Israel Should NOT Sign a Cultural agreement with Europe
In the past, under much heavier political pressure, Israel signed the Horizon 2020 program that funds scientific research, which also includes the same territorial discrimination. But there is no reason to repeat such a mistake. Moreover, the cultural agreement is worse than the Horizon agreement because the latter "only" discriminated against scientific institutions. For example, Ariel University could not receive EU funding. Government funds can compensate for this kind of damage. Cultural funding, however, involves consumers. The cultural agreement would mean that anything using EU funds, such as an exhibition or an entire theater, would not be able to operate in the Old City of Jerusalem or in Katzrin. This is discrimination that is prohibited under Israeli law. In addition to this, the scientific agreement was in a highly competitive field where countries are fiercely fighting for supremacy. With all due respect, this is not the case in the fields of, say, dance or visual arts.
After Horizon 2020, the EU did not wait long. It immediately acted to anchor the separation between the territories inside and beyond the Green Line in the lamentable U.N. Resolution 2334. Israeli leaders, including the current leadership, claim that they are determined to fight Resolution 2334. This cannot be done if the Israeli government signs an agreement that actually implements the resolution.
Israel will do all this damage for a handful of euros – a few million a year. Israel will pay 33 million euros for the agreement and will receive back funding, according to estimates, of about seven million euros per year. Signing the cultural agreement is unprecedented. It will harm Israel's supporters fighting BDS; it will harm Israel's claims against its detractors; it will cause prohibited discrimination against about 800,000 Israeli citizens – and all this for a very small profit. Professor of law Eugene Kontorovich is one of the world's preeminent experts on universal jurisdiction and maritime piracy, as well as international law and the Israel-Arab conflict. {Reposted from IsraelHayom}

July 3, 2026 






