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ZOA: DO NOT BUY COKE!!


coke boycott.jpgThe Zionist Organization of America has recently issued a boycott on the purchase of Coca-Cola products. Here is a copy of the boycott, and the history behind it:

“Coca-Cola has been occupying and reaping the benefits from stolen property in Egypt — property that was stolen from its Jewish owners, the Bigio family, by the Egyptian government. When the Bigios learned about Coca-Cola’s plan to acquire an interest in their property, they repeatedly asked Coca-Cola to do the right thing and compensate them for their loss. But Coca-Cola has never offered them a penny.

Coca-Cola should be ashamed of its unfair and immoral conduct. The Company holds itself out as “more than a beverage company” — it’s a “corporate citizen of the world” that’s supposed to “act in every instance with honesty, integrity, accountability and respect.” Coca-Cola tells its employees to “never engage in behavior that harms the reputation of the Company. If you wouldn’t want to tell your parents or your children about your action — or wouldn’t want to read about it in a newspaper — don’t do it.”
Reason for boycott? 

When Refael Bigio was a boy, he would run into the Coca-Cola bottling plant on his family’s Egyptian estate and be welcomed by the smell of cola, the clinking of glass and lollipops in the shape of little bottles.

“Because I was the son of the owner, they used to dip it twice in sugar,” the 63-year-old Montreal grandfather said of those treats.

But that collegial, decades-old relationship between the Bigio family and the beverage company would change. Yesterday, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Mr. Bigio could proceed with his lawsuit against Coca-Cola Co., which he says bought property that had been confiscated from his family by the Egyptian government in 1962.

The lawsuit, one of the first of its kind, could set a precedent in court battles by other Jewish business owners seeking to recover assets seized in the Arab world.

“Coca-Cola knew certainly well that we are the owners of these assets and that we were expropriated because we are Jewish,” Mr. Bigio said yesterday from his office in the borough of Outremont. “I was horrified by their act …. They’ve abused all measures of common decency.”

Nathan Lewin, Mr. Bigio’s high-profile Washington, D.C., lawyer, said Coca- Cola is trespassing on his client’s property and will seek damages of at least $100-million.

In the late 1930s, Mr. Bigio said Coca-Cola leased part of his family’s land in Heliopolis, a suburb of Cairo, and set up a plant. Later, the Bigios started manufacturing bottle caps and serving trays for Coca-Cola.

According to some historians, a surge of pan-Arab nationalism forced about 50,000 Jews to flee Egypt in the 1950s and 1960s. One day in 1962, Mr. Bigio who was being groomed to take over the family business, arrived at the family factory to find the street filled with police officers demanding he turn over the keys.

Penniless, the family fled to France, where they were accepted as refugees before moving to Montreal and establishing a successful agro-industrial enterprise.

In 1980, Egypt’s minister of finance ordered the state insurance company, Misr Insurance, to return the Bigios’ properties to them.

Mr. Bigio had been trying unsuccessfully for years to reclaim his assets through Egytian courts when he heard Coca-Cola was interested in buying the bottling company that ran his family’s old factories. “We approached them in good faith, in a peaceful manner and reminded them of the relationship we had with them,” Mr. Bigio said. He requested compensation, “but they brushed us off.”

In 1994, Coca-Cola purchased a minority stake in the bottler. Crystal Warwell Walker, a spokeswoman for Coca-Cola, said the company has never leased property directly from the Bigios; Coca-Cola does not even own the land, she added.

“If you want to sue on ownership rights, the company doesn’t have them,” she said. The bottling company leases the property from the insurance company, Misr, she said.

She added that the company will agree to deal with the matter through an Egyptian court because U.S. law regarding jurisdiction prevents Misr from being named as a defendant.

Mr. Bigio has been fighting to have his day in a U.S. court for almost a decade. His first lawsuit was dismissed by a New York federal judge for procedural reasons. A court of appeals reversed the ruling, finding that the Bigios are unable to get relief through the Egyptian courts.

Mr. Bigio is buoyed by the Supreme Court’s refusal to consider Coca-Cola’s request to overturn the appeal, as well as by community support.

Last week, the Zionist Organization of America asked its members to boycott Coca-Cola products based on Mr. Bigio’s case. “They should not have helped Egypt benefit from this theft,” said the pro-Israel group’s president, Morton Klein.

Mr. Lewin said the next step will be to request evidence from the company, but he expects further delays by Coca-Cola.

Mr. Bigio said he will not back down. “When you know something is yours in your right and if you fight for it in the proper decorum — at the end justice does prevail.”

(Sources: ZOA / National Post / Canada)



22 Responses

  1. NAH!!! It’s all about that good looking fella holding the Coke bottle.
    The zionim got scared, that the chasidim will consume all the coke,
    and they’ll have to drink Negel Vasser.

  2. the zionist r boycott’ing a lot of things these days first they boycott n”k from entering israel (as was reported on y”w a few week’s ago) & then the unity goverment that the clowns in gaza made . & now its coke what’s next ??? they should boycott all the non kosher food from entering israel !!!! I think we will start hereing ONLY GOOD NEWS from e”y!!

  3. Now for a sensible comment:
    BOYCOTTS are a legal action to show displeasure and cause a company to bear a financial lose. (ex; the el al boycott was to cause them a $$$ lose till they cry “Gut Shabbos”). The Jewish community and other groups have boycotted products and at times have seen results, eg. the boycott and letter writting to Duncan Hines caused the co. to change its D stamp. Whether this is a worthy cause or not, is for you to decide**? If it was your property and future financial gain—-would it be important to you.
    ***or ask daas torah

  4. I’d rather boycott Zionists :). Where is the hakoros hatov for all the years that Coke sold in the medina, which is a tiny little market especially back in the not so far off years when yes, your average Israeli could hardly afford a Coke, and lost Arab business because of that? As always, the tzioinim seize on minor issues and make Jews look like loudmouth yachnes.

    And no one boycotted Duncan Hines – those who use cholov stam kept using it – but because sales went down simply because those who made DH cakes for eating after a meat meal no longer could (and a bigger factor was probably non-Jewish lactose intolerant consumers), they saw it was economically beneficial to return to Parve.

  5. Joseph is the bad non-zionist. If there are any problems he is around to be blamed by certain commentators. Especially if its a zionist problem. Even if he didn’t make any comments. Who else is there to kick around on a boring day (if its one of those rare days that nk is not on yw)?

  6. Itzik; You took the words right off my keyboard.
    I am not commenting on this individual case; however I suspect that ZOA possibly did not consult daas torah, and it is true that Coke is owed a certain Hakoras hatov. (Kofie Tov is what got Amon/Moav kicked out for good).
    PS I once had to listen to the headline speech of either WZO/UJC and in a whole hour Hashem was not mentioned ONCE!!

  7. “If you want the authentic taste of the Real Thing, you need to buy the Jewish Thing.
    “In the US, where cheap high fructose corn syrup has been used instead of sugar to sweeten American Coke since the drink’s relaunch in 1985. Corn is a grain, so Coke isn’t kosher L’Pesach. The company responded by manufacturing a limited quantity of Kosher Coke, sweetened with sugar, in cans and bottles with “OU-P” or “Kosher L’Pesach” printed in Hebrew on a yellow cap. Kosher Coke is only available during March and April in areas with high Jewish populations.”
    – This was printed in Mondays Guardian.co.uk newspaper!

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