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Hummus Debate Spreads

November 30, 2010

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The latest academic call for divestment from Israel isn’t a demand to boycott its colleges, nor to withdraw investments in companies based in the Jewish state. This one is something of a culinary conundrum.

Hummus has already been the butt of high-profile jokes about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but a student group at Princeton University isn’t laughing. Those students take hummus so seriously, in fact, that they are waging a campaign against one brand of the chickpea spread whose owner has been accused of contributing to human rights violations of Palestinians in the West Bank because the company supports the Israeli military.

Sabra Dipping Company has come under attack recently, after allegations surfaced that its co-owner, the Israel-based Strauss Group, makes financial contributions to the Israeli Defense Forces. (Sabra’s other co-owner is PepsiCo.) Strauss has noted on its corporate website that it supports the welfare, cultural and educational activities of members of the military, but the Israeli press has reported that the company is removing some references to its military support amid the current controversy.

A Princeton Committee on Palestine petition gathered more than 200 student signatures, enough to include a referendum on this week's Undergraduate Student Government election ballot. If students approve the measure, the committee will submit a formal request to Dining Services to provide an alternative hummus option -- in addition to Sabra -- at university-run retail outlets. That includes five venues in a food court-style dining venue and two cafes. (The university does offer house-made hummus in some other facilities.)

The debate over American colleges’ associations with Israel has picked up steam in recent years, with academics and student activists alike weighing in. Now, via Facebook, students across the country are declaring their support for or opposition to Sabra. The hummus debate has now emerged on multiple campuses, including Georgetown University and DePaul University, the latter of which banned Sabra’s dip after the Students for Justice in Palestine approached administrators. (DePaul later backtracked on the ban and reinstated the sale of Sabra while DePaul’s Fair Business Practices Committee is investigating the issue.)

At Princeton, the student group that sponsored the referendum says it is neutral because it only calls for more options and not the elimination of any (though that was the original intent of the measure, before it was revised). “We think it’s important to allow students to have choice, and if they want to eat hummus, not have to buy a product that’s so morally problematic,” said Yoel Bitran, president of the Princeton Committee on Palestine.

But thousands of students from colleges far beyond Princeton are taking issue with that stance, and condemn the committee’s propagation of anti-Israel sentiment. The Facebook event “Save the Hummus! -- Vote Against the Sabra Hummus Boycott,” created by members of the campus group Tigers for Israel, has more than 2,600 attendees -- compared to 181 attending "Boycott Sabra Hummus." The pro-Sabra group says the referendum unfairly singles Sabra out of numerous companies with ties to Israel, and is “based on a convoluted claim that the company supports human rights violations against Palestinians.”

“The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a very complicated issue, and we concede that there’s room for improvement in all sides,” the event reads. “Placing ALL of the blame on Israel is not going to bring peace to the region. Instead of furthering these divides through arbitrary boycotting, we should work to build bridges between both sides by engaging each other in constructive dialogue to find ways to end the conflict.”

Students aren’t the only critics. “This is surely either a hoax, or malicious nonsense of the kind advanced by supporters of the discredited [Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions for Palestine] campaign,” Keren Goodblatt, spokeswoman for the Schusterman Center for Israel Studies at Brandeis University, wrote in an e-mail. She said the group at Princeton is being unfair to Sabra by “taking [the name] out of context and using it as a code-word for anything associated with Israel.” (The word sabra refers in Israel both to people born there and a fruit that is prickly on the outside and sweet inside.)

Bitran did acknowledge that the real goal of the referendum is not necessarily to have it approved, but rather to raise awareness of who owns Sabra and the potential implications of purchasing the product. And in that sense, the student group has succeeded, he said.

“In the beginning people didn’t really understand why this mattered. People thought that it was just about hummus and kind of trivial,” Bitran said. “I think most people kind of changed their minds…. At this point the referendum itself is a detail.”

If the measure does pass, that doesn’t necessarily mean Sabra’s competitors should start lining up to be the next face of hummus at Princeton. University spokeswoman Emily Aronson said dining officials would consider the hummus preferences of all stakeholders – faculty and staff as well – not just students.

“Dining services will continue to keep the dialogue open with the students in the [Princeton Committee on Palestine], though given that student voting on the referendum has not yet closed, it would be premature to say at this point what the outcome and next steps may be,” Aronson wrote in an e-mail.

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Comments on Hummus Debate Spreads

  • Really, 200 Princeton students?
  • Posted by Trace Urdan at Signal Hill on November 30, 2010 at 10:00am EST
  • I'm sure you could find 200 Princeton students to sign a petition to ban abortion, or legalize marijuana, or dispense with grades, or gladly transfer to Harvard, or who don't even know what Hummus is.

    So this is news? Really IHE?
  • Left Antisemitism
  • Posted by CaN on November 30, 2010 at 10:45am EST
  • First of all, make your own damn hummus. It's easy.

    Secondly, the Antisemitism of the left has to become a much more openly discussed topic at universities. The student and some faculty obsession with Israel (over, say, Zimbabwe or myriad other human rights disasters, notably in the rest of the Middle-East) bespeaks a real flaw the logic of these "debates." The hatred of Israel is disproportionate to the situation. What is the real motivation here if not hatred of Jews?
  • Anti-apartheid != Anti-semitism
  • Posted by Chris on November 30, 2010 at 11:30am EST
  • Being in opposition to Israeli apartheid is as anti-Semitic as being in opposition to South African apartheid was anti-white. To argue otherwise is either patently foolish or purposefully inaccurate.

    I hope this referendum passes, but even if it doesn't there are clearly still benefits, as the article mentions. I'm very glad to see the U.S. student movement beginning to make headway on the Israeli apartheid issue.. well done, Princeton Ctte on Palestine!
  • Seriously?
  • Posted by OldCommProf on November 30, 2010 at 12:15pm EST
  • Thanks for the info. I'll be sure to switch to Sabra now and increase my hummus consumption, since it'll also benefit my Pepsi stock.
  • Anti.apartheid != Antisemitism
  • Posted by stan , prof/history at U Portland--Salzburg on November 30, 2010 at 12:15pm EST
  • Carl is right that charges of Antisemitism are too easily thrown around, but so are charges of apartheid. There is much to be criticized about Israeli policies, but apartheid is not an accurate description of them. When some opponents of Israel start throwing around exaggerated charges of apartheid, Nazi like behavior, and even genocide one has to wonder what lies behind their claims. At that point Antisemitism starts to seem like a reasonable explanation. And when one reads some of the stuff that passes for anti-Zionism these days it becomes clear that it is the real explanation for some (and I said some, not all) of them.
  • Posted by Monica on November 30, 2010 at 4:00pm EST
  • I'm sure my choice of vegetable dip and its impact on international diplomacy is important and I really should get better informed so I can take appropriate action. However, at the moment my only reaction to this is... "Hummus Debate SPREADS"(?!?!) -- give a raise to the headline writer. Well done.
  • @Monica
  • Posted by Trace Urdan on November 30, 2010 at 6:15pm EST
  • I secretly suspect the headline is the only reason this story got written...
  • Posted by Israeli Hummus on December 1, 2010 at 7:45am EST
  • From now on I will make sure that I buy Sabra Hummus. Thank you for the background information.
  • buy Sabra
  • Posted by Debbie on December 1, 2010 at 10:00am EST
  • So glad my daughter decided on Yale and not Princeton! She's concentrating on her finals--not on countering anti-Israel/Jewish rhetoric. Just bought the large container of Sabra hummus--in fact, from now on, will buy nothing buy Sabra!
  • israel hummus
  • Posted by muti , architect at boston architectural college on December 1, 2010 at 11:00am EST
  • its a fact that the lefts obsession with Israels human right violations and not with all the human rights violations that are committed by all the Muslim countries and all the Muslim terrorists is motivated bu pure anti semitism,
    why are all the leftist people ready to risk their life's to break israels Gaza blockade when they have countless human right violations in their home countries they are motivated bu pure anti semitism the oldest form of hatred.
  • That didn't take long...
  • Posted by Matt , Graduate student at Midwest Regional on December 1, 2010 at 11:45am EST
  • Looks like the Megaphone (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megaphone_desktop_tool) crew has arrived.

    Kudos to the Princeton committee for participating in the BDS movement for Palestinian liberation and end to apartheid. The motivation behind these students is not anti-semitism; the work of Norman Finklestein is quite clear that there is a conflation between what is termed anti-Semitism and the criticism of the Israeli state. It is totally possible to be a critic of the Israeli state and not be anti-Semitic; Finklestein himself is the child of Holocaust survivors who rejects the rhetorical use of the Holocaust to justify genocidal tactics perpetrated upon Palestinians and especially Gazans, who dared to democratically elect Hamas into power. You can also read the work of Jews for Justice for Palestinians (http://jfjfp.com/) to read more information about Jewish activists. Or you can read about the Courage to Refuse movement, comprised of a number of former IDF soldiers who conscientiously have refused to continue to participate in the bloodshed and war of oppression waged upon Palestine and the Occupied Territories.

    All this to say kudos to Princeton for taking action.
  • hummus- HA
  • Posted by K on December 1, 2010 at 2:00pm EST
  • Stopped buy Sabra a long time ago.

    Good thing many of you weren't around to oppose the ANC, even when they refused to rule out guerilla warfare and were actively giving exiles military training outside the country- for sabotage first, but flat out civil war if it came to that. Or maybe you were around and making the same kind of excuses for dragging feet on letting everyone under Israeli rule- military rule in the West Bank included, the right to vote and actually creating an integrated, western-style society.

    Oh, and good job on all the haters of people of dutch/german/english descent who singled out South Africa from every other human rights issue at the time!
  • It's not all Antisemetism, but it's not absent either
  • Posted by CaN on December 1, 2010 at 2:30pm EST
  • You can be against Israeli occupation of the West Bank and for a Palestinian state without blinding yourself to the strange Antisemitic bedfellows you will also make in these movements. This is why the divestment movement in South Africa worked: it wasn't wracked with the internal contradictions of the PLO. In fact, working to ensure a principled, ethical, pro-Palestine movement that refuses to engage in Anti-Judaism would be your most valuable contribution toward peace in the Middle-East. The "hummus-campaign smacks of an obsession that goes beyond helping Palestinians.

    For consistency sake, try boycotting a real dictatorship operating on a scale that would make Ariel Sharon blush, one where human rights are trampled and minorities are oppressed daily: buy nothing from China. Just try it for one day.
  • Love the headline!
  • Posted on December 2, 2010 at 4:46pm EST
  • That is all.
  • Misleading headline
  • Posted by taltalim , Culinary Studies at Chickpea U on December 4, 2010 at 7:30pm EST
  • The headline is intended to be funny but misleading: Hummos is *not* a spread.
    The very idea always makes me shiver. You "wipe" (Hebrew "lenagev") hummos with pita out of a bowl. Good hummos is still warm and comes with chickpeas on top.