The Atlantic: The Problem With Boycotting Israel
The Atlantic - (archive: https://archive.ph/IwOlw ) The Problem With Boycotting Israel
Writers should build bridges instead of walls.
By Arash Azizi
November 20, 2024, 7 AM ET
When you hear that thousands of writers have signed a petition, you can already guess what they are calling for: What other than boycotting Israel could generate such enthusiasm among the literati?
A staggering 6,000 writers and publishing professionals have signed a letter to address the most profound moral, political and cultural crisis of the 21st century. They are calling for a boycott of Israeli cultural institutions. The letter says that these institutions have played a crucial role in normalizing
injustices and that cooperating with them harms Palestiniansthe implication being that withholding cooperation will help Palestinians. Signatories include some of the best writers alive. If you like to read, chances are a favorite of yours is on here. Among the best-known are the novelists Percival Everett, Sally Rooney, Jhumpa Lahiri, and Annie Ernaux. Some of my own favorites include the Indian writer Arundhati Roy, the Canadian novelist Miriam Toews, and the British critic Owen Hatherley.
Predictably, the letter has led to a backlash. Almost 1,000 writers issued a counter-letter. They include the Pulitzer Prizewinning playwright David Mamet, the essayist Adam Gopnik, the historian Simon Sebag Montefiore, and the Nobel laureate Herta Müller. My favorite signatory on this one is another Nobel laureate, the fiery left-wing feminist Austrian Elfriede Jelinek, known for her 1983 masterpiece The Piano Teacher.
I am as horrified as anyone by Israels brutal and criminal war in Gaza and its decades-long regime of occupation. As a writer, my primary solidarity is with the dozens of journalists killed in the conflict in the past year, the majority of whom were Palestinian. But I also have no doubt as to which side of this literary civil war I am on.
Ive never joined a cultural boycott of any countrynot Israel, not Russia, and not Iran, my own country of birth. The latter informs my outlook on the issue.
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