Presbyterians Divest the Jews
by Andrew Walsh
Coverage of routine institutional religious business is so deeply out of
journalistic fashion that nobody much noticed on July 2, 2004, when the
216th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church USA (PCUSA) passed a
package of resolutions touching on relations between Jews and Christians and
initiating a lengthy process of disinvestment intended to press Israel’s
government to change its occupation policies in the Palestinian territories.
Nevertheless, news of the resolutions did eventually dribble out,
initially in a Religion News Service roundup on July 6. PBS’s “Religion and
Ethics Newsweekly” picked up the story on July 9, when anchor Bob Abernethy
noted briefly that the mainline denomination had decided “to begin divesting
in some companies that do business with Israel,” perhaps including “U.S.
companies such as Caterpillar, which makes bulldozers used by the Israeli
army.”
Eric J. Greenberg of the weekly Forward broke
the story to the Jewish community on July 16, 2004. “In an unprecedented
victory for pro-Palestinian activists, leaders of the largest Presbyterian
denomination officially equated the Jewish state with apartheid South Africa
and have voted to stop investing in Israel.” While not an accurate summary
of the Presbyterian resolutions, it certainly mobilized Jewish reaction.
“The Presbyterian Church (USA) has committed a grievous sin,” Alan
Dershowitz thundered on August 4, 2004 in an op-ed piece in the Los Angeles
Times that was widely reprinted. “Unless the church rescinds this immoral,
sinful and bigoted denigration of the Jewish state, it will be
‘participating in’ and ‘contributing to’ anti-Jewish bigotry and the
encouragement of terrorism.”
“If these are our friends, exactly who are our enemies?” Jonathan Tobin
jabbed in the August 2004 issue of the Deep South Jewish Voice. “In their
own buttoned-down, white-bread manner, the Presbyterians are telling the
Jews to go to hell.”
Even the more rhetorically measured response of interfaith veterans like
Rabbi A. James Rudin, the American Jewish Committee’s senior ecumenical
official, betrayed considerable anxiety. Rudin complained in his Religion
News Service column on July 22 that the resolutions (especially one
continuing denominational funding for a small Presbyterian sponsored
congregation of Messianic Jews) had “undermined more than 40 years of
constructive Presbyterian-Jewish religious dialogue that was built on mutual
respect and understanding.”
If the Jewish response was hot, the Presbyterian reaction was frosty.
Stated Clerk Clifton Kirkpatrick, the denomination’s highest elected
official, defended the General Assembly’s votes in a lengthy public
statement issued on July 22. The assembly, he said, “did not approve a
blanket divestment from companies that do business in Israel, as is being
reported in some places.” Further, it had not asserted “any moral
equivalency” between Israel and apartheid South Africa.
Instead, the Presbyterian assembly’s actions arose, he said, from “a
longstanding commitment to the secure existence of Israel and the Israeli
people, in a similar commitment to the security and existence of the
Palestinians in their own state, and in a passionate vision of negotiated
peace as the only way forward.”
These summer exchanges set the stage for an uncommon, steely, and
unflinching controversy between Jews and Presbyterians that has unfolded
step by step over the past year as Jews have struggled, so far with no
success, to persuade the Presbyterians to back off their Israel resolutions.
More than a shouting match, the confrontation has revealed the deep
structure that governs how both sides engage faith in public action, how
sensitive each is to accusations of moral misconduct, and how little (40
years of dialogue or no) each side understands what makes the other tick.
From the Jewish perspective, the problem centered on the drift of
mainline Protestants—once the Jewish community’s closest allies in public
policy—into what seems like open endorsement of Palestinian aims and goals.
On the Presbyterian side, as Neela Banerjee put it in the September 28,
2004 New York Times, the decision “to explore divestment may be the starkest
example so far of the frustration among many Protestants with the crumbling
of peace efforts, a fact worsened, they believe, by Israel’s decision to
build the barrier (wall) in the West Bank.” The Protestant view, Antonios
Kireopoulos, assistant general secretary for international affairs of the
National Council of Churches told the Times, was that “interfaith dialogue
between Jews and American Protestants has waned over the last few years, in
great part because of tension over Israel’s policies.”
A meeting between Presbyterian and Reform and Conservative Jewish leaders
in New York on September 28, 2004 failed to cool things off. Alan Cooperman
of the Washington Post reported on September 29, 2004 that “neither side
gave any ground” in a “polite but tense” meeting.” Rabbi Eric H. Yoffie,
president of the Union of Reform Judaism told reporters after the meeting,
“Holding something over the head of Israel to change its conduct, while
holding nothing over the heads of the Palestinians to change their
conduct…has caused utter dismay in the Jewish community.”
As the confrontation built up, both sides had to cope with the excesses
of their own extremists. Jewish leaders had to find their way around their
original overstatements of the Presbyterian resolutions, their sense of
shock at hearing the news, and, some months later, their chagrin at an
anonymous arson threat against Presbyterian churches for their tilt against
Israel.
In October, the Presbyterians, in turn, had to deal with the embarrassing
statements of a delegation of Pres-byterian peace activists on a study tour
of the situation in Israel, Lebanon, and the Palestinian territories. One
retired seminary ethics professor ended up on Hezbollah’s satellite TV
network saying that “relations and conversations with Islamic leaders are a
lot easier than dealings and dialogues with Jewish leaders.” That led to a
November 17 announcement that the PCUSA had fired two staff members who had
met with Hezbollah leaders.
During the fall of 2004, some observers were trying to figure out what
had caused the sudden and gaudy collision. The very experienced journalist
Ira Rifkin noted in the September 6, 2004 Jerusalem Report, that the
normally alert Jewish communal organizations had let the Presbyterian
discussion “slip past them.”
This was because the resolution came to the floor of the General Assembly
not as a highly publicized proposal from the church’s central
administration, but as an unheralded request from the Presbytery of St.
Augustine, a regional jurisdiction in northeast Florida, which had passed
its resolution on the matter in 2003. The fact that it passed 431-62 also
seemed deeply alarming.
“We had no idea this was coming up,” David Saperstein of the Union for
Reform Judaism—and the most prominent Jewish lobbyist in Washington—told
Minnesota Public Radio’s “Marketplace” on October 19. “They did not seek any
input from our community on this.”
Part of the problem, therefore, was that, even after 40 or 50 years of
ecumenical dialogue, Jewish leaders had not grasped the inner dynamics of
Presbyterian polity, or the denomination’s high sense of its moral
responsibility. “The mainline church’s influence today is not about
numbers,” Rifkin observed. “Its influence remains strong because of its
historic role in the building of the United States and the disproportionate
number of members it has among America’s business and political elite.”
In certain respects, the raison d’être for General Assembly is to give
the PCUSA the opportunity to meet its moral obligation to call things as it
sees them. As Clifton Kirkpatrick, in superb Presbyterian polity-speak,
stated in his late July 2004 ripost to Jewish critics, “We make every effort
to discern God’s presence in the world and to ‘let justice roll down like
waters, and righteousness like an everflowing stream’ (Amos 5:24). It is out
of this faith and commitment, and with careful reflection, that the
commissioners of the 216th General Assembly took a number of actions
concerning our relations with the Jewish community, as well as the situation
of Israel and Palestine.”
This sense of institutional mission identity is rooted in the
Presbyterian mania for proper order, for inviolable internal organizational
protocols. The 2004 resolutions authorized the PCUSA’s Mission
Responsibility Through Investment Committee to make recommendations to the
General Assembly Advisory Council in 2005 on selective divestment of
corporations in the church’s $8 billion portfolio, with those
recommendations to be ratified at the church’s 2006 General Assembly. No
earthly power—or argument—could or should alter that
Nevertheless, the Jewish aversion to divestment was so strong that the
organized Jewish community felt compelled to try to press Presbyterians to
abandon their process.
That set up positional warfare, and, during the fall of 2004, press
accounts of coordinated local efforts by local Jewish leaders to persuade
local Presbyterians to press their national leaders to halt the process
began to appear. In places as varied as Washington, Houston, San Francisco,
New Orleans, and Allentown, stories reported intense inter-communal
discussions.
“A small group of San Antonio Presbyterians has signed a statement
opposing a resolution issued by the national church that calls for divesting
church funds from multinational corporations operating in Israel,” J.
Michael Parker reported in the San Antonio Express-News on December 10. “The
San Antonio statement—in effect a rebuttal to the national resolution—was
drafted at University Presbyterian Church. It grew out of discussions
involving local Presbyterians and several Jewish leaders.”
James Rudin, in his Religion News Service column of September 23,
stressed the opposition of many prominent Presbyterians to the resolutions.
The General Assembly “fell out of the stupid tree and hit every branch going
down,” he quoted the Rev. Mark Brewer, pastor of Los Angeles’ Bel Air
Presbyterian church, as saying.
But Manya A. Brachear’s Chicago Tribune dispatch of November 10 reported
that the Presbyterian process was grinding forward relentlessly, despite the
objections of many individual Presbyterians in Chicago and other places. She
also found prominent Presbyterians ready to defend the General Assembly.
“It’s not an attack on Israel,” the Rev. John Buchanan, senior pastor of
Chicago’s powerhouse Fourth Presbyterian Church told the Tribune. “It’s a
modest attempt by one small denomination to say a word of peace and justice
and hope in the middle of continuing mind-numbing violence and human
suffering.”
Brachear then reported that the Mission Responsibility Through Investment
Committee had announced the standards it had set for selective divestment:
“companies that operate on occupied land, sell products, services or
technology to support Israeli settlements or the construction of the
separation barrier; or do business with organizations that support violence
against innocent civilians.”
By December, Jane Lampman of the Christian Science Monitor was re-porting
that other Protestant denominations, notably the Episcopal Church, were also
thinking about economic action to protest Israeli occupation policies. And
by the spring of 2005, these included the world-wide Anglican communion, the
United Church of Christ, the Disciples of Christ, the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America, and several regional bodies of the United Methodist
Church.
In February, the World Council of Churches issued a statement asking its
347 member denominations to give “serious consideration” to economic
pressure as a means of obtaining its policy ends. The Christian Century
reported on March 22 that the WCC had issued a statement in February
commending the Presbyterian plan “in both method and manner” for using
“criteria rooted in faith and calling members to do things that make for
peace.”
The Century then quoted a battle-weary Rabbi Gary Bretton-Granatoor,
interfaith director of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), as saying the
“divestment campaign has taken on a life of its own. The best thing we can
do is continue to call it what it is—holding Israel to a double standard and
using religious language to justify political ends.’”
By the spring, Jewish efforts seemed to be moving in two directions. The
first was to specify that Palestinian Christians were the source of bad
Presbyterian policy notions. Nancy Glass of the Religion News Service
reported on August 2 that the ADL and others were pointing to the growing
influence of the Sabeel Ecumenical Liberation Theology Center in Jerusalem
on mainline Protestant thinking.
“The Sabeel offices are frequently included in the itineraries of
mainline Protestant delegations visiting the Holy Land,” Glass wrote. “In
one of many partnerships with U.S. churches, the Rev. Naim Ateek, president
of Sabeel, visited the U.S. for four months at the end of 2003 as a guest of
the Presbyterians.”
The second approach was to come close to admitting that the tactic of
using swarms of local interventions to short-circuit the Presbyterian
divestment process wasn’t working and that efforts would simply have to wait
until 2006 and the next Presbyterian General Assembly, which alone has the
authority to alter the resolutions of previous assemblies.
In early July, meanwhile, the United Church of Christ passed a resolution
at its General Synod meeting that, according to Emily Dulcan’s July 9 story
in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch was “similar in tone” to the PCUSA’s
resolution of the previous year.
So, when the Presbyterian committee deliberating on the selective
divestment finally issued its recommendations in Seattle on August 5,
reaction was muted. Predictably, the committee suggested a lengthy phased
approach of trying to persuade four named military equipment and technology
companies (Caterpillar, Motorola, ITT Industries and United Technologies) to
change their business practices before undertaking any divestment. Then,
acting on its own initiative, the committee also suggested the same process
of negotiation with Citibank, alleging (according to an article by Laurie
Goodstein of the New York Times) that the “bank had a connection to a bank
accused of having a role in funneling money from Islamic charities to the
families of Palestinian suicide bombers.”
After the companies were named, Jewish leaders like Rudin tried a new
tack: isolating the Presbyterians from other mainline groups. The Jewish
Telegraphic Agency’s Rachel Pomerance quoted Rudin late August as saying
that “Jewish-Presbyterian relations have long been difficult.” Rudin now
spoke of a “ long history of antipathy, even hostility,” to Israel and
Zionism among the Presbyterian leadership and noted that “Presbyterian
missionaries have long been closely allied with Arabs, helping to found
American universities in Beirut, Cairo and Ramallah, which in turn has
informed their pro-Arab stance.”
Pomerance’s piece, which appeared in many Jewish communal newspapers,
claimed that Jewish officials were “close to giving up on talks with
Presbyterian leaders.” But perhaps not on other Protestants. “The
Presbyterians seem to be in a very different place than the other
denominations,” declared Ethan Felson of the Jewish Council for Public
Affairs.
The Presbyterian process, mean-while, ground on, apparently impervious to
outside pressure. Nevertheless, questions were being raised by many
Presbyterians whether their church’s taste for attempting to influence the
behavior of nations was a good thing.
Writing for the media criticism website, The Revealer, Presbyterian
minister Ben Daniel suggested on December 23 that the Presbyterian fondness
for issuing resolutions in jargon that non-Presbyterians have trouble
understanding wasn’t serving the group well. The denomination, he wrote, is
“unused to having people pay attention to its actions,” noting that “in the
twenty years that I have been following the work of Presbyterian General
Assemblies, this is the first time a significant number of non-Presbyterians
have really cared about what Presbyterians have to say.”
Other insiders also suggested that the stately process of General
Assembly resolutions moves too slowly for the news. The entire first year of
the divestment controversy coincided, for example, with Israel’s wrenching
withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, a goal seemingly consonant with Presbyterian
wishes. (And, it’s worth noticing, during which the Israeli army used its
Caterpillar bulldozers to knock down Israeli settlements.)
Barbara Wheeler, president of Auburn Theological Seminary and an eminent
liberal Presbyterian, took to the pages of the Christian Century on February
8 to call her church’s divestment policy “unwise and ineffective.”
Divestment, she noted, “will have symbolic weight only,” because its
connection with previous campaigns against apartheid “signals extreme
opprobrium” and this “feeds Israeli insecurities and defensiveness….Thus the
Presbyterian divestment decision makes it less, not more likely that Israel
will modify its policies that afflict Palestinians and will take risky steps
toward peace.”
“Instead of delivering moralizing pronouncements and symbolic body
blows,” she wrote, “Presbyterians should offer partnership—listening,
support and encouragement to Jews, Muslims, and other Christians who are
working for peace.”
It is no secret that there has been deep tension between mainline
Protestants and the organized Jewish community for many years—mostly over
how to solve the problems of the Middle East. But the memory of a vigorous
common front in the Civil Rights and Great Society eras—as well as the labor
of many individuals—kept elements of a working alliance going. And, by fall,
there were signs that many mainline groups don’t want an open break. On
October 11, the Religion News Service reported that the Episcopal Church’s
Executive Council had “flatly rejected” divestment in companies doing
business with Israel and that leaders of both the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America and the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) opposed
divestment as well.
This year’s contretemps raises the tantalizing question of whether the
old mid-20th century coalition has broken up for good—whether, for example,
the dispute will drive the Jewish community into a permanent alliance with
evangelical Protestants, who are enthusiastic backers of the State of
Israel.
Time, of course, will tell. But the potential for a really significant
realignment in the religious politics of the nation exists, and it makes the
next General Assembly of the PCUSA, in the summer of 2006 in Birmingham,
Alabama, worth much closer journalistic scrutiny than the controversy has
received so far. Not very many people were watching as the Presbyterians did
their foreign policy business last summer. The same should not be true of
2006. |