The Middle East Section Of The American Anthropological Association
MES Statement on Palestine
We stand in solidarity with the Palestinian
people against ongoing settler colonialism and condemn Zionist violence
against them, including forced evictions and retaliatory violence by
Israeli state forces against Palestinians in the Occupied West Bank,
East Jerusalem, Gaza, and within the state of Israel. We condemn the
recent forced evictions of Palestinian families in the Sheikh Jarrah
neighborhood of East Jerusalem–part of a now decades long campaign of
ethnic cleansing of Jerusalem–and Israeli violence perpetrated against
families trying to defend their homes.
In October 2014, nearly 1200 anthropologists signed “Anthropologists for the Boycott of Israeli Academic Institutions”
to support the global campaign for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions.
On November 20, 2015, a resolution to boycott Israeli academic
institutions was endorsed by a vote of 1040-136 at the American
Anthropological Association business meeting. It was subsequently
forwarded to the full membership for an electronic ballot and narrowly
missed adoption by a razor-thin margin of 39 votes (2,423 for and 2,384
against).
Seven years later, on April 27, 2021, Human Rights Watch issued a landmark report,
characterizing the Israeli state’s systemic discrimination and violence
as inflicting “deprivations… so severe that they amount to the crimes
against humanity of apartheid and persecution.” A similar conclusion was
reached by the Israeli Human Rights organization B’tselem in January 2021.
Palestinian activists have long made this argument. It reflects how
foregone the reality of the Israeli Apartheid system is that mainstream
international human rights organizations now find themselves forced to
acknowledge the reality of the situation on the ground, despite
tremendous political pressure from the state of Israel and its
supporters.
We reject the “two-sides” narrative that ignores the differences
between one of the most heavily militarized states in the world and a
Palestinian population resisting their oppressors. This is a state which
continues to displace, dispossess, and murder those living under its
illegal occupation, based in on-going settler colonialism, and a system
of ethnic, religious, and racial apartheid. Palestinian resistance to
this violent system of occupation and apartheid is a legal right.
As members of a U.S. professional organization that continues to
grapple with systemic racism and inequality in our field and our
practices, we condemn settler colonialism, ethnic cleansing, and racial
capitalism that connect the United States and Israel. We stand with
those working to dismantle these systems of oppression, and we amplify
their calls for justice, equality, and human dignity.
Israel’s policies of closure, land confiscation, house demolitions
and dispossession of Palestinians, unlawful arrest, injury and killing
of Palestinian civilians have continued unabetted since AAA last took up
this issue. We call on our colleagues in their classrooms,
universities, and beyond to:
- Reject the “two-sides” narrative that erases power hierarchies.
- Recognize the framework of apartheid as applicable to describe
Israel’s systematic repression of Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank,
and within Israel’s 1948 boundaries.
- Recognize that Israel’s violent repression often constitutes crimes against humanity.
- Reject the IHRA definition of anti-Semitism which has been used by
Israel’s supporters to suppress legitimate criticism of Israel.[1]
Sincerely,
MES Executive Board
[1]
An alternative is presented by the Independent Jewish Voice of Canada
that defines antisemitism AND does not suppress criticism of Israel:
https://www.ijvcanada.org/jerusalem-declaration/
http://mes.americananthro.org/mes-statement-on-palestine/?fbclid=IwAR1KTuHk30qWSs877FEGknPw9Ob3Tn5IlWQnbiAIfdIJX32pCJwoyG-EWkc
MES
The membership of the MES and anthropology as a whole are uniquely
poised to contribute to establishing and promoting public understanding
and policy frameworks that accommodate the historical experience and sociocultural diversity of the peoples of the Middle East.
The Middle East Section (MES) of the American Anthropological Association
convenes anthropologists with an interest in the peoples, cultures and
histories of the Middle East. Our membership is noteworthy for its
disciplinary diversity: socio-cultural anthropologists, linguistic
anthropologists, physical anthropologists and archaeologists, as well as
practicing anthropologists from these subdisciplines, all participate
actively in the section, and our membership thrives on the participation
of members from the United States, the Middle East, and from other
parts of the world. http://mes.americananthro.org/about/