After an American company decided to boycott the occupied territories

Ice cream war between Israel and the Palestinians

  • Workers are worried about their future.

    AFP

  • Palestinians welcomed the US company's announcement of a boycott of settlements.

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  • Zenger hopes that the American group will reverse its decision.

    AFP

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Israeli Ben & Jerry's ice cream franchisee Avi Zenger finds himself and his small factory at the center of a political storm, after the US parent company's decision to boycott settlements in the occupied West Bank.

"We will continue to sell anywhere connected to Israel," Zenger told AFP from his factory in the agricultural village of Beer Tuvia, south of Tel Aviv, where 160 employees work in the summer ice cream industry.

The Vermont-based company, Unilever, announced a few days ago that it would stop marketing its products in the occupied Palestinian territories, specifically the West Bank and East Jerusalem, due to its incompatibility with its "values", which angered Israeli leaders.

Israel occupied the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, in 1967. Since then, it has been building settlements in the West Bank, where some 670,000 Israelis live.

The international community considers the settlements illegal, and tension persists between Palestinians and settlement residents.

Palestinians welcomed the US company's announcement of a boycott of settlements, and the phrase "my favorite ice cream" was spread on social media pages, and invitations to buy it.

Activists on Facebook also circulated a picture of the head of the Joint List, Knesset Member, Ayman Odeh, eating ice cream and making a gesture of praise, emphasizing his support for the boycott decision.

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Zinger could have been happy with this free publicity, but the American company's announcement sparked a storm of Israeli reactions on social media and officials, threatening the ice cream market he sells.

The Israeli government has been fighting fiercely for years with the BDS movement, which calls for an economic, cultural or academic boycott of Israel, with the aim of ending the Israeli occupation and settlement in the Palestinian territories.

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, who made a direct call to the CEO of Unilever, threatened "severe consequences" as a result of the decision.

"The boycott has not and will not succeed, and we will fight it with all our might," his office told AFP. "We have a lot of ice cream, but we have one country."

In a letter on Tuesday, Israel's ambassador to the United States, Gilad Erdan, urged 35 of the 50 US states to follow the laws against the boycott movement, which were passed to prohibit boycotts of Israel.

Alarm bells

While President Isaac Herzog described the boycott as "a new form of terrorism", the Palestinian Authority considered that Herzog should thank "Ben & Jerry" because they "raised the alarm bells."

"Either Israel hears the message and works to end its occupation, or it will face a complete boycott," she added.

Separating politics from ice cream

Zenger fears for his ice cream, which he wants to sell to Palestinians and Israelis wherever they are, whether in Tel Aviv or in settlements or anywhere else.

"We cannot boycott Israeli citizens for political reasons," he says, explaining that his refusal to comply with the parent company's decision led to its non-renewal of the manufacturing agreement that expires next year.

While the Beer Tuvia plant continues to operate in the remaining months before the contract expires, employees fear for their fate.

"I'm afraid for my job, and for the jobs of my friends who work here," says Ayelet Damlaw, 38, a quality control officer at the factory. "It's not easy to suddenly find out that you might lose your job."

On social media, following initial calls for a boycott of the giant brand, the Israelis made several calls to support the local franchise opposing the parent company's decision.

"I came to express my support" for the local product, Moshe Weizmann, during his visit to the ice cream factory, on Wednesday, told AFP, while his wife and two children (four and 13 years old) were enjoying shopping with an abundance of offers.

"We have to separate politics from ice cream," added the man, from the southern town of Ofakim.

And the seller working in the factory, Omer Granada (19 years), expressed his surprise, as "more people come than before to buy ice cream to support us."

Zenger, who acquired the Ben & Jerry franchise 35 years ago, remains "optimistic" that the American group will reverse its decision, as did Airbnb a while ago.

At the time, the online home and apartment rental platform announced that it had abandoned bids in Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, before reversing its decision.

• While President Isaac Herzog described the boycott as a “new form of terrorism,” the Palestinian Authority considered that Herzog should thank “Ben & Jerry” because they “raised the alarm bells.”

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