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July 12, 2013

No Ariel McDonald’s

Owner chooses not to locate in post-67 areas.
LINDA GRADSTEIN THE MEDIA LINE

When it comes to Israel and the Palestinians, everything, it seems, even a hamburger, is political. Israelis who live in areas that Israel acquired in 1967 are up in arms over McDonald’s decision not to open a branch in the mall that will be built in Ariel over the next year.

In Israel, the McDonald’s franchise is private and is owned by Omri Padan, one of the founders of the dovish group Peace Now, which opposes Israeli building in post-1967 areas. There are 170

McDonald’s restaurants in Israel, about 40 of which are kosher. The company’s website claims it is the largest employer of youth in Israel, giving jobs to 3,000 teenagers, along with 1,000 adults.

Padan declined an interview but his office sent a one-line reply to the request: “This has always been the policy of Dr. Omri Padan,” referring to the decision not to open restaurants in Ariel, the Golan Heights, which Israel captured from Syria in 1967, or even east Jerusalem, which Israel has annexed.

Some in Israel welcomed Padan’s decision.

“In every democratic country, everyone has the right to decide where to live and where to open his business,” said Yariv Oppenheimer, the director general of Peace Now. “Padan did not want to take part in settlement activity. He thinks the settlements are damaging to Israel and we agree.”

Others disagreed.

Settler leader Yigal Dilmony said that, while he doesn’t support boycotts, consumers should vote with their wallets.

“Every citizen who cares about the state of Israel should think before he buys a burger, ‘Who is he financing?’” said Dilmony. “Burger Ranch [a rival local Israeli chain] said they will open in the new mall. Israeli citizens should support those chains with Zionist values.”

Some went even further.

“I urge the public to boycott anyone who boycotts it [the mall],” Housing Minister Uri Ariel said. “Only then will they get the message and the boycotts will stop.”

Oppenheimer of Peace Now reacted sharply, saying Padan’s decision is not a boycott. “Nobody is saying that ‘settlers’ are not allowed to buy McDonald’s,” he said, referring to Israelis who live in post-1967 areas. “You can’t fault him for not building in a place they don’t want to remain part of Israel.”

The dispute erupted as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in the region for yet another attempt to restart Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. Palestinians say that all of the areas that Israel acquired in 1967 must become part of the Palestinian state and all 330,000 Jewish residents there must leave. Israel says it wants to hold onto what it calls “settlement blocs,” including Ariel.

“I think the decision not to open a McDonald’s here is a mistake and hurts a large population,” said Ariel’s Mayor Eliezer Shaviro. “Any kind of boycott is a mistake and causes more division.”

Shaviro said that residents are trying hard for coexistence with their Palestinian neighbors. “In our industrial zone, we have factories where Israelis and Palestinians work together and Palestinians make five times what they would in Nablus or Ramallah,” he said, referring to two nearby Palestinian towns. “If there is a boycott on Ariel, these factories might have to fire workers, and the Palestinians will join the cycle of violence instead of the ‘cycle of income.’”

It is not the first time that Ariel, which boasts a university of 13,000 students, both Arabs and Jews, has been in the news. In 2011, 165 academics said they would not participate in academic functions at Ariel University because it sits on post-1967 land. A year earlier, dozens of actors said they would not participate in cultural events there.

Israelis are especially sensitive to boycotts, as the country often has been a target. Recently, physicist Steven Hawking pulled out of a conference to protest Israel’s policy toward the Palestinians.

The boycott, divestment and sanctions movement has stepped up activity and dozens of artists, including musician Elvis Costello and actors Dustin Hoffman and Meg Ryan have cancelled appearances in Israel as a protest gesture. Others, however, have rejected the boycott calls. For example, Barbra Streisand played to tens of thousands of enraptured fans last month, and Alicia Keys appeared this month.

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