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	<title>Observer &#187; In Defense of the Park Slope Food Co-op&#8217;s Israel Boycott</title>
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		<title>In Defense of the Park Slope Food Co-op&#8217;s Israel Boycott</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2011/08/in-defense-of-the-park-slope-food-co-ops-israel-boycott/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Aug 2011 13:27:20 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2011/08/in-defense-of-the-park-slope-food-co-ops-israel-boycott/</link>
			<dc:creator>Matt Chaban</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/?p=178017</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><div id="attachment_178025" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 210px"><em><a href="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/park_slope_coop_bds-e1314040318294.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-178025" title="Park Slope Food Coop" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/park_slope_coop_bds-e1314040318294.jpg?w=200&h=300" alt="" width="200" height="300" /></a></em><p class="wp-caption-text">Organic democracy. (BKLYN GUY</p></div></p>
<p><em>On the progressive blog Waging Nonviolence, Kiera Feldman mounts a vociferous defense of <a href="http://wagingnonviolence.org/2011/08/progressive-except-on-palestine/">the Park Slope Co-op's right to boycott Israeli goods</a>, should its members feel so inclined. It is in large part a 1,600-word critique of </em>The Observer<em>'s <a href="http://www.observer.com/tag/co-opt/">recent series</a> on <a href="http://www.observer.com/2011/08/soy-vey-could-a-hummus-fight-kill-the-co-op/">the BDS debate that has swept the brownstone bastion</a> in recent months. We considered grabbing a few paragraphs for a "smug" blockquote commentary of our own, but instead, we're giving the subject a full airing here, republished with permission. <!--more-->And, for more, there is a lighthearted shopping trip to the co-op to see <a href="http://wagingnonviolence.org/2011/08/co-oping-bds-part-ii-filling-up-the-israeli-boycart/">exactly what products might be boycotted</a>, which kind of reminds </em>The Observer<em> of the time <a href="http://www.observer.com/2010/real-estate/can-park-slope-food-co-ops-savings-save-it-whole-foods">we went comparison shopping at the co-op</a>. Now, to Ms. Feldman:</em></p>
<p>Once, in the bulk goods aisle of the Park Slope Food Coop, a  wild-haired woman stood next to me and scrutinized the coffee-grinder  settings. “I’m using it for an enema,” she explained. “It needs to be  very fine.” I suggested the espresso grind.</p>
<p>This is exactly the kind of shopping experience I hoped for when I  joined the Park Slope Food Coop in the fall of 2009: a realization of  the eternal promise of New York, home of the strange. (That and  crazycheap organic food.) Founded in 1973, the Coop is a Brooklyn  institution with enough character to have spawned its own genre of trend  piece. Some examples: the Coop has Byzantine <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/25/nyregion/25coop.html?pagewanted=all" target="_blank">rules</a> and work requirements (debatable); the Coop has <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/glogin?URI=http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/18/nyr" target="_blank">nannies</a> covering their employers’ shifts (dubious); and, most recently, the Coop is becoming <a href="../2011/08/soy-vey-could-a-hummus-fight-kill-the-co-op/?show=print" target="_blank">a hotbed of anti-Semitism</a> (downright wrong).</p>
<p><em>The New York Observer</em> has contributed the latest addition to the genre, with <a href="../2011/08/soy-vey-could-a-hummus-fight-kill-the-co-op/">a smug piece</a> earlier this month devoted to Coop members’ efforts to initiate a  boycott of Israeli products and divest from whatever Israeli holdings  the Coop might have. At the historically progressive Coop, the <em>Observer</em> procured a chorus of sources declaring the campaign anti- Semitic and  intolerable in “the heart of Chaimtown,” as one man put it, referring to  Park Slope’s high Jewish population. For the full sensationalist  effect, Alan Dershowitz—the de facto representative of the hawkish  Israel-right-or-wrong Jewish establishment—denounced the campaign’s  “bigotry” and threatened to shut the joint down, an ambitious goal for a  Cambridge, Massachusetts, resident who is not a member of the  democratically-governed Coop.</p>
<p>The <a href="http://psfcbds.wordpress.com/" target="_blank">Coop campaign</a> is part of Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS), a global movement launched with <a href="http://www.bdsmovement.net/call" target="_blank">a 2005 call</a> by 170 Palestinian civil-society groups. Shorthand demands: end the  occupation of the Palestinian Territories; end the legal discrimination  against Palestinian citizens of Israel; and allow the 700,000  Palestinians expelled in the 1948 creation of the state to return—along  with their descendants—to what is now Israel. Until the country complies  with international law, the movement vows economic and cultural  boycotts, institutional divestments, and governmental sanctions of  Israel. Perhaps the strongest indicator of BDS’s power is the Boycott  Law <a href="http://wagingnonviolence.org/2011/07/bds-movement-so-successful-israel-passes-law-banning-boycotts/">passed in the Knesset in July</a>, making it illegal for groups like <a href="http://boycottisrael.info/" target="_blank">Boycott from Within</a> to advocate BDS in Israel, a state that bills itself as “the only democracy in the Middle East.”</p>
<p>Leading the charge against BDS at the Coop is Barbara Mazor, who told the <em>Observer</em>,  “I think [BDS supporters are] latching onto it like slogans. Like true  believers, it’s the cool thing to do. You know, ‘I’m a progressive, and  it’s a progressive cause,’ so I think that’s how it’s coming through,  very thoughtlessly.” (Mazor also alluded to her otherwise liberal  politics with a dig at “a certain president [who] spent eight years in  office.”) The political alignment of the Coop’s BDS opponents is made  clear <a href="http://stopbdsparkslope.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">on their website</a>, which links to the reactionary pro-Israel group Stand With Us, known for having once <a href="http://jewishvoiceforpeace.org/blog/right-wing-israel-advocacy-group-pepper-sprays-jewish-voice-peace-jvp-members" target="_blank">pepper sprayed anti-occupation activists</a> from the group Jewish Voice for Peace, along with having published an anti-BDS comic book that depicted Palestinians as <a href="http://mondoweiss.net/2011/01/out-of-answers-on-how-to-confront-bds-standwithus-comic-book-portrays-palestinians-and-allies-as-vermin-reminiscent-of-nazi-propaganda.html" target="_blank">vermin</a>, in a throwback to Nazi propaganda.</p>
<p>“People here are always thinking about the implications of  everything,” Mazor was quoted as saying in a 2001 academic article about  the Coop. “That’s really nifty. I find that stam people [Yiddish for  “ordinary people”] think about less and less.”</p>
<p>Those who argue that the Coop boycott campaign is anti-Semitic  believe that BDS “singles out” Israel among all the other nations of the  world that commit grave human rights violations; the only reason anyone  would focus on Israel, the logic goes, is because they harbor prejudice  against Jews. “Israel has a lot of problems, but so does China, so does  America, so does a lot of the world,” Coop member Andrew Sepulveda <a href="../2011/08/the-night-the-observer-almost-blew-up-the-co-op/?show=all" target="_blank">told</a> the <em>Observer</em>,  voicing a common BDS counterargument. But must we rank wrongdoing  nations before taking a stand? And is it not logical to single out  Israel, given that U.S. foreign policy has already singled out Israel  with over $3 billion in annual military aid? “Whenever we take a  political action, we open ourselves up to accusations of hypocrisy and  double standards,” BDS supporter Naomi Klein <a href="http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/03/31-9" target="_blank">reminds us</a>, “since the truth is that we can never do enough in the face of pervasive global injustice.”</p>
<p>“The reason we’re boycotting Israel and not Atilla the Hun is because  there is an international call for boycott on Israel, and we should be  honoring boycotts,” according to one Coop boycott supporter, who asked  not to be named. “We shouldn’t be crossing picket lines. End of story.  The reason we aren’t boycotting Atilla the Hun is because there is no  international campaign to boycott Atilla the Hun. If the victims of  Atilla the Hun ask for a boycott, then we should take that seriously.”</p>
<p>In a <a href="http://foodcoop.com/files_lwg/lwg_2011_07_28_vFF_n15.pdf" target="_blank">letter</a> published in the Coop’s house organ, the <em>Linewaiters’ Gazette</em>,  boycott organizers noted that the Coop has a long tradition of  boycotts—of both individual companies and entire nations. A 20-year  boycott of South African products began in 1973, the year of the Coop’s  founding. There have been eleven Coop boycotts since 1989, including  Coca-Cola, Domino Sugar, non-United Farm Worker grapes, and tuna.<!--nextpage--></p>
<p>Until recently, the matter of boycotting and divesting from Israel had only been raised in letters in the <em>Linewaiters’ Gazette</em>,  where the debate has ebbed and flowed for over two years. But at a July  26th general meeting—a monthly gathering held at Brooklyn’s  Congregation Beth Elohim—the grinding wheels of Coop democratic process  began turning with the first face-to-face discussion of BDS. The  question at hand was not whether or not the Coop should join BDS, but  rather whether they should even hold a membership-wide vote. “Why not  boycott Syria, Saudi Arabia, or Bahrain?” said Susan Tauber, one of the  members advocating against the referendum, according to the Linewaiters’  Gazette’s recap of the general meeting.</p>
<p>Coop BDS organizers told me that almost all of the supporters who  spoke at the meeting were Jewish and identified themselves as such.  Still, Jewish opponents of BDS at the Coop show that the “progressive  except Palestine” phenomenon in the American Jewish community has not  gone away. While open to hosting the debate in his synagogue,  Congregation Beth Elohim’s Rabbi Andy Bachman—generally considered a  progressive rabbi—condemned the boycott efforts in a statement, <a href="http://www.andybachman.com/2011/07/official-statement-on-park-slope-food.html" target="_blank">writing</a>,  “BDS rhetoric reveals that the ultimate goal of the majority of its  supporters is a dissolution of Israel as a Jewish state. This is simply  untenable and unjust.” (Bachman was referring to BDS’ demand that  Palestinian refugees be allowed to return to what is now the state of  Israel in accordance with UN Resolution 194.) In the <em>Linewaiters’ Gazette</em>,  BDS opponent Ruth Bollettino made the same argument, but in starker  language. “The ‘right’ of Palestinian refugees to return means  dismantling the Jewish state demographically, flooding it with  Palestinian Arabs,” Bollettino wrote, revealing the racial fears  underpinning the drive to maintain Israel as a Jewish-majority state.  Her letter joined seven others against BDS, one in support of BDS, and  an unrelated letter thanking a stranger for having returned $90 that had  fallen out of the writer’s pocket at the Coop entrance.</p>
<p>Boycott supporters at the Coop would seem to be in the minority, if one were to judge by the letters in the <em>Linewaiters’ Gazette</em> or the <em>Observer</em>, which admitted its nonscientific methods while <a href="../2011/08/the-night-the-observer-almost-blew-up-the-co-op/?show=all" target="_blank">noting</a>,  “Finding pro-boycott members outside the co-op Monday night was no easy  task.” But Melissa, a Brooklynite Coop member of eight years, had a  different impression of the membership’s stand. “The silent majority of  Coop members are probably uncertain about the issue of BDS,” she said,  adding, “The challenge that we have is not to change the minds of people  like Barbara Mazor.” Rather, it is to educate their fellow Coop members  as to the need to honor the Palestinian BDS call.</p>
<p>Retired lawyer Dennis James, a Coop BDS organizer, noted the  generational divide he sees in conversations about BDS—who shuts off,  and who’s willing to engage. “Some of the older people, you can’t raise  the subject. It’s verboten,” James said. “Whereas younger people might  argue with you but they will talk about it.”</p>
<p>The other day, I met up with my friend Jesse Bacon at Tealounge, a  coffeeshop across the street from the Coop. Despite having once seen a  mouse scamper through the glass dessert case there, I ate part of  Jesse’s cookie as we talked BDS shop. He’s an activist with Jewish Voice  for Peace, working on <a href="http://jewishvoiceforpeace.org/tiaa-cref" target="_blank">their campaign</a> to get the pension fund TIAA-CREF to divest from Motorola and other  companies profiting from the occupation of the West Bank. Many TIAA-CREF  holders are teachers and other professionals who tend to skew liberal  in their politics. Working on the campaign has helped Jesse see how  important it is to have a sympathetic population when advocating BDS in  an institution. Jesse weighed in:</p>
<blockquote><p>In a certain sense, the Coop campaign is dealing with  liberal people who just want to get their crunchy, hippie food and be  left alone. But the best things that movements critical of Israel can do  is to push people to be consistent. Consistency is a great thing to  offer people. It requires some explanation and education as to why this  is part of your other values–why boycotting or divesting from Israel is  an extension of them.</p></blockquote>
<p>The cringe factor was high for both of us while reading the <em>Observer</em>’s  anonymous source decry the Coop BDS campaign reaching into the heavily  Jewish populated Park Slope, “the heart of Chaimtown.” At the same time,  Jesse pointed out, “The fact that a BDS campaign is even going on in  ‘Chaimtown’—the heart of the Jewish crunchy liberal  establishment—whether or not this wins, it shows that this issue is  everywhere now.”</p>
<p><strong><a href="mailto:mchaban@observer.com">mchaban [at] observer.com</a></strong> |<strong> <a href="http://twitter.com/MC_NYC">@MC_NYC</a></strong></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><div id="attachment_178025" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 210px"><em><a href="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/park_slope_coop_bds-e1314040318294.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-178025" title="Park Slope Food Coop" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/park_slope_coop_bds-e1314040318294.jpg?w=200&h=300" alt="" width="200" height="300" /></a></em><p class="wp-caption-text">Organic democracy. (BKLYN GUY</p></div></p>
<p><em>On the progressive blog Waging Nonviolence, Kiera Feldman mounts a vociferous defense of <a href="http://wagingnonviolence.org/2011/08/progressive-except-on-palestine/">the Park Slope Co-op's right to boycott Israeli goods</a>, should its members feel so inclined. It is in large part a 1,600-word critique of </em>The Observer<em>'s <a href="http://www.observer.com/tag/co-opt/">recent series</a> on <a href="http://www.observer.com/2011/08/soy-vey-could-a-hummus-fight-kill-the-co-op/">the BDS debate that has swept the brownstone bastion</a> in recent months. We considered grabbing a few paragraphs for a "smug" blockquote commentary of our own, but instead, we're giving the subject a full airing here, republished with permission. <!--more-->And, for more, there is a lighthearted shopping trip to the co-op to see <a href="http://wagingnonviolence.org/2011/08/co-oping-bds-part-ii-filling-up-the-israeli-boycart/">exactly what products might be boycotted</a>, which kind of reminds </em>The Observer<em> of the time <a href="http://www.observer.com/2010/real-estate/can-park-slope-food-co-ops-savings-save-it-whole-foods">we went comparison shopping at the co-op</a>. Now, to Ms. Feldman:</em></p>
<p>Once, in the bulk goods aisle of the Park Slope Food Coop, a  wild-haired woman stood next to me and scrutinized the coffee-grinder  settings. “I’m using it for an enema,” she explained. “It needs to be  very fine.” I suggested the espresso grind.</p>
<p>This is exactly the kind of shopping experience I hoped for when I  joined the Park Slope Food Coop in the fall of 2009: a realization of  the eternal promise of New York, home of the strange. (That and  crazycheap organic food.) Founded in 1973, the Coop is a Brooklyn  institution with enough character to have spawned its own genre of trend  piece. Some examples: the Coop has Byzantine <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/25/nyregion/25coop.html?pagewanted=all" target="_blank">rules</a> and work requirements (debatable); the Coop has <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/glogin?URI=http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/18/nyr" target="_blank">nannies</a> covering their employers’ shifts (dubious); and, most recently, the Coop is becoming <a href="../2011/08/soy-vey-could-a-hummus-fight-kill-the-co-op/?show=print" target="_blank">a hotbed of anti-Semitism</a> (downright wrong).</p>
<p><em>The New York Observer</em> has contributed the latest addition to the genre, with <a href="../2011/08/soy-vey-could-a-hummus-fight-kill-the-co-op/">a smug piece</a> earlier this month devoted to Coop members’ efforts to initiate a  boycott of Israeli products and divest from whatever Israeli holdings  the Coop might have. At the historically progressive Coop, the <em>Observer</em> procured a chorus of sources declaring the campaign anti- Semitic and  intolerable in “the heart of Chaimtown,” as one man put it, referring to  Park Slope’s high Jewish population. For the full sensationalist  effect, Alan Dershowitz—the de facto representative of the hawkish  Israel-right-or-wrong Jewish establishment—denounced the campaign’s  “bigotry” and threatened to shut the joint down, an ambitious goal for a  Cambridge, Massachusetts, resident who is not a member of the  democratically-governed Coop.</p>
<p>The <a href="http://psfcbds.wordpress.com/" target="_blank">Coop campaign</a> is part of Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS), a global movement launched with <a href="http://www.bdsmovement.net/call" target="_blank">a 2005 call</a> by 170 Palestinian civil-society groups. Shorthand demands: end the  occupation of the Palestinian Territories; end the legal discrimination  against Palestinian citizens of Israel; and allow the 700,000  Palestinians expelled in the 1948 creation of the state to return—along  with their descendants—to what is now Israel. Until the country complies  with international law, the movement vows economic and cultural  boycotts, institutional divestments, and governmental sanctions of  Israel. Perhaps the strongest indicator of BDS’s power is the Boycott  Law <a href="http://wagingnonviolence.org/2011/07/bds-movement-so-successful-israel-passes-law-banning-boycotts/">passed in the Knesset in July</a>, making it illegal for groups like <a href="http://boycottisrael.info/" target="_blank">Boycott from Within</a> to advocate BDS in Israel, a state that bills itself as “the only democracy in the Middle East.”</p>
<p>Leading the charge against BDS at the Coop is Barbara Mazor, who told the <em>Observer</em>,  “I think [BDS supporters are] latching onto it like slogans. Like true  believers, it’s the cool thing to do. You know, ‘I’m a progressive, and  it’s a progressive cause,’ so I think that’s how it’s coming through,  very thoughtlessly.” (Mazor also alluded to her otherwise liberal  politics with a dig at “a certain president [who] spent eight years in  office.”) The political alignment of the Coop’s BDS opponents is made  clear <a href="http://stopbdsparkslope.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">on their website</a>, which links to the reactionary pro-Israel group Stand With Us, known for having once <a href="http://jewishvoiceforpeace.org/blog/right-wing-israel-advocacy-group-pepper-sprays-jewish-voice-peace-jvp-members" target="_blank">pepper sprayed anti-occupation activists</a> from the group Jewish Voice for Peace, along with having published an anti-BDS comic book that depicted Palestinians as <a href="http://mondoweiss.net/2011/01/out-of-answers-on-how-to-confront-bds-standwithus-comic-book-portrays-palestinians-and-allies-as-vermin-reminiscent-of-nazi-propaganda.html" target="_blank">vermin</a>, in a throwback to Nazi propaganda.</p>
<p>“People here are always thinking about the implications of  everything,” Mazor was quoted as saying in a 2001 academic article about  the Coop. “That’s really nifty. I find that stam people [Yiddish for  “ordinary people”] think about less and less.”</p>
<p>Those who argue that the Coop boycott campaign is anti-Semitic  believe that BDS “singles out” Israel among all the other nations of the  world that commit grave human rights violations; the only reason anyone  would focus on Israel, the logic goes, is because they harbor prejudice  against Jews. “Israel has a lot of problems, but so does China, so does  America, so does a lot of the world,” Coop member Andrew Sepulveda <a href="../2011/08/the-night-the-observer-almost-blew-up-the-co-op/?show=all" target="_blank">told</a> the <em>Observer</em>,  voicing a common BDS counterargument. But must we rank wrongdoing  nations before taking a stand? And is it not logical to single out  Israel, given that U.S. foreign policy has already singled out Israel  with over $3 billion in annual military aid? “Whenever we take a  political action, we open ourselves up to accusations of hypocrisy and  double standards,” BDS supporter Naomi Klein <a href="http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/03/31-9" target="_blank">reminds us</a>, “since the truth is that we can never do enough in the face of pervasive global injustice.”</p>
<p>“The reason we’re boycotting Israel and not Atilla the Hun is because  there is an international call for boycott on Israel, and we should be  honoring boycotts,” according to one Coop boycott supporter, who asked  not to be named. “We shouldn’t be crossing picket lines. End of story.  The reason we aren’t boycotting Atilla the Hun is because there is no  international campaign to boycott Atilla the Hun. If the victims of  Atilla the Hun ask for a boycott, then we should take that seriously.”</p>
<p>In a <a href="http://foodcoop.com/files_lwg/lwg_2011_07_28_vFF_n15.pdf" target="_blank">letter</a> published in the Coop’s house organ, the <em>Linewaiters’ Gazette</em>,  boycott organizers noted that the Coop has a long tradition of  boycotts—of both individual companies and entire nations. A 20-year  boycott of South African products began in 1973, the year of the Coop’s  founding. There have been eleven Coop boycotts since 1989, including  Coca-Cola, Domino Sugar, non-United Farm Worker grapes, and tuna.<!--nextpage--></p>
<p>Until recently, the matter of boycotting and divesting from Israel had only been raised in letters in the <em>Linewaiters’ Gazette</em>,  where the debate has ebbed and flowed for over two years. But at a July  26th general meeting—a monthly gathering held at Brooklyn’s  Congregation Beth Elohim—the grinding wheels of Coop democratic process  began turning with the first face-to-face discussion of BDS. The  question at hand was not whether or not the Coop should join BDS, but  rather whether they should even hold a membership-wide vote. “Why not  boycott Syria, Saudi Arabia, or Bahrain?” said Susan Tauber, one of the  members advocating against the referendum, according to the Linewaiters’  Gazette’s recap of the general meeting.</p>
<p>Coop BDS organizers told me that almost all of the supporters who  spoke at the meeting were Jewish and identified themselves as such.  Still, Jewish opponents of BDS at the Coop show that the “progressive  except Palestine” phenomenon in the American Jewish community has not  gone away. While open to hosting the debate in his synagogue,  Congregation Beth Elohim’s Rabbi Andy Bachman—generally considered a  progressive rabbi—condemned the boycott efforts in a statement, <a href="http://www.andybachman.com/2011/07/official-statement-on-park-slope-food.html" target="_blank">writing</a>,  “BDS rhetoric reveals that the ultimate goal of the majority of its  supporters is a dissolution of Israel as a Jewish state. This is simply  untenable and unjust.” (Bachman was referring to BDS’ demand that  Palestinian refugees be allowed to return to what is now the state of  Israel in accordance with UN Resolution 194.) In the <em>Linewaiters’ Gazette</em>,  BDS opponent Ruth Bollettino made the same argument, but in starker  language. “The ‘right’ of Palestinian refugees to return means  dismantling the Jewish state demographically, flooding it with  Palestinian Arabs,” Bollettino wrote, revealing the racial fears  underpinning the drive to maintain Israel as a Jewish-majority state.  Her letter joined seven others against BDS, one in support of BDS, and  an unrelated letter thanking a stranger for having returned $90 that had  fallen out of the writer’s pocket at the Coop entrance.</p>
<p>Boycott supporters at the Coop would seem to be in the minority, if one were to judge by the letters in the <em>Linewaiters’ Gazette</em> or the <em>Observer</em>, which admitted its nonscientific methods while <a href="../2011/08/the-night-the-observer-almost-blew-up-the-co-op/?show=all" target="_blank">noting</a>,  “Finding pro-boycott members outside the co-op Monday night was no easy  task.” But Melissa, a Brooklynite Coop member of eight years, had a  different impression of the membership’s stand. “The silent majority of  Coop members are probably uncertain about the issue of BDS,” she said,  adding, “The challenge that we have is not to change the minds of people  like Barbara Mazor.” Rather, it is to educate their fellow Coop members  as to the need to honor the Palestinian BDS call.</p>
<p>Retired lawyer Dennis James, a Coop BDS organizer, noted the  generational divide he sees in conversations about BDS—who shuts off,  and who’s willing to engage. “Some of the older people, you can’t raise  the subject. It’s verboten,” James said. “Whereas younger people might  argue with you but they will talk about it.”</p>
<p>The other day, I met up with my friend Jesse Bacon at Tealounge, a  coffeeshop across the street from the Coop. Despite having once seen a  mouse scamper through the glass dessert case there, I ate part of  Jesse’s cookie as we talked BDS shop. He’s an activist with Jewish Voice  for Peace, working on <a href="http://jewishvoiceforpeace.org/tiaa-cref" target="_blank">their campaign</a> to get the pension fund TIAA-CREF to divest from Motorola and other  companies profiting from the occupation of the West Bank. Many TIAA-CREF  holders are teachers and other professionals who tend to skew liberal  in their politics. Working on the campaign has helped Jesse see how  important it is to have a sympathetic population when advocating BDS in  an institution. Jesse weighed in:</p>
<blockquote><p>In a certain sense, the Coop campaign is dealing with  liberal people who just want to get their crunchy, hippie food and be  left alone. But the best things that movements critical of Israel can do  is to push people to be consistent. Consistency is a great thing to  offer people. It requires some explanation and education as to why this  is part of your other values–why boycotting or divesting from Israel is  an extension of them.</p></blockquote>
<p>The cringe factor was high for both of us while reading the <em>Observer</em>’s  anonymous source decry the Coop BDS campaign reaching into the heavily  Jewish populated Park Slope, “the heart of Chaimtown.” At the same time,  Jesse pointed out, “The fact that a BDS campaign is even going on in  ‘Chaimtown’—the heart of the Jewish crunchy liberal  establishment—whether or not this wins, it shows that this issue is  everywhere now.”</p>
<p><strong><a href="mailto:mchaban@observer.com">mchaban [at] observer.com</a></strong> |<strong> <a href="http://twitter.com/MC_NYC">@MC_NYC</a></strong></p>
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