The False Foundation of B’nai Brith’s Data

Every year, B’nai Brith Canada releases its “Audit of AntiSemitic Incidents”. This report is then heavily marketed to multiple levels of government and often shows up in arguments for adopting certain policies, like the regressive IHRA definition and flawed online hate legislation.

The 2021 report hit a new low in attempting to conflate legitimate pro-Palestinian protest with actual vile acts of hatred against Jews. And this is the dangerous component here. B’nai Brith intentionally merges its reporting on anti-Jewish racism with its denunciation of “anti-Israel” activities. In fact, the pledge to fight anti-Semitism on the B’nai Brith Int’l website that people are encouraged to adopt includes as its second tenet: “To speak against demonization, delegitimization or double standards against Israel, as they are manifestations of anti-Semitism.”

On April 26, Canada Palestine Association questioned the credibility of the B’nai Brith report in a tweet that showed a photo of a picket sign from page 11 of their 2021 Audit, introducing the section on “Assessing the Data”.

This data led them to conclude that 2021 was another record year for anti-Semitic incidents. And although their report does include clear cases of vandalism against synagogues and hate graffiti, how much of their “assessed data” also includes cases of political protest by Palestinians and their allies? B’nai Brith claimed on page 12 of the report: “In fact, online hate has become the preferred method of targeting Jews. B’nai Brith logged 2,093 incidents of online hate, or an increase of 12.3% over the 2020 figures of 1,863 cases. This evidence should convince government that a review of current legislation regarding online hate is necessary.”

As the photo in the screenshot is presumably another case of alleged “anti-Semitic” behaviour, how many of their 2093 “online hate” incidents had nothing to do with hatred against Jews and everything to do with supporting the anti-colonial and anti-apartheid struggle of the Palestinian people? Given that their info for the photo itself isn’t even correct (it was from a Vancouver support rally in June for #BlocktheBoat, not a Montreal rally in May), one questions the eagerness of the Zionist lobby to smear the growing solidarity with Palestine with the charge of anti-Semitism. In the “Highlights” section (page 34), B’nai Brith devoted half a page to denigrating Toronto students at Marc Garneau Collegiate that had staged a walkout to protest anti-Palestinian racism. This clear political agenda colours the whole foundation and intent of the B’nai Brith reporting and strips it of any credibility for serious anti-racism organizing.

This approach is not only flawed and promotes anti-Palestinian racism, but also extremely dangerous in that it serves to minimize the real cases of anti-Jewish hatred. It is preposterous that a person holding up a sign saying that Canada and Israel are partners in apartheid and colonialism is casually mixed with “Kill Jews, Gas Jews” graffiti at a religious centre (page 19). Or is this part of the effort to demonize the growing number of human rights organizations and officials that have recently classified Israel as an apartheid regime?

We denounce this attempt to create an institutional environment so hostile to pro-Palestine opinions, that activists and groups will either be censored outright or self-censor. The struggle against racism in Canada is too important to be manipulated by anyone with a self-serving political agenda, especially the Zionist lobby. Anti-racism organizing is not a competition to see who is the “most targeted religious minority in the country”; the fightback by multiple communities to deal with the systemic daily racism they face must be inter-connected and include a clear commitment to fight all forms of racism.

Actions in Support of Palestine

As Israeli forces are stepping up their brutality against Palestinians, activists in British Columbia are taking to the streets to show support for the Palestinian struggle. On April 23, there is an action in Surrey, BC to Stand for Palestine and to highlight Palestinian political prisoners.

And on April 16, an information picket to say “No to Israeli Apartheid Wines” was held at the BC Liquor Store on Commercial Drive, Vancouver. Hundreds of leaflets were distributed, signatures were collected, and then a delegation went to the office of MLA Melanie Mark to also deliver the message.

April 16 Picket: No to Israeli Apartheid Wines!

The campaign to “Tell BC Govt to Pull Israeli Apartheid Wines” has featured joint actions in Vancouver and Victoria over the last two months, and the letter initiative has garnered over 1300 signatures (both on-line and in person). Check out full details here.

Friends of the Campaign to “Tell BC Govt to Pull Israeli Apartheid Wines!”

Our “Friends of the Campaign” initiative highlights notable friends and allies who have endorsed our letter campaign to “Tell BC Govt to Pull Israeli Apartheid Wines!”. We appreciate the support of Roger Waters, Libby Davies, former and current Vancouver city councillors, IJV members, local artists, lawyer Dimitri Lascaris and professor Sunera Thobani amongst others. (The list of endorsers to date follows the text of the letter.)

Text of Letter
To: BC Premier John Horgan
      BC Finance Minister Selina Robinson

I am writing to express my outrage at the refusal of BC government officials to remove Israeli apartheid wines from publicly owned liquor stores. Your recent action in quickly putting a “…halt to the importing and sale of Russian liquor products” clearly demonstrates that your government can take decisive action. However, your unwillingness to do the same for Israeli wines shows a hypocritical double standard that smacks of racism.

Human rights activists in BC have sustained an on-going campaign for 14 years to have Israeli wines removed from liquor store shelves, most of which are linked to the Israeli settlement enterprise. They have detailed that the wines in question are either from the Golan Heights Winery and its joint venture the Galil Winery; or from the Israeli Teperberg Winery, which proudly displays a map on its website showing vineyards in occupied Palestinian territory.

Israeli settlements are illegal under the Fourth Geneva Convention and international humanitarian law. They are part and parcel of the systematic targeting of the Palestinian people for dispossession, occupation and apartheid for over 73 years. Last year, the New Democratic Party NDP of Canada passed a resolution that committed in part to end “all trade and economic cooperation with illegal settlements in Israel-Palestine”. The Canadian government also acknowledges the illegality of Israeli settlements in its official policy.

Further, major international and Israeli human right groups, including Amnesty International, have determined that Israel is committing the crime of apartheid. Therefore, I demand that the BC government immediately de-shelve Israeli wines from our publicly owned liquor stores; I do not wish to be made complicit in supporting apartheid.

https://actionnetwork.org/letters/tell-bc-government-to-pull-israeli-apartheid-wines

Friends of the Campaign:

Anne Roberts
(former Vancouver City Councillor)

Dimitri Lascaris
(Lawyer, journalist and activist)

Earle Peach
(Director, Solidarity Notes choir)

Gurpreet Singh
(Independent journalist and activist/Cofounder of Radical Desi, an online magazine that covers alternative politics)
Jayce Salloum
(Artist and curator)

Jean Swanson
(Vancouver City Councillor)

John Soos
(PhD, clinical psychology)

Kevin Neish
(Retired vocational instructor, Mavi Marmara survivor)
Khaled Barakat
(Palestinian-Canadian writer and activist)
Khaled Loutfi Mouammar
(Palestinian Christian denied the right to return to his homeland because he is a non-Jew/Served on the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada 1994-2005)

Kimball Cariou
(former editor of People’s Voice)

Libby Davies
Natalie Knight
(Indigenous (Diné and Yurok) organizer and Chairperson of Friends of the Filipino People in Struggle
)
Noah Gotfrit
(Musician, WCCARS member at large
)
Pat Howard
(Retired Professor, Simon Fraser University)

Rehab Nazzal
(PhD, Artist and Lecturer, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver)

Rev. Marianna Harris
Rifat Audeh
(Canadian award-winning filmmaker and human rights activist)

Roger Waters
(Musician)

Sid Shniad
(Founding member, Independent Jewish Voices Canada)

Stephen Aberle
(Member of Independent Jewish Voices – Canada)

Sunera Thobani
(Professor, University of British Columbia)

Tim Louis
(Lawyer and former Vancouver City Councillor)

Information Picket: No to Israeli Apartheid Wines

Saturday, April 16 3-5 pm
BC Liquor Store, 1520 Commercial Dr., Vancouver

Picket & Public Education Action
Join us to hand out leaflets, get signatures on our action network letter, and outreach to promote the “Tell BC Govt to Pull Israeli Apartheid Wines” campaign.
Major international and Israeli human right groups, including Amnesty International, have determined that Israel is committing the crime of apartheid. Yet the BC government insists to carry Israeli wines in publicly owned BC liquor stores, even though most are linked to the illegal Israeli settlement enterprise.
https://actionnetwork.org/…/tell-bc-government-to-pull… 

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