Boycott Campaign Against Israel Is Latest 'Mutation' Of Oldest Hatred Says Former Chief Rabbi

Former Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks has hit out at the BDS campaign against Israel

The boycott, divestment and sanctions campaign (BDS) is 'dangerously wrong', according to the former Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, now Lord Sacks. 

In a video posted on his website, he says: 'Because beneath the service, it is an attempt to delegitimise Israel as a prelude to its elimination. No Jew, and no humanitarian, can stand by and see that happen.'

He said the BDS campaign will harm the very people it seeks to protect and prolong the situation it seeks to end and 'lead to wrongs in the name of rights'.

He said he supports the right of Palestinians to a state of their own, and of Palestinian children to future of 'dignity and hope'.

But the BDS campaign will achieve neither of these things. He said that to focus on one nation, and the only one with an effective democracy in the Middle East, looks 'less like a campaign for human rights than campaign against Israel's very right to be'.

Israel's enemies had tried to destroy it by war, by economic sanctions, politically and then by a campaign of suicide bombings. 'Now through the BDS campaign, they are trying to deligitimise it morally.' He said the campaign will fail, but it was still serious.

He said the campaign against Israel is the latest 'mutation' of the world's oldest hatred, antisemitism. He accused its proponents of seeking to silence and intimidate supporters of Israel.

He was speaking days after an unprecedented decision by one university to cancel 'Israel Apartheid Week'. The Simon Wiesenthal Center, an international human rights organisation which counters antisemitism, hate crime and terrorism, welcomed the decision by the University of Central Lancashire to cancel the week and called on other universities to follow suit.

Israel Apartheid Week is part of the growing BDS movement targeting Israel.

News
Fire severely damages historic Amsterdam church on New Year’s Day
Fire severely damages historic Amsterdam church on New Year’s Day

A major fire tore through one of Amsterdam’s best-known historic buildings in the early hours of New Year’s Day, seriously damaging the property and forcing people to leave nearby homes.

Rwanda’s president on the defensive over church closures
Rwanda’s president on the defensive over church closures

Rwandan President Paul Kagame defended the government's forced closure of Evangelical churches, accusing them of being a “den of bandits” led by deceptive relics of colonialism. 

We are the story still being written
We are the story still being written

The story of Christ continues in the lives of those who take up His calling.

Christians harassed, attacked all over India at Christmas
Christians harassed, attacked all over India at Christmas

International Christian Concern reported more than 80 incidents in India, some of them violent, over Christmas.