********************  POSTING RULES & NOTES  ********************
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly & permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
*****************************************************************

Comrades,

Sorry link to the article didn’t work. Here’s the AP story:

US duty free owners give millions to Israeli settlements
BY URI BLAU AND JOSEF FEDERMAN
Yesterday  [July 1, 2019]
JERUSALEM (AP) — When travelers shop at dozens of duty free shops at airports 
worldwide, they may be paying for more than a bottle of vodka or box of 
chocolates.

The Falic family of Florida, owners of the ubiquitous chain of Duty Free 
Americas shops, funds a generous and sometimes controversial philanthropic 
empire in Israel that runs through the corridors of power and stretches deep 
into the occupied West Bank.

An Associated Press investigation shows that the family has donated at least 
$5.6 million to settler organizations in the West Bank and east Jerusalem over 
the past decade, funding synagogues, schools and social services as well as 
far-right causes considered extreme even in Israel.

The Falics’ philanthropy is not limited to the settlements and they support 
many mainstream causes in the U.S. and Israel. However, they are a key example 
of how wealthy U.S. donors have bolstered the contentious settlement movement. 
Most of the world considers Jewish settlements in the West Bank and east 
Jerusalem to be obstacles to peace, but Israel considers the territories 
“disputed.”

The Falics support the ultranationalist Jewish community in Hebron, whose 
members include several prominent followers of a late rabbi banned from Israeli 
politics for his racist views, and whose movement is outlawed by the U.S. as a 
terrorist organization. They back Jewish groups that covertly buy up 
Palestinian properties in east Jerusalem, and they helped develop an 
unauthorized settlement outpost in the West Bank. The outpost was later 
retroactively legalized.

They have supported groups that are pushing for the establishment of a Third 
Temple for Jews at the holiest and most contested site in the Holy Land. They 
also have given more money than any other donor to Prime Minister Benjamin 
Netanyahu, a strong supporter of settlements, and have donated to other leaders 
of his Likud party.

In a response to AP questions through his lawyer, Simon Falic, who spoke on 
behalf of the family, said Jews should be able to live anywhere in the Holy 
Land, whether it’s Israel, Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem or the West Bank. He 
condemned violence and claimed none of the groups he supports do anything 
illegal under Israeli law.

“We are proud to support organizations that help promote Jewish life all over 
the Land of Israel,” said Falic, whose business is based in Miami, Florida. 
“The idea that the mere existence of Jewish life in any geographical area is an 
impediment to peace makes no sense to us.”

However, the international community overwhelmingly believes the settlements 
violate international law, which prohibits an occupying power from transferring 
its own population into the territory it occupies.

Since capturing the West Bank and east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war, the 
settler population has grown to about 700,000 people, roughly 10% of Israel’s 
Jewish population. In recent years, it has received a boost from Netanyahu’s 
pro-settler government and from a far more tolerant attitude by President 
Donald Trump, whose top Mideast advisers are longtime settlement supporters.

This growth has been fueled in part by fundraising arms for leading settlement 
groups in the United States. According to a past investigation of U.S. tax 
forms by the Israeli daily Haaretz, fundraising organizations in the U.S. 
raised more than $230 million for settlement causes between 2009 and 2013 alone.

“Far-right foreign donors are a pillar of the settlement enterprise,” said 
Peace Now, an Israeli anti-settlement watchdog group.

Other prominent settlement donors include casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, U.S. 
billionaire Ira Rennert, American financier Roger Hertog and the U.S. 
ambassador to Israel, David Friedman. Names of dozens of other lesser-known 
donors adorn buildings, playgrounds and even park benches throughout the West 
Bank.

But the Falics stand out for the wide scope of groups they support and their 
close ties with leading Israeli politicians. Critics say activities billed as 
harmless philanthropy have come at the expense of Palestinians.

Duty Free Americas is headed by three Falic brothers: Simon, Jerome and Leon. 
The chain operates over 180 stores at airports and border crossings in the U.S. 
and Latin America. Leon Falic told the trade publication TRBusiness that the 
privately held company last year posted over $1.65 billion in sales.

The family has two main charitable organizations, the U.S.-based Falic Family 
Private Foundation and the Segal Foundation in Israel. During the decade ending 
in 2017, the U.S. foundation distributed about $20 million to “various 
worldwide Jewish organizations,” according to tax filings.

The Israeli foundation gave away roughly $15 million over that time. Financial 
reports do not outline recipients, but an AP analysis of the tax records of 
more than two dozen settlement organizations identified at least $5.6 million 
in donations. Other funds went to other causes, including the country’s amateur 
American football league, a Jerusalem hospital and a Jewish seminary in 
northern Israel.

Perhaps the Falics’ most controversial activity is in Hebron, a city where 
several hundred ultranationalist settlers live in heavily guarded enclaves amid 
some 200,000 Palestinians.

Relations between the populations are tense, and some of the Jewish leaders are 
followers of the late Rabbi Meir Kahane, whose “Kach” party was outlawed in 
Israel in the 1980s for calling for a mass expulsion of Arabs from the country. 
The U.S. also branded Kach a terrorist group.

According to the AP analysis, the Falics donated roughly $600,000 to “Hachnasat 
Orchim Hebron,” a group that hosts visitors to the Jewish community. Baruch 
Marzel, a former aide to Kahane, is deeply involved.

Falic said his connections to Marzel were primarily through a “beautiful 
project” that distributes snacks to Israeli soldiers protecting the residents 
of Hebron.

“While I may not agree with everything he has said, the work we have done that 
has been affiliated with the Hebron community has been positive, 
non-controversial and enhances Jewish life in the Hebron area — which we 
strongly support,” he said.

Issa Amro, a Palestinian activist in Hebron, disagrees. He said the seemingly 
harmless project serves the settler cause at the expense of Palestinians.

“We are suffering from settler violence,” he said. “When I tell the soldiers 
‘protect me,’ they tell me ‘we are not here to protect you. We are with our own 
people, who are the settlers.‘”
_________________________________________________________
Full posting guidelines at: http://www.marxmail.org/sub.htm
Set your options at: 
https://lists.csbs.utah.edu/options/marxism/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to