Palestinian advocates encourage action against University of Chicago pension company 13Oct12 October 13, 2012

Three pro-Palestine activists discussed their efforts to put pressure on companies that they claim profit from Israelâs military presence in Palestine using a strategy called Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) during a discussion sponsored by Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) in Stuart Hall on Wednesday evening.
According to her research, the offenders included companies such as Caterpillar, which sells armed bulldozers to Israel, and Motorola, the radar and security system provider of the Israeli settlements in Palestine.
Baum added that Hewlett-Packard, a computer company likely used by numerous students, developed a biometric identification system that will be used to control movement on the ground in Palestine.
Sandra Tamari, an organizer of the St. Louis Palestine Solidarity Committee who this June made national news for being denied entry into Israel after she refused to share her personal e-mails with Israeli security officials, defended the economic implications of BDS.
âPalestinians may suffer economically in the short term, but the Palestinians are asking for [BDS],â she explained. She added that strategies such as positive investment and humanitarian aid are not only insufficient, but not what the people of Palestine want.
What makes BDS so powerful compared to positive investment, she argued, is the attention it brings to the conflict. âBDS accelerates the conversation,â she said. âBDS is not a punitive movement. We are targeting the Israeli economy, not Israelis.â
Sydney Levy, director of advocacy for Jewish Voice for Peace, a group that works to secure the region, encouraged students to organize their professors to complain to TIAA-CREF for its affiliation to the invested companies.
âThe moment you are working with professors,â Levy said, âTIAA-CREF will listen to you.â
In an e-mail, SJP President and fourth-year Sami Kishawi said that SJP had already been working with Chicago Divests and was planning a broad campaign to get students more engaged with the Israel-Palestine conflict.
âOne major goal of our campaigns is to get the campus talking. Too many students and faculty members think that Israelâs occupation of Palestine is too controversial or complicated of an issue to discuss, or that it doesnât concern them. But it does,â Kishawi wrote.
Thank You.