As we write this Monthly Report, we can look back on a rather intensive period of work. ECI co-hosted the first ever Passover Seder at the UN headquarters in New York, hosted our Annual Policy Conference at the European Parliament in Brussels, recorded a new monthly European Report programme, and finally organised our Annual Prayer Summit, all in the same week although on two different continents!
This may very well have been one of the most work intensive weeks in our history, but also one of the most productive ones. Thank you for standing with us faithfully in prayer and for your financial giving as we continue to stand with Israel where it matters the most.
ECI co-hosts first ever United Nations Passover Seder as Israel escapes UN Security Council condemnation
The day was co-hosted by ECI’s Forum for Cultural Diplomacy together with the Israeli Mission to the UN. The fact that Israel was expected to face a vicious resolution at the UN Security Council on the eve of the Passover day only added even more drama to the event.
Would the nations assembled around the Passover Seder table learn the lessons of the Passover story as they read from the biblical story of Haggadah and heard Rabbi Elie Abadie, Gregory Lafitte and Tomas Sandell explain the significance of what the Passover means for us as individuals and nations today? You will find the speech of Gregory Lafitte here.
It also proved again how the nations, despite the negative reputation of the UN, are eager to learn from the Jewish holidays. Over the last three years, ECI has organized several events to mark the Jewish holidays and each time ambassadors and UN officials have been keen to attend.
As the UN member states are reminded about their stated goal to “beat their swords into ploughshares” (Isaiah 2:4), we are pleased to see how they are increasingly also starting to “learn from the ways of the God of Jacob” (Isaiah 2:3), as it states in the Bible.
Just like the UN recognition of Yom Kippur as an official holiday showed us last year, our work at the UN is not in vain and it bears much fruit. Please consider partnering with us financially so that we can continue this important work by marking your gift to “ECI’s UN work”. You can find information about financial giving to ECI here.
ECI Annual Policy Conference concludes that Israeli innovations lead to peace and prosperity whilst BDS breeds anti-Semitism
After having argued for months about the inconsistency of EU’s discriminatory policies towards Israeli goods and services from the disputed territories, the EU leaders have finally understood that the BDS movement is in fact breeding anti-Semitism. At the ECI Conference, European Commission Special Coordinator against Anti-Semitism, Katharina von Schnurbein, noted that BDS events at college campuses are followed by a rise in anti-Semitism. She expressed her concern over the fact that Jewish students are once again targeted on college campuses for their affiliation to the state of Israel.
The ECI Annual Conference was co-hosted by MEP Hannu Takkula and was moderated by ECI’s Founding Director Tomas Sandell.
ECI Legal Counsel Andrew Tucker defines new guidelines for EU-Israeli cooperation in a new global environment
In his speech, he suggested five ways in which Europe can do more to demonstrate its capacity to show leadership and moral clarity in relation to the Israeli-Arab conflict.
1. First, Europe needs to expose the BDS movement for what it is – an illegal assault on the fundamental right of the Jewish people to self-determination. A right acknowledged by all European nations, and in respect of which, Europe has entered binding commitments.
2. Secondly, Europe should support Israel’s right as a sovereign state to use force to counter terrorism which threatens the security of its citizens.
3. Thirdly, Europe should help the Palestinian refugees by winding down the UNRWA and insist that the Arab States, which caused the 1948 and 1967 wars and created the Arab refugees, should absorb those refugees today.
4. Fourthly, Europe should put conditions on EU funding of the Palestinian Authority based on:
a. Compliance with the Oslo Accords
b. Compliance with human rights in its territories
c. Cooperation between Israelis and Arabs in Areas B and C.
5. Finally, European nations should reject Palestinian demands for recognition of Palestine as a state, and support Israel’s right to negotiate a peace agreement with its neighbours, as long as the Palestinians do not reform their own society. This means, for example, rejecting the proposed UN Security Council resolution which would entail agreement with Palestinian claims to sovereignty over East Jerusalem and the West Bank.
You can read the full transcript of Andrew Tucker’s speech here.
Upcoming ECI Conferences
International Symposium on the Middle East Peace Process in a Changing World
Promoting peace, justice and security on the basis of international law
Tuesday 7th June, 2016
10.00 to 16.00 at The Hague, Netherlands
Poster with details of The Hague Symposium
Registration and more information: info@ec4i.org
Promoting peace, justice and security on the basis of international law
Tuesday 7th June, 2016
10.00 to 16.00 at The Hague, Netherlands
Poster with details of The Hague Symposium
Registration and more information: info@ec4i.org
For more information: www.ec4i.org - Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.