jeudi 28 octobre 2010

Eglise méthodiste: la campagne de boycott d'Israël tourne à l'échec

La campagne anti-Israël au sein de l'Eglise méthodiste est clairement un échec.  Une pétition en-ligne de soutien à la position adoptée officiellement par l'Eglise sur Israël est péniblement parvenue à récolter 279 signatures .... Les méthodistes ne sont pas antisémites et sont globalement horrifiés par la résolution condamnant Israël lors de la conférence de 2010.  Et pourtant le prédicateur à l'origine de cette initiative, Richard Hall, parle de succès.  Le  Comité Québec-Israël a très bien analysé cette astuce employée par les boycotteurs qui vont d'échec en échec : "Depuis son lancement au Québec, la campagne BDS n’a récolté, en fait, que des revers qu’elle transforme en succès grâce à une rhétorique triomphaliste dont seuls ses militants sont peut-être dupes."  Nous rejoignons David en vous invitant à célébrer cette victoire du bon sens avec une bonne tasse de thé et un petit gâteau de Jaffa.

Contexte: Les Juifs britanniques rompent avec l'Eglise méthodiste

Source: Methodist Preacher (Anti-Israel petition among Methodists fails)

The anti-Israel campaign within British Methodism is clearly faltering. An online petition in support of the Church's recently adopted official position on Israel has closed after only ten days with just 279 signatories.  This combines with evidence from the south west to show how little enthusiasm among Methodists there is for a full scale vilification of Israel.

Methodist people are not anti-Semitic and many are horrified that the 2010 conference passed a deliberately biased report and resolution attacking Israel.

Despite a campaign on facebook, an email campaign, and the support of an external pressure group, the number of Methodists signing the petition remained statistically insignificant, no more than 200 out of the British Methodist Church's 400,000 strong community. Originator of the petition, Richard Hall, a Methodist Minister in Wales, a widely read and influential semi official blogger claimed "It has served it’s purpose. 279 signatures in less than two weeks. Some will have been dodgy, but that’s the way of petitions."

Closer inspection of the petition and the signatories show just how ill conceived it was.

Hall's petition claimed that the plaintiff in a forthcoming court action had described the Methodist Church as racist and anti-Semitic. In fact the plaintiff has been very careful to say that this was not the case, but believes that the conference report, resolution and behaviour were discriminatory under current legislation and case law.

At least two of the signatories of the ill-fated petition subsequently removed their name, several were anonymous, many were from overseas and some were from members of a tiny British based Jewish organisation critical of Israel. One signatory was actually supportive of the plaintiff. Among those signing was Ben White, author of a scurrilous book on Israel.

Several of the signatories left abusive remarks about the plaintiff.

The failure of this petition is a welcome straw in the wind that British Methodism has not got the appetite for the ill conceived anti-Israel campaign. We should look forward to restoring a healthy and friendly relationship with our Jewish neighbours. Time for a cup of tea and a celebratory Jaffa cake.

Voir également: Terry Gallogly’s Dishonesty Further Damages Anti-Israel Methodist Cause

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