°®Âþµº

'We have to realise our economic power': Palestinians boycott Israeli products for Palestine Economic Week

The initiative seeks to boost the Palestinian economy and support women-owned businesses as part of a vision for a new future.
4 min read
London
10 June, 2021
The campaign is decentralised and all over historic Palestine [Jon G Fuller/Eye Ubiquitous/UIG/Getty-file photo]

throughout historic are boycotting as part of a weeklong campaign to support local businesses.

Palestine Economic Week began last Sunday, the first day of the week in the Middle East, and will run until this Saturday.

The initiative, which seeks to boost the Palestinian economy, has also seen support for women-ownedÌýbusinesses and faltering markets as part of an imagining of what a liberated future should be.

Lama Shehadeh, 29, an activist with the campaign, said: "We have to realise our economic power and our power in unity in this economic struggle to be able to direct our economic forces into our community."

The Haifa-based architect and urban planner cited the mass action that swept the region in May as a key motivation for starting the movement.

Last month, Palestinians went on aÌý, including inside Israel, to protestÌýIsraeli human rights violations.

This included the deadly , aggression against Al-Aqsa Mosque, and ongoing attempts to expel Palestinian families in Sheikh Jarrah, occupied East Jerusalem, from their homes.

In-depth
Live Story

Now, Palestine Economic Week aims to keep everyone engaged, including after the seven-day initiative concludes.

Shehadeh told °®Âþµº: "We don't want [people] to stop talking about our struggle and to stop resisting the colonial system the moment… Israel stops bombing Gaza."

She explained this is typically what happens, as people begin to feel the nightmare is over.

"Nothing has changed. We still live under the same colonial system; we're still oppressed."

Shehadeh links her nation's economic woes to the .

The term, meaning "catastrophe" in English, refers to the ethnic cleansing of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in 1948 alongside the creation of Israel.

Many activists and scholars consider the process to have continued right to this day, calling it an .

Shehadeh said: "Israel has been stealing our natural resources since the Nakba.

"We are drawn into poverty and unemployment, and we are very dependent on the Israeli economy as cheap labour and consumers of Israeli products."

The grassroots campaign, which doesn't have an official leadership and is decentralised, is running under aÌýslogan best translating from Arabic as, "Buy Locally".

Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý
Ìý

Events encouraging Palestinians to buy local andÌýboycott Israeli productsÌýstarted during the campaign's preparations lastÌýweekÌýand will continue over the coming days.

These range from farmers' marketsÌýto lectures, while stickers haveÌýbeenÌýemblazoned on products to invite people to purchase them.

FromÌýcities such as Haifa to smaller towns like Kafr Kanna, and in countless villages, the response has been widespread in Israel.

So too in Gaza and Jerusalem, plus West Bank refugee camps, Hebron, Ramallah and more.

Shehadeh said: "We stopped counting".

In one village, a list of all businesses owned by women and families was distributed by youthsÌýto encourage locals to purchase from them.

This is valuable, Shehadeh argued, because Palestinian women are among the most economically marginalised elements in the community.

"We encourage this to empower the weakest among us".

Within Israel's borders, she explained, women'sÌýunemployment figures are some of the worst anywhere on earth.

Society
Live Story

Shehadeh also said the campaignÌýis an opportunity to examine the role of capitalism in a future liberated Palestine.

"We imagine it… not as another capitalist system as [in] Israel that oppress[es] labour… but instead of Israel it's strong Palestinian investors or very rich Palestinians."

This adds to the importance of women's typically home-run businesses, for example, since ShehadehÌýargued these do not engage inÌýexploitation.

Simultaneously, declining local markets in Nazareth, Jerusalem, Acre and beyond - which have been devastated by this economic model - are being revitalised through cultural efforts this week, including historical tours.

A Ìýfrom the campaign's Instagram page proudly stated it isÌý"a first step towards breaking Israel's capitalist chokehold over us".

Under the present system, some local authorities in the West Bank have made a stand.

Beitunia, Anabta, Zawata and Beit Wazan have decided to offer tax breaks to businesses without Israeli products.

Moreover, Palestinians in the diaspora and their allies have shown their support for the campaign with many taking to social media to listÌýPalestinian products and businesses followers canÌýsupport.

Despite this outpouring of support, Shehadeh acknowledged there have been challenges.

The siege of Gaza makes the enclave highly dependent on Israeli goods, making a boycott there difficult.ÌýWithin Israel, there are often no Palestinian options available, in which case, people areÌýinsteadÌýencouraged to purchaseÌýimported goods.

Although the Israeli authorities have not cracked down on the peaceful economic protest, yet, Shehadeh saidÌýIsrael's anti-BDS law could come into play.

What's more, the media has largely ignored Palestine Economic Week and, crucially, Israeli shoppers have seemingly started to boycott Palestinian shops.

Shehadeh explained that many Israelis would previously come to Palestinian villages within Israel's borders to save money, or to purchase food.

In June, this seems to have wound down.

Palestinian activists have long advocated an internationalÌýboycott of Israeli goods through the movement.

The peaceful protest movement calls onÌýpeople around the world to vote with their wallets andÌýpile financial pressure on Israel to end its occupation and violations against the Palestinian people.

Ìý