Tuesday, June 19, 2012

The celebrated black author Alice Walker has refused to allow a new Israeli edition of her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, The Color Purple, in protest at Israel's policy of apartheid and persecution of the Palestinian people

The African-American writer, who is active in the international Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign against Israel, has written to the Israeli publisher, Yedhiot Books, saying that she cannot permit publication of the book at this time. In the letter, made public by the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott on Israel, she invokes a comparison with the decision not to show the 1985 Steven Spielberg film of her novel in South Africa before the end of apartheid. A version of Walker's classic story of an abused black woman set in the segregated US Deep South of the early 20th century was published in Hebrew in the 1980s. But she says the testimony heard from Israelis and Palestinians by the private Russell Tribunal on Palestine, of which she was a member, was devastating. The tribunal, which investigates war crimes, has no legal status and is modelled on one set up during the Vietnam War by the philosopher Bertrand Russell and other intellectuals. Walker adds that having grown up under American apartheid she found that Israel's treatment of the Palestinians was far worse. The use of the term apartheid to describe the treatment of Palestinians arouses fierce antagonism in Israel. The BDS campaign calls for sanctions against Israel until it complies with international law and Palestinian rights and goes significantly further than a separate and parallel campaign for the boycotting of goods produced in settlements in occupied territory, which are widely regarded as illegal in international law. Walker says that she hopes the BDS campaign will have enough of an impact on Israeli civilian society to change the situation.

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