BY SETH GITELL
The nation's largest and most prominent mainline Protestant
denomination, the 11 million-member United Methodist Church — whose
members include both President Bush and Senator Clinton — is set to
take up the issue of whether to divest from companies that do business
with Israel.
The meeting, which is to be held on Friday in Fort Worth, Texas, will
mark the highest level of consideration that the subject of economic
divestment from the Jewish state has received within the Methodist
denomination.
Key questions hanging over the event will be whether the church will
decide to use its $16 billion pension fund as an economic tool against
Israel, and whether divestment would shatter the church's traditional
relationship with American Jews.If the church moves ahead with a
divestment resolution on the national level, the denomination would
become the largest Protestant group to embrace such a measure. The
General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, which has 2.4 million
members, voted in favor of such a measure in 2004. Another important
liberal denomination, the United Church of Christ, went in the other
direction last summer when it opted to engage in a "balanced study" of
the Middle East conflict.
"I would counsel a bit of humility. I wonder how much the voice of the
United Methodist Church even has in foreign policy or Middle East
policy," an executive with the church's General Commission on Christian
Unity and Interreligious Concerns, the Reverend W. Douglas Mills, told
The New York Sun. "I'm concerned about protecting our relationships."
Rev. Mills will be one of four speakers from a variety of perspectives
who will address a crowd of church delegates and others at the event
later this week and will speak against divestment.
Another speaker will be a member of the New England Conference's
Divestment Task Force, Susanne Hoder. She also headed an informational
gathering on the Middle East in June, which gave attendees the
opportunity to "learn how these companies profit from Israel's illegal
occupation of Palestinian lands," "examine the impact of the occupation
on Israeli and Palestinian society," give an "update on Bethlehem,
Jerusalem, and Gaza," "discuss apartheid in Israel and the occupied
territories, and learn how many organizations, including churches,
municipalities, and Jewish groups, are using economic measures to end
it."
The New England Conference came out in favor of divestment three years
ago, and in June of last year, it released a report urging divestment
from 20 specific companies with business interests in Israel, including
Blockbuster, General Dynamics, and General Electric.
Rev. Mills said he supported the church keeping a "balanced
perspective" on the Middle East. "I would prefer to have, for example,
shareholder activism in companies, rather than have no voice at all,
which is what you have when you're not a shareholder," he said. Titled
"Divestment, the Middle East, and Sudan," the Friday meeting in Texas
will be part of a larger assembly beginning today and ending on
Saturday in anticipation of the church's general conference in April.
The general conference in April will be the first national legislative
gathering of the church since two of its regional groupings — the New
England Conference and Virginia United Methodists — passed
pro-divestment resolutions in 2005.
While the church did not provide a copy of specific legislation likely
to be brought up at the church's general conference in April, the
Friday session is an indicator that divestment will be on the Methodist
agenda.
"As far as legislation for the conference, I don't believe it's
available yet," a spokeswoman for the United Methodist Church, Diane
Denton, said. "The briefing [in Texas] is to provide delegates and
others with information on issues expected to arise on general
conference. It will be up to the conference to determine what if any
action may be taken on this issue." Coming out in favor of divestment
would likely damage the church's ability to work with American Jewish
groups.
"For another church to start down this road is very dangerous and very
harmful to the relationship between the Jewish community and the
mainline Protestant churches," the American Jewish Committee's U.S.
director of interreligious affairs, Rabbi Gary Greenebaum, said.Rabbi
Greenebaum plans to travel to Forth Worth for the meeting. "These are
churches that traditionally the Jewish community has gotten along with
very well."
It would also likely have consequences for members of the church who
favor a different approach. "I love my denomination, and I think this
is a stupid move," a senior minister at the First United Methodist
Church of Palo Alto, the Reverend Archer Summers, said. Rev. Summers,
who plans to attend the April conference, is an executive committee
member of Christians for Fair Witness on the Middle East, a group of
mainline Protestants and Roman Catholics who seek to inject fairness
into the discussion of the issue.A lifelong member of the
Harvard-Epworth United Methodist Church in Cambridge, Mass., John
Regier, opposed the New England Conference's resolution, and will try
to convince his pastor — who will attend the conference — to vote
against divestment measures. "The resolution is premised on the idea
that the dispute between Israel and the Palestinians is all Israel's
fault," Mr. Regier said. "I think the situation is far more complicated
than that."
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Methodists To Mull Divestment From Israel
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