StandWithUs Files Brief Supporting Arkansas Anti-BDS Law

StandWithUs Files Brief Supporting Arkansas Anti-BDS Law

Jewish Journal
Aaron Bandler
June 11, 2019


The StandWithUs Saidoff Legal Department, along with Agudath Israel of America and the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, filed an amicus brief on June 6 to the 8th Circuit of Court Appeals in support of the Arkansas law cracking down on the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement.
The brief, which was obtained by the Journal, begins with the argument that freedom of speech and association protected under the First Amendment of the Constitution is not absolute. The state can override First Amendment protections when there is a “compelling interest” to do so, such as in instances of discriminations, and the BDS movement perpetuates anti-Semitism, the brief argued.
“Boycotts against Jews and Jewish-owned businesses are embedded in this history,” the brief states. “In 1922, Arab leaders in the Palestine Mandate launched a boycott against Jews. In 1933, the Nazi regime in Germany boycotted Jewish-owned stores and businesses in an attempt to isolate and exclude Jews from all civic life. In 1945, before the creation of the Jewish state, the Arab League Council called for a boycott of all Jewish and Zionist products. In 1947 and 1948, Jews (not just Zionists) in Algeria, Iraq, Libya, Egypt, Morocco, Syria and Yemen were persecuted, subjected to government-instigated anti-Jewish riots, and deprived of their belongings.”
Today, BDS continues the anti-Semitic tradition of boycotts against the Jewish people through boycotting the Jewish State of Israel. But what makes BDS particularly insidious is its goal to destroy Israel, the brief argued.
“BDS co-founder Omar Barghouti has been explicit about this goal, stating
that BDS ‘oppose[s] a Jewish State in any part of Palestine,’” the brief states. “In this context, Palestine refers to the entire area that is now Israel, not specific disputed regions such as the West Bank and Gaza. Other BDS leaders have likewise confirmed that BDS’s goal is to eliminate the State of Israel, urging that ‘to bring down the state of Israel . . . should be stated as an unambiguous goal’ of the BDS movement.” The brief also noted that organizations like Students for Justice Palestine (SJP) routinely call for Israel’s destruction through chants like, “From the [Jordan] river to the [Mediterranean] sea, Palestine will be free.”
The BDS movement also espouses anti-Semitic rhetoric in its criticism of Israel, such as “dehumanizing cartoons portraying Israelis as malicious octopuses and apply age-old anti-Semitic slurs about Jewish greed to Israelis” as well as “modern-day forms of the medieval blood libel that accused Jews of poisoning wells and using the blood of Christian children to bake matzah.” BDS’ anti-Semitism has resulted in increased violence against the Jewish community, the brief argued, particularly on college campuses.
“In the wake of BDS campaigns, Jewish students have been harassed with anti-Semitic slurs and discrimination,” the brief states. “For example, at the University of California, Davis, a Jewish fraternity house was vandalized with a swastika after a BDS resolution passed in the student senate. During a BDS campaign at San Diego State University, numerous racist posts appeared on social media platforms targeting Jewish students. At UCLA, after a successful BDS resolution passed the student government, pro-BDS senators tried to deny a Jewish student her position on the student government judicial board on the grounds of her Jewish identity.”
The brief highlighted the BDS movement’s double-standard against Israel, noting that the movement singles out the Jewish state while being “notably silent” about human rights abuses occurring in countries like China, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
“Viewed against the background of historical and current anti-Semitism, and in light of the openly anti-Semitic views espoused by BDS movement leaders, the most plausible explanation for the BDS movement’s obsessive application of a double standard toward Israel is anti-Jewish animus,” the brief argued.
The brief concluded that the state of Arkansas has a compelling interest in fighting anti-Semitism, thus making their anti-BDS law constitutional.
“The State’s compelling interest in combatting that invidious discrimination overcomes any incidental effect that Act may have on boycotters’ rights of expression and free association,” the brief states. “The Act is in harmony with the ideal of a government ‘which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance . . . .’ The judgment should be affirmed.”
The American Jewish Committee (AJC) filed a similar brief on June 7, arguing that the state law protected a “legitimate interest in ensuring that it has full and unimpeded access to all goods and services available on the market, including those of Israeli origin, in the fulfillment of government contracts.” The AJC brief added that individuals and companies are allowed to voice their opposition to Israel; it is only the commercial boycotts that are not protected speech.
The Arkansas law, passed in 2017, bars state contractors from engaging in boycotts of Israel. The brief was filed in response to a 2018 lawsuit from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) on behalf of The Arkansas Times. The University of Arkansas-Pulaski Technical College, an advertiser for the Times had asked the Times to sign a pledge against boycotting Israel under the law; the Times refused, prompting the college revoke its business from the Times. The Times argued that the law was unconstitutional, as the publication has never taken a stance on BDS. United States District Judge Brian Miller dismissed the lawsuit in January, arguing that commercials boycotts are not protected under the First Amendment. The ACLU is appealing the decision.
Read the full article HERE

StandWithUs is an international, non-partisan education organization that supports Israel and fights antisemitism. StandWithUs empowers and energizes students and communities with leadership training and educational programs on hundreds of college campuses, high schools, and middle schools. StandWithUs informs through social media, print and digital materials, films, weekly newsletters, and missions to Israel. StandWithUs takes legal action through the StandWithUs Saidoff Legal Department. Founded in 2001 and headquartered in Los Angeles, the organization has chapters and offices throughout the U.S., Israel, the UK, Canada, Brazil, Argentina and Australia. More at www.standwithus.com. 

Related Content

About
StandWithUs

USA Regions
& Offices

Global
Chapters

Education & Research

Legal & Community

Upcoming Events

RESOURCES

NJ Assembly committee approves bill to establish definition of antisemitism
My identity as a progressive Zionist Jew shouldn’t be at stake
Examining Starvation Allegations in Gaza 

Take Action

Campaign

Demand Accountability: DC Comics Must Reconsider Its Choice of Writer for Red Hood

Join us in demanding that DC Comics uphold its values and protect its readers from hate.

AHAVA Sculpture - Exclusive & Limited Collection

Only 60 Numbered Sculptures Available worldwide — A True Collector’s Piece!  All proceeds support StandWithUs’ mission to fight antisemitism and support Israel.