conservative group critics charge with trying to
split the church, created further controversy when they gave international
delegates free cell phones which included directions for voting against a range
of politically progressive proposals. It was their anti-divestment resolution
called "Oppose Divestment from Israel" which was soundly defeated,
thus illustrating how groups lobbying against selective divestment have won few
hearts and minds.
"This is an important step forward for a major
US church that has a longstanding
history of opposition to the Israeli occupation, and is now moving towards one
of the only nonviolent actions that can lead to real peace in the region. Each
day Israel's occupation and settlement
expansion continues unabated, the divestment and sanctions movement will grow,"
said Sydney Levy, Director of Campaigns for Jewish Voice for Peace, one of the
country's largest Jewish peace organizations.
Church leadership also
reaffirmed condemnation of Israel's occupation. Jim Winkler,
the General Secretary of the Methodist General Board of Church and Society
said:
"Israel's occupation of Palestinian
land has continued for more than 40 years. Undeniable misery is experienced
every day by Palestinian Christians and Muslims. Our church should not profit
from it."
At the last General Conference in 2004, this resolution
passed:
"The United Methodist Church opposes continued military
occupation of the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem, the confiscation of
Palestinian land and water resources, the destruction of Palestinian homes,
the continued building of illegal Jewish settlements, and any vision of a
'Greater Israel' that includes the occupied territories and the whole of
Jerusalem and its surroundings."
[Book of Resolutions, 2004, #312]
Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton is a member of the United Methodist Church and spoke at the General Conference
in 1996.
Jewish Voice for Peace launched a website,
http://www.investinpeace.org/ where Jews and
allies have sent messages of
support to Methodists seeking to bring a lasting peace to the region by
divesting from companies that profit from Israel's
occupation.
The United Methodist Church meets every four
years.
______________________________
About
Jewish Voice for Peace
Founded in 1996, Jewish Voice for Peace is a national
grassroots peace organization with over 20,000 supporters dedicated to
promoting a US foreign policy in the
Middle East based on peace, democracy, human
rights and respect for international law. JVP's board of Jewish American
and Israeli advisors
includes Pulitzer and Tony award winner Tony Kushner,
actor Ed Asner, poet Adrienne Rich as well as other respected rabbis,
artists, scholars and activists.
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