[lbo-talk] Four Hours, Once a Week

Yoshie Furuhashi furuhashi.1 at osu.edu
Tue Aug 17 11:53:53 PDT 2004



>There are immediate things that need to be done. People need
>affordable childcare, for instance. I see all kinds of churches
>offering inexpensive child care and free summer bible camps.
>Well...? Why not? Why let the dead guy on a stick worshippers
>monopolize this territory? (And it sure as shit doesn't have to be
>a full-time fucking job. That is one thing that annoys me about left
>workerism: the insistence that you give over your entire life to the
>movement, 24/7 slavishly "organizing". Please.)

You want to compete with Christians? Then, do as they do. You ought to spend at least four hours once a week on an organization of which you are a member and make enough financial contributions to maintain full-time organizers ("pastors" and "missionaries" in the Christian world), training schools for organizers ("seminaries" in the Christian world), community centers ("churches" in the Christian world), study groups ("Bible studies" and lectures by theologians, missionaries, lay activists, etc. in the Christian world), social programs (child care, elder care, scholarships, etc.), socials (for singles, etc.), literature, and so forth.

The obstacle is that secular leftists in the USA, on the average, have become lazier, stingier, and more pie-in-the-sky than religious leftists.

My favorite Christian church is the PCUSA, which is probably to the left of the CPUSA on some questions, like the question of Palestine.

Tuesday, July 27, 2004 Presbyterians Divest from the Israeli Occupation

The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) voted to divest from multinational corporations operating in Israel/Palestine, the first US church to employ divestment to end the Israeli occupation:

The 216th General Assembly approved several measures opposing the Israeli occupation of Palestine Friday, including a call for the corporate witness office of the Presbyterian Church (USA) to begin gathering data to support a selective divestment of holdings in multinational corporations doing business in Israel/Palestine.

Divestment is one of the strategies that U.S. churches used in the 1970s and '80s in a successful campaign to end apartheid in South Africa.

The vote was 431 to 62 to have the church's Mission Responsibility Through Investment Committee (MRTI) study the matter and make recommendations to the General Assembly Council (GAC).

When a handful of commissioners expressed reservations about the action, the Rev. Mitri Raheb, a Lutheran pastor from Bethlehem, an ecumenical guest at the Assembly, said divestment is important because it is a way for the churches to take direct action. For too long, he said, the churches have simply issued statements -- and that is not enough.

"We have to send strong messages to such companies," Raheb said, referring specifically to Caterpillar Inc., the American builder of the armored tractors and bulldozers the Israeli army uses to demolish Palestinian homes.

"Sisters and brothers, this is a moment of truth," Raheb said.

The Rev. Victor Makari, the PC(USA)'s liaison to the Middle East, supported the divestment strategy, saying, "I think the issue of divestment is a very sensitive one with Israel. . . . If nothing else seems to have changed the policy of Israel toward Palestinians, we need to send a clear and strong message."

The divestment action also calls for the United States to be an "honest, even-handed broker for peace" and calls for "more meaningful participation" in peace negotiations by Russia, German, France and others. It also encourages the U.S., Israeli and Palestinian governments to "lay aside arrogant political posturing and get on with forging negotiated compromises that open a path to peace."

In other actions related to Israel, the Assembly voted by large margins to condemn Israel's construction of a "security wall" across the West Bank; disavow Christian Zionism as a legitimate theological stance and direct the denomination's Middle East and Interfaith Relations offices to develop resources on differences between fundamental Zionism and Reformed theology; and study the feasibility of sponsoring economic-development projects in Palestine and putting an action plan in place by 2005.

The actions on Israel were forwarded to the Assembly by the Peacemaking Committee. (Alexa Smith, "GA04121: Assembly Endorses Israel Divestment: Palestinian Says Merely Issuing Another Statement Is Not Enough," July 2, 2004)

According to the church's website, "The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) has approximately 2.5 million members, 11,200 congregations and 21,000 ordained ministers" ("Who We Are"), so it also is the largest membership organization so far to embark upon divestment to pressure Tel Aviv.

Click on the link to read the PCUSA's momentous decision: "Item 12-01 -- Overture 04-32 : On Supporting the Geneva Accord, Urging Israel and Palestine to Implement the Accord."

See, also, Nathan Guttman, "Presbyterians Divest Themselves from Israel " (Haaretz, July 21, 2004); and Ahmed Nassef and Jawad Ali, "Viva Presbyterians! Church Divests from Israel" (MWU! Blog, July 23, 2004).

<http://montages.blogspot.com/2004/07/presbyterians-divest-from-israeli.html>

Yoshie



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