Who are the real victims of the Ben & Jerry’s Israel boycott?

While the workers of Ben & Jerry’s have been caught in the middle of a conflict, they are unwilling to be forgotten.

Ice cream on the line at the Ben & Jerry's factory (photo credit: ARSEN OSTROVSKY OF THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL FORUM)
Ice cream on the line at the Ben & Jerry's factory
(photo credit: ARSEN OSTROVSKY OF THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL FORUM)
“We’re like the sacrifice in the middle,” Orit Toker, Ben & Jerry’s Israel manager of food technologies, told The Jerusalem Post. In conflict, those caught in the middle are often those that suffer the most – and are often forgotten.
On Thursday, the Post had the opportunity to meet the hardworking, family-oriented workers of Ben & Jerry’s Israel.
On Monday, Ben & Jerry’s announced its boycott of West Bank settlements and its intention not to renew its contract next year with its partner in Israel.
Israeli politicians received the decision like a declaration of war. Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, and President Isaac Herzog have all issued scathing rebukes of the ice cream company.
The Boycott Divestment and Sanctions movement that led the pressure campaign have welcomed Ben & Jerry’s decision, and are already pushing for further action.
Caught in the middle are people like Reuven Ben-Teruncha who has worked at the local ice cream factory for five years. He has nine children, and jokes that he is waiting for a tenth. He’s proud of appearing on the factory’s promotional materials.
“The people here are good, the pay is on time, there is job security.” He told the Post. “This job is my health and livelihood.”
His co-workers describe him as always having a smile on his face – but even Reuven is concerned.
“It’s not fair, all of a sudden to close a factory that has been operating for 35 years,” he said. “People have been working here for seven years, 15 years, and people want to close the factory on them...Let us work.”
Reuven is far from the only person whose livelihood is on the line.

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Factory line workers at the Ben & Jerry’s Factory. (Photo credit: Michael Starr)
Factory line workers at the Ben & Jerry’s Factory. (Photo credit: Michael Starr)
“It’s me and 160 people that work for this company,” Avi Zinger, CEO of Ben & Jerry’s Israel, told a tour organized by the Digitell arm of the Ministry of Strategic Affairs, which organized the visit to meet the people beyond the headlines.
Zinger described himself as someone who loves ice cream. Before he brought Ben & Jerry’s to Israel as their licensee and partner, he says one “couldn’t get decent ice cream in Israel.”
After the decision to end their agreement, Zinger said that “the first day, it was a shock.” Everyone went around the factory with the feeling like “everything is falling apart.”
But while the decision was a shock, Orit Toker noted that it was not a surprise.
Zinger listed dozens of ways they’ve been attacked before. Ben & Jerry’s Israel weathered these attacks, but the momentum shifted sharply in the wake of the recent Gaza war, Operation Guardian of the Walls.
Ben & Jerry’s Israel factory stands, and 90% of its employees live, within range of Hamas rockets, so they spent much of the war in bomb shelters. When they emerged, and most of Israel returned to normal, they were still under attack. A barrage of BDS social media comments and campaigns pressuring Ben & Jerry’s forced them into internet silence – until the declaration on Monday.
Itai, a product manager for Ben & Jerry’s Israel, is from Kiryat Gat, and has worked at the factory for three years. He told the Post they feel like they’re still in the middle of a war.
“We don’t make politics, we make ice cream,” Itai told the Post.
Rami, the head of logistics, echoed the sentiment, explaining that a political war was being waged against them. He told the Post that he has been trying to calm his workers. It isn’t easy. In Kiryat Malachi, close to where the factory is located in Beer Tuviya, “not much is here,” he said. Families, distributors, all rely on Ben & Jerry’s Israel for their livelihood.
Kiryat Malachi was established in 1951 as a tent city, or ma’abara, for masses of Jewish immigrants. The town has a population of 22,000 people, many of them immigrants from the former Soviet Union. Ethiopian immigrants make up 17% of the population. According to the Neriya Center-Kiryat Malachi charity, the city “ranks only 4 out of 10 on a scale of prosperity, with an average income 50% lower than the national average.”
 Ben & Jerry’s Israel has not just been providing jobs to the area, but contributing to charities and social projects.
According to Zinger, his company has given to charities focusing on Israeli-Ethiopian communities. It also contributed to an entrepreneurial program that brought young Israeli Jews and Arabs together.
Reuven Ben-Teruncha shows his ice cream stacking skills to the Strategic Affairs Ministry tour group. (Photo credit: Lauren Morganbesser)
Reuven Ben-Teruncha shows his ice cream stacking skills to the Strategic Affairs Ministry tour group. (Photo credit: Lauren Morganbesser)
According to Zinger the company employs Ethiopian immigrants and refugees, and has Israeli Arab distributors that rely on them.
These initiatives, opportunities and jobs are all at risk.
Gabi is a division head at Ben & Jerry’s Israel. He is married with three kids, and has worked at the factory for 24 years.
If the factory closes, Gabi joked that “it will be hard for my kids because they love to eat ice cream.” He took a more serious tone when he said, “but they are also very proud that their father works in an ice cream factory.”
In addition to his family, his workers’ livelihoods prey on his mind. “I worry for them.”
When asked what would happen next, Zinger said that “We have to let people go, we have to shut down the company if we lose the license.”
However, Zinger emphasized that he is an optimist. He doesn’t believe that will happen, because of all the support they’ve received in Israel and around the world.
This cautious optimism is shared by his employees.
“The factory may close in a year,” Itai told the Post. ”We don’t know what will happen, we hope the political pressure will prevent that from happening”
“I think it will be okay,” a line worker said.
The inside of the Ben and Jerry's factory (Credit: Lauren Morganbesser)
The inside of the Ben and Jerry's factory (Credit: Lauren Morganbesser)
The resilient mood seemed to have been amplified by the visit of social media influencers, pundits, and NGOs that came with the Strategic Affairs Ministry’s Digitell branch. As the group arrived, workers were hanging new Israeli flags on the front gate.
At the end of the tour, the event turned celebratory, with some of the Digitell group climbing onto a Ben & Jerry’s truck with an Israeli flag, cheered on by Zinger and other workers.
While the workers at Ben & Jerry’s have been caught in the middle of a conflict, they are unwilling to be forgotten. They have not just embraced the support they’ve received, they’ve been actively fighting the closure of their factory.
“Everyone is behind us,” Zinger said excitedly.
Hallel Silverman and two other members of the Digitell visiting group stand on a Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream truck.
Hallel Silverman and two other members of the Digitell visiting group stand on a Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream truck.