Home
/
Isiam
/
Politics & Economics
/
Palestinians use their own goods, fight dependence to Israel
Palestinians use their own goods, fight dependence to Israel
Apr 30, 2025 10:11 PM

  At Garden's grocery store in Ramallah, Dalia al-Khatib hands out fliers and showcases Palestinian goods for Intajuna ("Our Products"), one of many campaigns asking Palestinians to avoid Israeli products.

  But across town, an all-Palestinian crew of laborers heads home after a day of work on the nearby Jewish settlement of Adam, like some 30,000 other Palestinians who help build settlements in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

  The contrast illustrates a Palestinian dilemma. After 40 years of occupation, their economy is tied to Israel's, so attempts to reduce its dependence clash with hard realities.

  Palestinians use the Israeli shekel as currency. From cars to shampoo, countless goods come from or via Israel. Most packaged foods and household products have a foreign or Palestinian counterpart, but fruit and vegetable vendors say they would be out of business without Israel, where most produce is grown.

  Boycott

  Calls for boycott started as far back as 2004, without much result. But that changed after Israel's Gaza offensive last January, says Mustafa Barghouti, a member of the Palestinian Legislative Council and a boycott advocate.

  Boycotting, he says, is a great way to oppose Israeli policies non-violently. And it can help reduce Palestinians' dependence on the Israeli economy.

  His outlook highlights a new tactic in many local campaigns, which now focus on developing the weak Palestinian economy.

  "This is about supporting Palestinian goods," says al-Khatib.

  The United States and Britain recently acknowledged the positive impact of Israel's removal of checkpoints on the commercial life of West Bank cities such as Nablus.

  Though Intajuna showcases are popping up in more Ramallah grocery stores, Israeli goods remain on the shelves, not least since many Palestinians are wary of their own national products, especially dairy.

  Al-Khatib says Intajuna carefully screens goods.

  According to many grocers, the campaign has increased shopper interest in Palestinian goods. But in spite of that, only a few noted a real change in buying patterns.

  "Illegal exploitation"

  What most activists agree on however, is a complete boycott of products from Israel settlements, which are built on West Bank land that Palestinians need, to create a viable state under a comprehensive talks with Israel.

  Settlements have been growing since Israel captured the land in the 1967 Middle East War. Near a half million Jews now live in the West Bank and Arab East Jerusalem, among 2.5 million Palestinians.

  Palestinian activists say products grown or made in settlements are a form of illegal exploitation.

  But settlement goods can be hard to spot, especially fruits and vegetables, which are often unmarked. Settlements are the main exporter of dates for example, which are commonly eaten in Palestinian households during holidays and funerals.

  Palestinian Economy Minister Basem Khoury wants to block settler goods by implementing previously unenforced regulations that require all imports to have their source labeled.

  But the West Bank does not ask workers to quit settlement jobs while unemployment is over 30 percent.

  "If I had an opportunity to work for an Arab company that could offer steady work, I'd go immediately," said one.

  Settlement jobs pay 150-250 shekels ($40-$65) per day. The same jobs with Palestinian companies pay 70 to 120 shekels.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A grocery store in Ramallah

  Source: Reuters

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Politics & Economics
Displaced Afghans left out in cold
  Every day 400 Afghans become internally displaced, according to Amnesty International. At that rate, more than 2,500 Afghans were left homeless in the week of violent protests that swept the country recently over the burning of copies of the Noble Quran at the US-led Bagram airbase.   They joined the ranks...
Europe no sanctuary for Afghan asylum seekers
  As Afghanistan's army was beginning to assume a more active combat role in 2007 - and as suicide bombings and opium production hit record highs - Omar thought a move to Europe would make his life safer.   Instead, as with the 300 Afghans who marched in Stockholm that year to...
A Game of Drones
  America’s recent foreign policy has been enabled by a central idea: the United States does things differently. It wages wars differently. It suspends habeas corpus sparingly and with great restraint. It encroaches on liberties more gingerly. And it puts military men and women at risk with a respectful selectivity. To...
Slamming the door to justice on Palestinians
  Israel's ability to commit crimes against Palestinians with impunity relies on international complicity.   There is a determined international effort to ensure that Palestinians are shut out of every legal forum where they could pursue justice for Israel's crimes against them. Nothing illustrates this better than the horrifying case of the...
Palestinian hunger strikes: Media missing in action
  Can anyone doubt that if there were more than 1,500 prisoners engaged in a hunger strike in any country in the world other than Palestine, the media in the West would be obsessed with the story? Such an obsession would, of course, be greatest if such a phenomenon were to...
'Jewish democracy' founded on ugly battles
  Israel has a Jewish majority today because of the expulsions and denationalization of most Palestinians living there.   Among the many good reasons for marking the anniversary of the Nakba are two which speak to the intensifying debate about Israel's "democratic values": firstly, the fact that the Nakba is ongoing, in...
Drone Warfare and Accountability
  Fazillah, age 25, lives in Maidan Shar, the central city of Afghanistan’s Wardak province. She married about six years ago, and gave birth to a son, Aymal, who just turned five without a father. Fazillah tells her son, Aymal, that his father was killed by an American bomber plane, remote-controlled...
NATO ‘pullout’ won’t actually remove troops from Afghanistan
  Following in the rich history of fake endings to wars during the Obama Administration’s first term, the US and other NATO member nations are loudly hyping their endorsement of a transition pact, which is being presented as an “irreversible pullout” of occupation forces.   “We are now unified to responsibly wind...
White House: Drone Strikes ‘Legal and Ethical’
  Obama Aide: Constitution Makes Strikes Lawful Anywhere on Planet   Fresh off of an interview yesterday in which he shrugged off civilian killings in the US drone war, top White House adviser John O. Brennan was ordered to provide more “openness” on the program at a speech today in Washington.   This...
Syria’s forgotten refugees
  It was 21 February 2006. The date is etched in Samia’s mind.   She was in her kitchen making tea for her brother’s family, who was visiting her at her home in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, when gunfire broke out in the sitting room.   “It was as if there was a...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved