Evangelical Lutheran Church in America approves resolution calling on the government to end aid to Israel if it does not stop "occupation"
Ben Ariel, Netanyahu and Obama in the White House Reuters
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has approved a resolution calling on the American government to end all aid to Israel if Israel does not stop building in Judea and Samaria and "enable an independent Palestinian state", JTA reported Sunday.
Voting at its triennial assembly in New Orleans that ended Saturday, the church also sought a halt to all investment in companies that profit from Israel's alleged “occupation” and called on the president of the United States to recognize the “State of Palestine.”
The aid vote, which passed 751-162, urged church members to "call on their U.S. Representatives, Senators and the Administration to take action requiring that to continue receiving U.S. financial and military aid, Israel must comply with internationally recognized human rights standards as specified in existing U.S. law, stop settlement building and the expansion of existing settlements in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, end its occupation of Palestinian territory, and enable an independent Palestinian state," according to JTA.
The resolution also called on the president not to prevent the application of the State of Palestine for full membership in the United Nations and, in coordination with the United Nations Security Council, to "offer a new, comprehensive and time-bound agreement to the governments of Israel and Palestine, resulting in a negotiated final status agreement between Israel and Palestine leading to two viable and secure states with a shared Jerusalem."
Seems to me that they have been trying to do that for 70 years. Is pot legal in Louisiana?
In the divestment resolution, which passed 821-92, the church adopted a human rights-based investment screen for its social responsibility funds to ensure the church is not profiting from human rights abuses, and mentioned the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by name. It also called for the church to "increase positive investment in Palestine."
Let me see.... Israelis are building houses, Palestinians are murdering little girls in their beds, but Israel is bad and Palestinians are good! That takes a form of logic way too twisted for me to understand.
Do some research people. Palestinians are not suffering either in the West Bank or Gaza. They live pretty good lives. Stop listening to the propaganda coming out of Palestine, it is nonsense.
There will be no peace settlement with the Palestinians because their leaders want only one thing - the complete destruction of Israel and the removal of all Jews from the Holy Land, even though it's called Holy Land, in part, because of the Jews.
Of course, if the Jews did leave the Holy Land, it would soon become virtually uninhabitable wasteland where Palestinians could only live in poverty.
It's hard to believe an Evangelical church could be antiSemitic. Is the ELC actually evangelical, or is it just a name?
The resolutions were spearheaded by a group within the church called Isaiah 58, which bills itself as "a group of Lutherans working for peace and justice in the Holy Land", the JTA report said.
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America claims about 4 million members in nearly 10,000 congregations.
The resolution comes as Israel and the United States continue to discuss a new multibillion-dollar military aid package. A senior American official recently said the sides hope to reach a final deal soon.
The current defense agreement between Israel and the United States remains in force until 2018, and Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has been urged to accept President Barack Obama’s 10-year military aid package which reportedly includes a total of $145.8 million for Israeli missile defense programs, a sharp drop in financial support.
The Evangelical Lutheran Church's resolution also comes following recent criticism by the United States over Israeli plans to build new homes in Jerusalem.
The State Department recently used unusually harsh language in condemning plans to build 770 new housing units in the southern Jerusalem neighborhood of Gilo and describing them as “corrosive” to peace.
Israel later rejected the international criticism over its planned construction in Jerusalem as “lacking any factual basis”.
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