We Remember Nelson Mandela

December 7, 2013
Canada Palestine Association, Vancouver and the Voice
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December 7, 2013
Canada Palestine Association, Vancouver and the Voice of Palestine, Canada received the news of Nelson Mandela’s passing with great sadness and extend our deepest condolences to his family, the South African people and all of humanity. We have lost a unique and selfless leader who never wavered from his principles and never bowed to expediency in the most critical moments of the anti-Apartheid and anti-Colonialist struggles.
The Palestinian people have lost a solid supporter and outspoken advocate for Palestinian human rights and self-determination. He once said “The temptation is to speak in muffled tones about an issue such as the right of the people of Palestine … yet we would be less than human if we did so.” And surely Madiba never spoke “in muffled tones” about human rights and freedom for oppressed peoples all over the world. We will be forever grateful for his solidarity and unequivocal stand in support of liberation movements all over the world.
Madiba lives forever!
Hanna Kawas, Chair, Canada Palestine Association-Vancouver
Cohost, Voice of Palestine

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Some of Madiba’s words that you will not find quoted by international officials in their hypocritical rush to exploit his historic and profound legacy, including Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper:
1. “But we know too well that our freedom is incomplete without the freedom of the Palestinians.” (Address by President Nelson Mandela at the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, December 4, 1997, Pretoria)
2. At a news conference, Mandela said “We expect everybody who is exploring the possibility of lasting solutions to be able to face the truth squarely. I believe that there are many similarities between our struggle and that of the PLO. We live under a unique form of colonialism in South Africa, as well as in Israel, and a lot flows from that.” (From an article in JTA, March 2, 1990 South African and U.S. Leaders Dismayed over Mandela’s Remarks)
3. “We identify with the PLO because, just like ourselves, they are fighting for the right of self determination.”…”Arafat is a comrade in arms.” (Mandela answers criticism on ABC by Ted Koppel and American Zionists in attendance regarding his support for the Palestinian cause.)
4. “He told the Australian news media, ‘We agree with the United Nations that international disputes should be settled by peaceful means. The belligerent attitude which is adopted by the Israeli government is to us unacceptable’. Mandela said the ANC does not consider the PLO a terrorist group, adding: ‘If one has to refer to any of the parties as a terrorist state, one might refer to the Israeli government, because they are the people who are slaughtering defenseless and innocent Arabs in the occupied territories, and we don’t regard that as acceptable’.” (JTA article October 25, 1990 Mandela Angers Australian Jews with Fresh Anti-Israel Rhetoric)
5. And see also: 12 Mandela Quotes That Won’t Be In the Corporate Media Obituaries (December 6, 2013 by Common Dreams)

“Thomas Mulcair showed he gets it”!!!

The following email was sent on Dec.4, 2013 to NDP MPs and Party Officials:

Please stop pandering to the pro-Israel lobby, you will never win their vote. Instead, you are losing the progressive vote, your pride and your humanity.

Hanna Kawas

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Nov. 22, 2013
NDP solidly supports Israel
Editorial by: (“Jewish Independent”)
We call it the “kishkes” question. Any politician can mouth platitudes that sound good to Jewish voters. But most of us can differentiate between a politician who knows the right things to say versus one who truly understands the Jewish experience and why Israel is central to the Canadian Jewish identity. At a Montreal conference recently, New Democratic party leader Thomas Mulcair showed he gets it.
Canadian Jewish News reported on Mulcair’s comments at an event sponsored by the Montreal Friends of Peace Now and the Labor Zionist History Circle. Mulcair said he is “a friend of Israel under all circumstances,” and said that “singling out Israel as a pariah” is wrong. He said the movement to apply boycotts, divestments and sanctions against Israel is “exactly the wrong direction we should be going in” and said the accusation of apartheid against Israel “serves no purpose.”
Most significantly, Mulcair showed that he understands the bottom line when it comes to Israel’s survival. “Anyone who proposes a one-state solution for Israelis and Palestinians has been asleep for 60 years,” CJN reported Mulcair as saying. “It’s not a realistic solution, it’s not going to happen. It would mean invariably the death of the state of Israel…. It’s just another way of saying Israel does not have the right to exist.”
These comments are significant because they are unambiguous – and the NDP has equivocated in the past. The policy of the NDP and, before it, the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation, was strongly Zionist until 1967, when the party began to move to a position that took into consideration the Palestinian position as well. By the time of the Second Intifada, which coincided with a steep decline in the federal NDP’s success, the party was heavily influenced by anti-Israel activists, such as B.C. member of Parliament Svend Robinson. While the party may have had a balanced policy approach on the books, the loudest voices in the party were often stridently critical of Israel. The late former leader Jack Layton had to patch over a few such incidents, including forcing Vancouver MP Libby Davies to backtrack on a statement that effectively denied Israel’s right to exist.
In the race to succeed Layton, Mulcair was seen as the most pro-Israel candidate, but the issue hardly came up. Mulcair’s victory had to do with other things, mostly the potential he had to preserve the party’s historic inroads in Quebec. His recent comments are among the most extensive and clear Mulcair has yet made on the topic.
Of course, Mulcair has some strong words for the Conservative approach to the issue. The Stephen Harper government’s robust and vocal support for Israel, Mulcair suggested, has diminished Canada’s role on the international stage.
“Canada is absolutely nowhere, we are not players. Our voice could count for a lot,” he said, according to CJN. “Stephen Harper says he is a steadfast ally [of Israel], but what do allies do, if not take part in the process?… Working for peace means working with countries that don’t necessarily agree with us. That’s the essence of diplomacy. We [an NDP government] are going to be at the table … and not just harp on the sidelines.” He added: “You can’t get change if you criticize from the outside.”
This assertion has been made before by New Democrats, Liberals and others. At the risk of saying that Canada should not overestimate our self-importance, it is hard to discern Canada as having had a great impact on the last round of Mideast peace talks (or the one before that, or before that, back until maybe 1956), so we should not rend our garments over the loss of an influence we may never have had in the first place. There is something to be said for a lonely voice for Israel on the international stage adding a tiny bit of balance to a global dog-piling that even a UN interpreter dubbed over a hot mic “a bit much” recently.
We might also take mild exception to Mulcair’s well-intentioned statement that “[c]reating a homeland for the Jews is one of the noblest things the world community was able to accomplish since the war.” The UN may have voted for the Partition Plan, but when it came to the battle for survival in 1948-49, the Jews of the Yishuv were joined by very few but Diaspora Jews and a small number of idealistic non-Jewish volunteers. Israel is a noble accomplishment, we concur, but let’s not give credit where it is not due.
That aside, Mulcair’s position is laudable. He even went so far as to declare that “100 percent” of his caucus and “everyone in the NDP” supports a two-state solution arrived at through mutual negotiation and resulting in borders that allow each of the peoples to live in peace. According to CJN, Mulcair acknowledged that there have been “attempts within the party to chip away [at that position], but they have gotten nowhere.”
This assertion of unanimity is extraordinary. It is a sign of a leader almost daring dissidents to speak up, but also of a leader secure enough in his position to draw a line in the sand. A quick peruse of blogs, online comments and trade union convention resolutions suggests that not all of the people who might be expected to support the NDP are quite so enthusiastic about an Israel living in peace and security. But Mulcair is effectively telling them that they have no place in his party.
This is deeply significant. It affirms a Canadian consensus among all mainstream parties that Israel has a right to exist and suggests that anyone who disagrees is a fringe element. Let us give credit where it is due and acknowledge that Mulcair has staked out an honorable and fair-mind.

Is Israel “the bulwark of democracy in the Middle East”?!

The following letter was sent to Elizabeth May, Leader of the Green Party of Canada, regarding her position on Israeli “democracy”.

Elizabeth May
Leader of the Green Party of Canada

You were quoted in the “Jewish Tribune” as saying that “Israel plays as the bulwark of democracy in the Middle East.” It seems to me that you “have not thought through the real politic of life in the Middle East” to quote you.
Here are the facts:

Israel has over fifty laws that discriminate against 20% of its Christian and Muslim citizens:
http://adalah.org/eng/Israeli-Discriminatory-Law-Database

See also the Index of Currently Pending Discriminatory Bills in the 19th Israeli Knesset: http://adalah.org/Public/files/Discriminatory-Laws-Database/Discriminatory-Bills-19th-Knesset-24-06-2013.pdf

Following is the moral and principled position of the Green Party (USA) and the Left Party in France:

Green Party (USA) reiterates support for BDS
The Left Party in France joins the Boycott-Divestment-Sanctions (BDS) campaign against Israel
http://www.lepartidegauche.fr/actualites/communique/le-parti-gauche-s-engage-dans-les-campagnes-boycott-desinvestissement-sanctions-l-egard-d-israel-25718
I hope that you won’t call their position anti-Israeli, the way you described the “‘anti-Israeli stance’ of Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East (CJPME)”. I urge you to not “pander” to the pro Israeli lobby the same way the other leaders of Canadian federal parties do, otherwise Canada and by association the Canadian people’s reputation internationally is doomed. I urge you to rethink your biased and emotional position.
Thanks for your attention
Hanna Kawas
Chairperson, Canada Palestine Association, Vancouver

Statement on Syria

No to US-led intervention in Syria
April 21, 2013 – Canada Palestine… Read more

No to US-led intervention in Syria
April 21, 2013 – Canada Palestine Association-Vancouver is alarmed by the escalating violence in Syria and the huge toll on the Syrian civilian population and we feel compelled to speak out. The increasing threat of foreign military intervention will only exacerbate this suffering and could well begin a wider war. We believe that the Syrian people are the only party to decide who should lead them, and outside intervention should be condemned.
The objective of Western governments has always been to control Arab natural resources, especially the oil, and to impose Arab dictatorships that serve their interests. The West has never cared for the well being or dignity of the Arab people; we need only to look at their history for the past sixty-five years, including their role in the dismemberment of Palestine and its people. Recently, there are clear signs that the US government and its allies, including Canada and various Arab puppet regimes, are increasing their intervention in Syria – from the rapprochement between Turkey and Israel under the auspices of US president Obama, the sharp increase of military aid from Arab governments and Turkey (with the help of the C.I.A.) to the Syrian opposition (including more than 160 military cargo flights by Jordanian, Saudi and Qatari military-style cargo planes, as reported by the NY Times Mar.25/13), to the unwarranted Arab League recognition of the Syrian opposition and the statement by Adm. James Stavridis, NATO’s top military commander, “We are looking at a wide range of operations and we are prepared if called upon to be engaged as we were in Libya.”
We call for a peaceful solution through dialogue and negotiations and the implementation of long-overdue reforms in Syria. There are many sincere elements that care about the future of Syria and are pushing for urgently-needed change, but any alliance with Israeli and U.S. hegemonic designs is and will be disastrous for the Syrian and Arab peoples. The UNITY of Syria is at stake, the future of the region is at stake. History will judge all those who collaborated with Israel and the U.S. empire (and this includes the Palestinian Authority).
Accordingly, Canada Palestine Association-Vancouver strongly denounces any Western and US-led intervention in Syria, and we call on our supporters to oppose any such intervention, especially from the Canadian Government. We will not allow John Baird and Stephen Harper to practice their hypocritical policies – supporting Israeli annexation over all of Jerusalem while pretending to care about the suffering of any of the Arab peoples.

We Lost “Splitting the Sky”, a Mohawk Warrior and Activist

Canada Palestine Association is deeply saddened by the recent passing … Read more

Canada Palestine Association is deeply saddened by the recent passing of Mohawk warrior and indigenous activist Splitting the Sky (John Boncore). The Palestinian people are indebted to Splitting the Sky for his enduring resistance and uncompromising anti-colonial positions, as well as his long time support of the Palestinian struggle. He was an early member of the American Indian Movement and also attempted a citizen’s arrest of U.S. President George W. Bush in 2009 in Calgary for war crimes and crimes against humanity .
We were honored to have him deliver a solidarity message on the occasion of the Int’l Day of Solidarity with the Palestinians in 2003 in Vancouver, an event that also featured the parents of Rachel Corrie.
Our condolences to his family, friends and nation; rest assured his legacy will carry on!

In Solidarity
Hanna Kawas
Chair, Canada Palestine Association
Cohost, Voice of Palestine