LONDON
The clubby staff lounges of British universities and the raucous meeting halls of labor unions have long shared a sympathy for the Palestinian cause that has found expression lately with a series of calls for professional unions to boycott Israel.
Any boycotts would almost certainly be a long way off. They are minority initiatives strongly opposed by the union leaderships. But they have outraged Israelis and American Jews.
The increasingly strident statements threaten to escalate into a diplomatic row despite British leaders’ attempts to play them down.
The latest furor erupted after the University and College Union decided on May 30 to consult members on halting funding, visits, conferences and joint publishing with Israeli institutions.
The motion accuses Israeli scholars of being complicit in the 40-year occupation of the Palestinian territories, which it claims has denied education to Palestinians through invasions, checkpoints, curfews, and shootings and the arrests of teachers, lecturers and students.
The National Union of Journalists approved a boycott on Israeli products in April and the public services union, Britain’s largest, will discuss a similar motion next week. Many Israelis feel it’s unfair to criticize them and not the Palestinians, and to single out Israel when so many countries commit far worse acts.