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Swiss Keren Hayesod alarmed by Israel’s direction, terrorist death penalty bill

  • March 15, 2023

Keren Hayesod Switzerland sent a letter to its Jerusalem headquarters on Sunday expressing its intense concern over the direction in which Israel was headed under the current coalition government.

The organization, also known as the United Israel Appeal, was founded in 1920 and today maintains branches in 45 countries, serving as the fundraising arm of the State of Israel and financing projects in the areas of education, welfare, immigration, absorption and more.

In the internal letter, addressed to the organization’s leadership in Jerusalem and published by the Walla news outlet, Keren Hayesod Switzerland said it “cannot stand aside silently any longer,” indicating its concern over legislation being advanced by the coalition to overhaul the judicial system while particularly singling out a bill currently before the Knesset that seeks to institute the death penalty for terrorists convicted of killing Israelis.

The proposed legislation, a central campaign promise of National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, stipulates that courts will be able to impose the death penalty on those who have committed a nationalistically motivated murder of a citizen of Israel. However, it would not apply to an Israeli who killed a Palestinian.

“This was a red line for us. This is not the Israel we want to support,” Keren Hayesod Switzerland’s letter read.

But it also indicated it was more generally worried over the general trend in the coalition’s legislative agenda, with signatories saying they were committed to supporting Israel “as long as the basic principles of humanity are respected and as long as Israel continues to be committed to the principles of a liberal and democratic system.”

Unnamed senior Keren Hayesod officials said they harbored serious concerns that the Swiss branch’s statement may be the first of many, potentially leading to a fall in donations to the fundraising institution and Israel, Walla reported.

Critics of the legal makeover decry the move as stripping judicial independence and eroding democracy, leaving almost all power in the hands of the elected political majority. Supporters say it is needed to rein in an overly activist judiciary, and insist it will strengthen democracy.

The Swiss branch, based in Zurich, called on Keren Hayesod’s leadership in Jerusalem to make sure its voice was heard “loud and clear,” warning it “not turn a blind eye to a real and immediate threat to the basic fabric of Israeli society.”

“We ask you to stand up to the people in charge and transmit this message,” the letter concluded.

In 2021, Keren Hayesod reported raising $140.2 million, 81 percent of which was spent on “strengthening Israeli society.” A further 10% was spent on connecting Jewish communities to Israel, and the remaining 9% on immigration and absorption in the Jewish state.

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