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

Sincere Condolences on the Passing of the Great Leader Hugo Chávez‏

Canada Palestine Association and Voice of Palestine Statement On the PassingRead more

Canada Palestine Association and Voice of Palestine Statement On the Passing of Hugo Chávez

To Merli Vanegas:
Consul General of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela in Vancouver

Dear Merli Vanegas,

We were deeply saddened by the news of the passing of the great revolutionary leader Hugo Chávez.
In the name of Canada Palestine Association and Voice of Palestine, Canada, we send our sincere condolences to you, to the Bolivarian revolutionaries and to the Venezuelan people.
We are certain that the achievements and successes of the revolution will be maintained and advanced. We are also certain that the US designs to economically and militarily control the world and its resources will be stopped and defeated.
Long live international solidarity between the Venezuelan people and the Palestinian and Arab peoples.

The Struggle Continues.

Hanna Kawas
Chairperson, Canada Palestine Association
Co-Host, Voice of Palestine

What Kind of Peace Do Israeli Voters Want?

Has the bankrupt CanWest’s pro-Israel banner passed to the TorontoRead more

Has the bankrupt CanWest’s pro-Israel banner passed to the Toronto Star?

The Toronto Star published an Editorial Opinion piece “Israeli voters still yearn for peace” on Jan. 25, 2013 by Shimon Koffler Fogel, the CEO of the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA), formerly the Canadian Council for Israel and Jewish Advocacy. This article was the latest by Fogel, full of half-truths, distortions and inaccuracies.

Then, on Jan. 28, 2013, an Editorial Opinion by Vivian Bercovici was published under the title “Bercovici: Palestinian leaders don’t care who wins in Israel” with the subtitle “Many western governments hold onto a misguided fantasy: that the persistent obstacle to Mideast peace is Israel, not Palestinian leaders.” This is clearly another piece written by Benjamin Netanyahu’s Foreign Ministry and is not worth our response; however, to add insult to injury, the Star informs its readership at the end of her article that this author’s “column will appear monthly”.

We sent the Star our response to Fogel’s Hasbara piece, hoping that they will be even-handed and publish it, but with no success. We are wondering if there was a coup in the Star and whether it abandoned its “Atkinson Principles”, especially the commitment to social justice. It seems the paper is now competing to become the new mouthpiece for Israel after the demise of the CanWest Empire.

We would like to note that our article is in defense of the Palestinian people and NOT in defense of the Palestinian leadership or the so-called Palestinian Authority. Our position is clear from the Fateh leadership that betrayed not only its founders but also the Palestinian people. We, along with other pro-Palestinian organizations and individuals, called on Mahmoud Abbas to resign over five years ago.

Following is our article that The Star refused to publish.

What Kind of Peace Do Israeli Voters Want?

It would seem that the objective of the editorial opinion “Israeli voters still yearn for peace” by Shimon Koffler Fogel (published in thestar.com on January 25, 2013) was to refute an earlier Star article on the Israeli elections by Olivia Ward. In that article, she talked about “the elephant in the room, around which most of Israel’s politicians have tiptoed: the Israeli-Palestinian peace process” and rightly concluded that Israeli politicians don’t want to be bothered with a long lasting peace with the Palestinians. It is insulting to the intelligence of Canadians for Mr. Fogel to now claim otherwise.

1. In a January 9/2013 interview with the New York Times, the President of Israel, Shimon Peres, was asked if Obama is or isn’t convinced that Israel wants peace. He answered, “Of course, he’s not convinced. He demanded an end to settlements and got a negative response, and they [members of the Likud-led government] are to blame for the ongoing activity in the settlements.”
2. In the same interview Peres talks about the role of Mahmoud Abbas in the peace negotiations (whom he calls by his nickname Abu Mazen): “Abu Mazen and I met for long talks, with Netanyahu’s knowledge, and even reached more than a few agreements. To my regret, in the end there was always some rupture…I do not accept the assertion that Abu Mazen is not a good negotiating partner. To my mind, he is an excellent partner. Our military people describe to me the extent to which the Palestinian forces are cooperating with us to combat terror”, he added. Abbas, who is on his third presidential term despite only being elected for one, and whose political legitimacy is questioned daily on the Palestinian scene due to his acquiescence to the Israeli agenda, is still not a suitable partner for Mr. Fogel or Benjamin Netanyahu for that matter.
3. Former U.S. Ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk in an interview with Israel’s Army Radio, that was reported by the Israeli paper Haaretz, also stated “Israel must realize that there is a partner for peace on the Palestinian side, Indyk said. ‘There is a partner, just up the road in Ramallah,’ said Indyk, ‘His name is Abu-Mazen, and he is committed to peace with Israel and to the two-state solution, and to preventing violence and terrorism’.”
4. Mr. Fogel should listen to the six former heads of the Israeli security service Shin Bet who all “argue–to varying degrees–that the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land is bad for the state of Israel” in the movie “The Gatekeepers.”

Mr. Fogel did not once comment in his article on the illegal “Israeli settlements”, which are recognized internationally as the main obstacle to peace, nor did he mention that it was not the Palestinians who were responsible for murdering Israeli Prime Minister Rabin and thereby derailing Oslo. Nor did he deem it necessary to mention that Benjamin Netanyahu opposed the Oslo agreement and openly campaigned against it, and that according to Dror Moreh, the Israeli filmmaker, “Netanyahu (is) as much to blame for Rabin’s death”. Fogel also forgot to mention what triggered the wave of post-Oslo suicide bombings – the murder of twenty-nine Palestinian worshippers and the wounding of 125 more at the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron/Al Khalil by the fanatic settler Baruck Goldstein in 1994.

Mr. Fogel starts his article by trying to cover up the inequalities in Israel between Jews and non Jews by saying, “As one of only 23 countries in the world that have continuously held free elections since 1948, Israel is known for being a particularly boisterous democracy”. Giving the right to vote to Palestinian Israelis doesn’t testify to the democratic nature of Israel. Would Mr. Fogel accept for Jewish or Black Canadians to have over thirty laws that discriminate against them in citizenship rights, redistribution of resources and social welfare, employment, land, educational access/attainment, and language, health and political participation? The right to vote becomes meaningless in such a context and this is what the Palestinian citizens of Israel have to endure. (See: The Inequality Report The Palestinian Arab Minority in Israel by Adalah, The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel.)

Fogel’s assertions that “Israeli voters still yearn for peace” is just another page from the Israeli Hasbara book. Recent polls as reported in the Sydney Morning Herald indicated that “Most Jewish citizens of Israel support discrimination against Palestinians … with 69 per cent advocating preference for Jews over Arabs in government jobs and 74 per cent in favour of segregated roads in the West Bank” and “42 per cent indicated they did not want to live in the same building as Arabs or have their children in the same class as Arab children.” (See also the Haaretz article by Gideon LevyApartheid without shame or guilt”). Is this the peace Israelis are yearning for? Is this the peace Mr. Fogel wants the Palestinian people to accept and live under?

Mr. Fogel put the blame for everything on the shoulders of the late Yasser Arafat, when he told former President Clinton “Do you want to attend my funeral?” This was when Arafat finally refused to capitulate to US/Israeli demands to accept Palestinian Bantustans, to accept illegal Israeli settlements on stolen Palestinian lands, to compromise on occupied East Jerusalem, and to renounce the right of return which is a collective and individual right for the Palestinian refugees who were ethnically cleansed in 1947/48.

Fogel then concluded that “the Palestinian people were never prepared for peace.” Yes, Mr. Fogel, the Palestinian people are not prepared for your kind of peace, which is the peace of occupation and racism; they will never accept such humiliating dictates from Israel nor from the West in general, no matter how great your military strength is or how many nuclear warheads you have. After 65 years of dispossession, the Palestinians do yearn for peace, but a peace with justice and dignity that will endure.

Hanna Kawas, Chairperson CPA

HERE WE STAND – STAND WITH US!

Voice of Palestine Commentary (Jan. 2, 2013)

“To Speak in Muffled Tones…wouldRead more

Voice of Palestine Commentary (Jan. 2, 2013)

“To Speak in Muffled Tones…would be Less Than Human”
– Nelson Mandela

Since Kairos Palestine issued The Bethlehem Call: Here we stand – Stand with us just over a year ago, Israeli injustices have multiplied. Illegal Israeli colonies continue to be built on stolen Christian and Muslim Palestinian lands, putting economic hardship and the brutal matrix of control on the Palestinian civilian population; Bethlehem Christians feel the squeeze as Israeli settlements spread with 22 colonies now surrounding the holy city. Ethnic cleansing continues all over historic Palestine, and the Apartheid wall devours Palestinian land with new plans to encircle the Cremisan Monastery near Bethlehem and force even more Palestinians to leave their homeland. Israeli military aggression goes on unabated, the most recent being the brutal 8-day attack and bombardment on Gaza.

The original Bethlehem Call received some support from Christian churches in the West, but largely, it fell on deaf ears since the majority of churches in the West either support Israel unconditionally or claim neutrality and only “speak in muffled tones”.
Israel is also being empowered by the unconditional support of the US, Canadian and other Western governments; the US economy is being sustained by its weapons sales to its Arab lackey (and dictatorial) regimes that are the principal purchasers of American arms (the US tripled its global arms sales in 2011 to US$66.3 billion).
We can NOT count on our governments to support human rights and democracy; it is well-known that they are the ones who are supporting and maintaining dictatorships in the Arab world and they are the ones that are supplying weapons to Israeli Apartheid. Atrocities and war crimes in the Holy Land should and must be challenged; as Desmond Tutu said, we should not be “neutral in situations of injustice” unless we “have chosen the side of the oppressor”. Our only hope is that grassroots organizations, conscientious trade unions, churches and other progressive parties will answer the Bethlehem Call and the Palestinian Civil Society call for Boycott Divestment and Sanctions against Israel.
It was done against South African Apartheid; it also can and will be done against Israeli Apartheid.
We hope next year will bring a qualitative change and that we will celebrate the holiday season in a free Bethlehem and a free Palestine!!
HERE WE STAND – STAND WITH US!
__________________
“If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality.”
Bishop Desmond Tutu
“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.” Nelson R. Mandela