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STOLEN BEAUTY: The Struggle for a Just Peace in the Middle East Coming to a Store Near You

Posted by NancyK -

Tue, Jul 21, 2009

Gaza

As the dust settled on the destroyed homes, schools and lives in the aftermath of Israel’s assault on Gaza earlier this year, mainstream human rights groups from Amnesty International to Physicians for Human Rights/Israel issued reports condemning Israel’s attack and alleging that the Israeli government and the Israeli Defense Forces had committed war crimes and crimes against humanity. The staff of CODEPINK Women for Peace re-opened a discussion of what we could do about Israel’s flagrant flouting of international law and the brutality of the ongoing blockade of Gaza, the occupation of the West Bank and the home demolitions in East Jerusalem. We decided to revisit the idea of a boycott against Israeli products—a boycott that was having more difficulty gaining traction here in the United States than in Europe. But the best way to end an occupation is to make it unprofitable, and one of the best peaceful ways to make something unprofitable is to organize a boycott.

While doing research on the Global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Movement for Palestine, I came across the web site Who Profits, a project of the Israeli Coalition of Women for Peace. On that site I found a list of Israeli and international companies that are directly involved in and profit from the occupation of the Palestinian West Bank. It seemed strategically and morally important to select for our campaign a corporation whose practices were clearly in contravention to international law. Many of the corporations on the Who Profits list were either unfamiliar to me, discouragingly huge, or didn’t seem like obvious targets for a women’s peace group. But I saw one name that I recognized: Ahava Dead Sea Laboratories. In fact, I knew there was a plastic bottle of Ahava Eucalyptus Mineral Bath Salts sitting on the windowsill next to the tub in my bathroom.

If you take a look at Ahava’s web site, you can read about the company’s environmentally responsible practices: “Our manufacturing processes are non-polluting and environmentally conscious. No animals are involved in testing phases and all of our products are encased in recyclable tubes, bottles and jars.” Ahava’s spokeswoman is fresh-faced Sex & The City actress Kristin Davis, whose commitment to doing good is evidenced by her status as an Oxfam Goodwill Ambassador and her position on the advisory board of The Masai Wilderness Conservation Fund. On the Ahava site, Davis is quoted as saying, “My personal beliefs, which include treating both animals and the environment with respect, are equally important to AHAVA.”

If you navigate around the web site you will see pristine images of the Dead Sea, enticing products with beautifully designed labels, and a photo of a water lily leaf with the caption, “This leaf has nothing to hide.” But, unfortunately, Ahava does have something to hide—an ugly secret about its relationship to a brutal occupation. The Hebrew word “Ahava” means love, but there is nothing loving about what the company is doing in the Palestinian territory of the West Bank. Ahava is an Israeli profiteer exploiting the natural resources of occupied Palestine.

AHAVA Dead Sea Laboratories, an Israeli cosmetics company, has situated its main manufacturing plant and showroom at the Israeli Jewish settlement Mitzpe Shalem in the Occupied Palestinian West Bank near the shores of the Dead Sea. Mitzpe Shalem, built on occupied land in 1970, is an illegal settlement, as are all Jewish settlements in the West Bank. Ahava’s capture of Palestinian natural resources from the Dead Sea is, according to the Fourth Geneva Convention, a patently illegal use by an occupying power of stolen resources for its own profit.  To add insult to injury, Ahava’s labels claim that the country of origin of its products is “The Dead Sea, Israel”—this type of labeling has been decried by Oxfam, among other human rights groups, as blatantly misleading.

While we were working on putting together the new AHAVA boycott campaign we called STOLEN BEAUTY, CODEPINK led several delegations to Gaza, one of which never made it into the Strip because the Israeli government wouldn’t let them through the Erez crossing. Several CODEPINK activists decided to take a fact-finding mission to the Ahava plant in the West Bank, corroborating what we had read about the plant’s location and its practices. The women decided to seize the opportunity and—with the avid encouragement of the Israeli Jewish and Palestinian peace activists that they had met—they went to the Ahava store at the Hilton Hotel in Tel Aviv to stage a protest action. Some put on bikinis, wrote on their bodies with mud NO AHAVA/NO LOVE, while others carried signs with slogans such as “There is no love in occupation.” They chanted, sang and made the Israeli evening news.

About a week later, we heard that Kristin Davis was going to be at Lord & Taylor on Fifth Avenue promoting Ahava products and signing autographs. Two of us went to the store to deliver a letter to Davis, requesting she stop letting Ahava use her beautiful face and good name to cover up their crimes. She was less than receptive, and we were escorted out of the store. A week later, the CODEPINK bikini brigade showed up at the “Tel Aviv Beach Party”—part of the Israeli government’s multi-million dollar “Re-brand Israel” campaign—in New York’s Central Park. The bikinis and our anti-occupation message made Fox News.

We recently sent letters to Ahava’s headquarters in Holon, Israel, as well as to Ahava USA and Kristen Davis, giving them notice of our boycott. We sent copies of these letters to Shamrock Holdings, the investment company of the Roy E. Disney family, which owns 19% of Ahava’s shares. On Monday of this week, CODEPINK women showed up in bikinis and mud at the Cosmoprof North America Trade Show in Las Vegas to let Ahava representatives know we were launching our STOLEN BEAUTY campaign.

We have sent letters to over 100 retailers requesting that they stop stocking Ahava products because Ahava helps finance the destruction of hope for a peaceful and just future for both Israelis and Palestinians. In August we’ll be outside a drugstore, department store or mall near you, exposing Ahava’s dirty secrets and showing that real beauty is more than skin deep. You can go to www.stolenbeauty.org to find out how to join our campaign. And you don’t have to wear a bikini to do it.

(Also posted at AlterNet here)

Popularity: 29% [?]

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  • Stephanie Musleh

    Is this the same company that set up in malls in little kiosk’s and harass people as they go buy. Very, very pushy.

  • Sonia

    I went to hundred of blogs to protest for the last Israel attack to Palestine. I went outside the Israel Embassy. But what I saw yesterday in a Beauty Store in Marina, it was shameful. Ladies wearing bikinis, chanting inside, putting stickers in Ahava products and the employees and customers,shocked by that action. A beauty store is a private place. What you did it’s illegal.

    I though that Code Pink was a serious and PROFESSIONAL organization. Instead, those Pink-bikini-code ladies looked like high school teenagers doing “bad” things and have fun with it.

    Are you Women for Peace? With this kind of behavior you are not different that the people you are against it.

    .Ahava could be made in occupied territories but it’s irrelevant when the situation it’s much more serious and tragic in Palestine. Definitely it was shameful to present it wearing bikinis, chanting and taking pictures for the Pink Code advertising campaign.

    Wrong way, girls.

  • http://www.codepinkalert.org/blog Dana

    Hi Sonia,
    I appreciate your comment and your concern about the Santa Monica action. Reading your note I can’t help but think what is really more outrageous–a woman in a bikini or a violent occupation? And in terms of ‘illegalality’, what is a handful of women chanting and placing stickers on bottles of mud in comparison to the violation of international law that happens on a daily basis in the Occupied Territories of Palestine?

    The bikini action idea was born from our work with the Coalition of Women for Peace during a recent delegation to Gaza/Israel/Palestine. Our Israeli and Palestinian sisters asked us to turn up the heat, expose the dirty truth and be bold and relentless with this campaign. We do this work with them in mind and with the goal of exposing the grim realities of the tragic occupation by highlighting one company’s exploitative practices.

    If you really want to draw comparisons I hope you wouldn’t ignore that one just because of your distaste for a particular street action.

  • http://vanessaorient@yahoo.fr vanessa

    I would not have bought Ahava product were in not for your publicity. I am planning a trip to Sephora and will make my purchase to demonstrate my support of Israel and its businesses. Thank you for your efforts in drawing a contrast between your shameless act and the modesty of Ahava.

  • Ben David

    Ahava has some really nice products to use. Personally, I use their shampoo and aftershave, both work really great, and I love using them.

    Its fun too have the kiosks in the mall because it is one way that Israelis get to come and see America. Its a great chance to speak in Hebrew and connect with a nice person.

    Ahava puts out a great product, has a strong marketing campaign, and is a prime example of why Israel is prospering and Palestinians cant seem to find any sort of success. Maybe if Israelis stopped producing and were an unsuccessful economy the world would stop having sympathy for a people under siege from external and internal forces.

    Great strides in science, cosmetics, pharmecuticals, ecology, along with an effort on its part to make peace with neighbors who can control their population and sustain some sort of country just show that Israel is here to stay, while the Palestinian cause will die once they grow tired with living the way they do. Do you think if Israel left that the Palestinians would start doing as well at the Ahava factory? No, it would be looted and turned into a launching pad for Kassams.

    Jordan and Egypt trained them to be terrorists. Their intellectuals and leadership fled the country, and now we are left with two corrupt entities controlling two peoples that dont know what is possible.

    Make Jordan the Palestinian state, there will never be a Palestinian sticking his Grandfathers house key in buildings long since lost.

  • MAX

    I just placed an order and all of my friends are placing orders. Thank you because I never knew jews were so awesome. AND they contribute to soceity. WOW…why don’t you people MOVE to gaza and work on the ground.

  • benay blend

    The BDS sub-committee of Another Jewish Voice, affiliates of AJJP, are interested in bringing this campaign home to Albuquerque. any information would be much appreciated–backgrounds, fliers that you would not mind sharing, insight into how to get the point across, etc. I read some of the comments that repeat some of the underlying themes of those who really do not see the reality of occupation.

  • NancyK

    Thanks for the support and interest. You can to to the Stolen Beauty site (www.stolenbeauty.org) to see our FAQ, press links, and a tool kit with fliers and suggestions for planning actions. If you want specific advice, you can e-mail me at codepinknyc [at] gmail.com

  • admin

    test

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3tZhzPe-8uw cellulean

    Not sure I agree totally with this, but a great post all the same.

  • http://allcosmeticsnow.com foundation cosmetics guy

    Great post

  • http://www.industrialoil.org Al Griest

    Great post! Thank you. Are you okay if I ask you this question? Is this powered by wordpress? I’m totally in love with the layout. Do you had any ideas what themes to download that have the similar to the feel of your site? Thank you!

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