Thursday, April 28, 2005

CJC News Release: Results of Survey Released - Parties Address Canadian Jewish Congress Concerns



April 28, 2005 - Results of Survey Released
Parties Address Canadian Jewish Congress Concerns

VANCOUVER - Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region today released the responses of the B.C. Liberal and New Democratic parties to questions of particular concern to the Jewish community.

The survey, which provides a reliable gauge of party positions on multicultural and human rights issues in each election cycle, is part of the organization’s mandate to inform and engage Jewish voters in the civic process.

The two parties each answered seven questions on diverse topics, including: support for the provincial Hate Crime Team; hate propaganda; Holocaust education; human rights protections; multiculturalism; affordable housing; and First Nations self-government.

“The parties have made clear their positions on these crucial issues facing our province and our country,” said Mark Weintraub, chair of Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region. “All British Columbians who are devoted to social justice and a civil society will benefit from these answers.”

The questionnaire was posed to the B.C. Liberals and the New Democrats, the two parties that have held governmental power in recent legislatures. Each of the questions was prefaced by the parties’ stated commitments to similar questions four years ago.

The full text of the survey and the parties’ responses are attached and also available online at http://www.cjc.ca/docs/RD/181_Party%20Survey%20April%202005.doc

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Contact: Erwin Nest
Executive Director
Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region
604-257-5101 (office)
erwinn@cjc.ca
www.cjc.ca

http://www.cjc.ca/template.php?action=news&story=704

Monday, April 11, 2005

The National Post: Ottawa Will Send Troops to Sudan

Ottawa will send troops to Sudan
31 soldiers to join UN observers in early summer

By Chris Wattie
OTTAWA, Apr 11, 2005 -- Canada will send a military mission to Sudan within two months, the National Post has learned. The Canadians will join a United Nations observer force monitoring a ceasefire in the vicious civil war in the southern half of the impoverished African nation.
A Department of National Defence source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the government will announce this week that 31 Canadian soldiers will be deployed to the East African nation in early summer.
The Canadian troops will be part of the United Nations Mission in Sudan (UNMIS) and will include military observers and training officers supporting more than 2,000 African Union soldiers already in Sudan to protect refugees from the fighting.
The source said the Canadian soldiers have been told to be ready to deploy to Sudan by the end of June. "This will all be happening in pretty short order," the source said.
Mark Weintraub, the chairman of the Canadian Jewish Congress's Darfur committee, said the coming announcement is a badly needed step toward ending what he calls "the worst human rights catastrophe in the world today."
Mr. Weintraub said Canada can act as a lever to move other nations to commit more troops to stop the killing in the Darfur region of Sudan.
"The people in Darfur need protection," he said. "And the Canadian government has to do everything in its power to catalyze the international community."
"A competently trained, well-equipped force is necessary to go in there and impose order ... to avoid another Rwanda."
More than two million people have fled their homes and as many as 300,000 have been killed in the Darfur fighting, which the United States has described as genocide.
A UN-appointed commission stopped short of calling it genocide, but said crimes against humanity had been committed and may be no less serious than genocide.
Dr. David Bercuson, of the University of Calgary's Centre for Military and Strategic Studies, said the small size of our mission to Sudan means Canada will play a relatively minor role in resolving the situation.
"The chief of defence staff's [General Rick Hillier] mantra until now has been that we aren't going to be doing things piecemeal," Dr. Bercuson said. "Well, this looks pretty piecemeal to me.... I don't know if we get any real international benefit out of missions like this."
However, he said that given the current demands on the Canadian Forces and its limited ability to airlift troops or equipment to far-flung missions overseas, 31 soldiers is probably all that could be managed.
"Someone in the Department of Foreign Affairs probably thought this was an easy and relatively cheap way to look like we're doing something to back up our rhetoric on Darfur," Dr. Bercuson said.
UNMIS was established to support a shaky ceasefire between southern rebels and the northern-based government. It is also to support the African peacekeepers who are now protecting refugee camps from the predations of the Janjaweed militia.
Mr. Weintraub said that by joining the UN mission, Canada may well "open the door" for other Western nations to contribute troops to a much larger force. "What is needed is 6,000 or 7,000 troops, because Darfur is an area about the size of France ... and a mandate to go out and protect people."
The UN Security Council has voted to send Darfur war crimes suspects to the International Criminal Court, including up to 51 people accused of crimes against humanity.
The sealed list of suspects is believed to include senior Sudanese government and army officials, Arab militia leaders and some rebel leaders and foreign army commanders.
The Sudanese government decried the move as unfair, but this month arrested 15 military and security officials for crimes including rape, killing civilians and burning villages.

Friday, March 25, 2005

Jewish Independent: The next chapter of activism


March 25, 2005
By: Pat Johnson


The next chapter of activism
Canadian Jewish Congress re-examines what defines a "Jewish issue."


What is a "Jewish issue"? That is a question that has been facing Canada's Jewish communal agencies for decades, but with changes to the national infrastructure of Jewish communal life, the answer is about to get a lot broader.


Bernie Farber, the new chief executive officer of Canadian Jewish Congress, was in Vancouver recently, laying some of the groundwork for a major redirection of his organization's agenda.


The changes are partly a result of the massive adjustment made in recent years to the structure of Jewish life in Canada. The national organizations that make up much of the Jewish community's institutional presence are now united under the umbrella of the Canadian Council for Israel and Jewish Advocacy (CIJA).


Though best know for fighting anti-Semitism, Canadian Jewish Congress has long been involved in a vast array of parallel and seemingly unrelated issues. In Ontario, where Farber was until January the executive director of the regional CJC office, the organization has already become one of the leading advocates for children living in poverty. That's an example Farber wants to emulate at the national level.


To do this, Farber aims to build better alliances with the various Jewish federations in Canada. Already, groups like the Jewish Federation of Greater Vancouver are deeply involved in issues of poverty and affordable housing. While federations do much of the "on the ground" work on issues like these, CJC, as the country's primary and oldest lobbying group, will now more actively take up the charge in pressing governments and other decision-makers to respond to issues of social justice that go beyond what would traditionally have been dubbed "Jewish issues."


"Congress is best situated to do the professional advocacy for the community because we've been doing it for almost 100 years," Farber told the Bulletin March 15. "What we haven't focused on are the kinds of issues that are vital to federations. In Ontario, we have. We have for the last number of years worked on issues like child welfare, elder care, social housing. What I want to do is transport that concept into other areas across the country so that Congress develops the kind of expertise that's needed."


Though CJC has long been involved in a range of issues, this is a rallying cry for a host of new initiatives, Farber said.


"I would say it's a new chapter of activism," said Farber.


Back to the question of what is a Jewish issue, Farber replied, any issue that you consider a Jewish issue is a Jewish issue.


"For example, when people say to me, how is child poverty a Jewish issue? Well, it's a Jewish issue because there are Jewish children who are poor. And even if there weren't, all these issues are human issues," he said. CJC's priorities are not just self-interest, but the larger Jewish imperative of tikkun olam, the repair of the world, he said.


"If there is a mission for Congress, that's what it is: to help repair the world," he said.


With a streamlined national umbrella, increased funding and the unification of national lobbying efforts, Farber believes CJC can do more than ever.


"We have a brand name, people expect good work of us and usually we don't let them down," he said. His goals include having a full-time lobbyist on Parliament Hill and, eventually, similar individuals in provincial capitals.


Farber cited the work of Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region, as a model for future national endeavors.


"People look to the Jewish community to be a leader on those issues," said Farber. "For example, here in the Pacific region, Mark Weintraub [the regional chair] and a number of our leadership here in the Pacific region are really leading on the matter of Darfur. Not, by the way, just in Canada. They are being recognized literally around the world as a strong advocate [for] dealing with his terrible genocide that's going on three-quarters of the way around the world. That's not a Jewish issue per se, but it is a Jewish issue because, of all people, we understand what it is to be victimized like this and to be killed in such numbers. It is an example of the kinds of thing that I want to see."


Though CJC can be expected to speak out more forcefully on things that do not seem like traditional "Jewish issues," the old standbys are not going to disappear, Farber said. Anti-Semitism, to the surprise and dismay of the Jewish community, has proved enduring and adaptive.


"We understand that anti-Semitism is different today than it was 10, even 15 years ago," he said. "It is one of the most redoubtable of viruses that finds a host and can mutate in any kind of a way."


A surprising and disappointing development, he said, is the emergence of anti-Semitism in the anti-Zionist movement of the left.


"Much of what we're seeing today in relation to this anti-Zionism bleeding into anti-Semitism is happening as much on the extreme left as it is on the extreme right and sometimes even on the centre-left," said Farber.


"In the past, we knew who our enemies were," he said, citing white supremacists, the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazis. "We fought them arm-in-arm with the trade union movement, with people on the left. They were our soldiers on the road to dealing with these issues. Something happened along the road. We lost sight of each other. We went down separate paths."


One of the priorities of CJC is to rebuild bridges and co-operation with the left in Canada.


"We have to find a way to be back there, even if we passionately disagree with each other," he said. "Friends can passionately disagree with each other, but we have to be there to put Israel's best face forward, to help people understand that there are two sides to every issue."


Working with police, hate crimes units, Internet service providers (ISPs) and the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, CJC has helped identify and shut down many web-based hate sites, often simply by appealing to the goodwill of the ISP.


CJC officials are also working on an anti-Semitism awareness program for school curricula, beginning in Ontario but intended to spread across Canada.


All of these efforts might give the impression that CJC is taking a more vigilant political orientation. Not so, said Farber.


"I don't see this as political," he said. "I really see this as human rights matters."


http://www.cjc.ca/template.php?action=itn&Story=1237



Thursday, March 24, 2005

CJC News Release: COMBATING HATE, PROTECTING RIGHTS TOP CONCERNS

CJC, Pacific Region Launches Ambitious Three-Year Agenda

VANCOUVER, B. C., March 24, 2005…A reinvigorated effort is needed to confront and combat bias and hate-motivated crimes in British Columbia. That was one of the major themes evident when Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region released its Public Affairs Action Agenda today. The 64-page triennial document acts as a summary of CJCPR priorities and guides the ongoing human rights work of the organization over the next three years, including a continued push for restoration of funding to the provincial Hate Crime Team.

“The issues in this ambitious agenda are priorities for Jewish Canadians, but like so much of our work, they affect all Canadians,” said Mark Weintraub, Chair of Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region. “We are involved with partner organizations on genocide prevention and awareness, social services, interfaith dialogues and issues of poverty in our region.”

The Public Affairs Action Agenda 2004 - 2007 identifies six areas of particular concern, including Hate and Bias Crime; Hate Propaganda; Holocaust Education; Human Rights Protections in B.C.; Multiculturalism; and Affordable Housing. Each section includes background briefing, a summary of the issue’s current status, and recommendations for action.

The recommendations spelled out by the Public Affairs Action Agenda 2004 - 2007 include a call on the provincial government to fully fund the province’s Hate Crime Team; intergovernmental cooperation on monitoring and combating hate propaganda; ensuring that Holocaust education remains part of B.C.’s required curriculum; the establishment of an information and advisory office within the provincial human rights apparatus; improved links between multicultural stakeholder groups; and increased funding for affordable housing, among other specific actions.

“The Action Agenda is the blueprint for our work over the coming years,” said Tony DuMoulin, a senior officer of Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region. “This is what we stand for, what we are working toward as part of our ongoing mandate. It addresses the wide-ranging and progressive social justice goals we seek as the democratic representative of Canadian Jewry.”

The CJCPR Public Affairs Action Agenda 2004 - 2007 is available in full online by clicking on http://www.cjc.ca/docs/RD/177_PAAA 2005.pdf - or writing this address in the address line of your browser.

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Contact:
Erwin Nest, Executive Director
Suite 201-950 West 41st Avenue
Vancouver, BC V5Z 2N7
Tel: 604-257-5101
Fax: 604-257-5131
E-mail: erwinn@cjc.ca

http://www.cjc.ca/template.php?action=news&story=697

Monday, March 21, 2005

Letter from Prime Minister Paul Martin

PRIME MINISTER
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0A2

March 21, 2005

Dear Mr. Weintraub:

Thank you for your letter dated March 8, 2005.

The time you have taken to write is greatly appreciated, and let me assure you that your specific comments regarding the conflict in Darfur have been given careful and appropriate consideration. Indeed, this particular matter is of great concern to our Government and country, and I am personally and strongly committed to our efforts to support a peaceful solution to the conflict in Darfur as well as to the Southern peace process.

With this in mind, as you have already sent a copy of your letter to the Honourable Pierre Pettigrew, Minister of Foreign Affairs, I have asked that a copy of our exchange of correspondence be sent to his office for his information. I am certain that he will also appreciate being made aware of your views on this matter, and will wish to give your comments every consideration.

Please accept my warmest regards.

Sincerely,

Paul Martin

Mr. Mark Weintraub
Chair
Canadian Jewish Congress
National Office
650-100 Sparks St.
Ottawa, Ontario
K1P 5B7

Saturday, March 19, 2005

National Post: UN fails to deter Sudan genocide



March 19, 2005
By: Mary Vallis

UN fails to deter Sudan genocide

The photo opportunities have ended, the official statements have been read, the foreign politicians have flown off in their jets and the Arab militias in Darfur have been left to get on with the slaughter.

Months after a parade of celebrities and Western leaders visited Sudan to express distress over a crisis that is killing thousands a month, little has changed. The militias have not been reined in, the Sudanese government is being as unco-operative as ever, and the death toll is escalating.

This week the United Nations calculated 180,000 have died in the western region of Sudan.

That is more than double the previous estimate. The Security Council, after lengthy debate, is locked in a stalemate, while China blocks sanctions to avoid hurting its oil interests.

Just four months ago, Paul Martin, the Prime Minister, flew to Sudan and warned President Omar al-Bashir that his Arab-dominated government must rein in the janjaweed militia, which has spread a campaign of terror through non-Arab villages in Darfur.

"The President indicated with us that he was not able to control the janjaweed. That ... they were operating on their own," the Prime Minister told reporters during his brief stopover. "The point we made to him is that we expect the janjaweed would be controlled. Period."

He was only one of a number of visiting Westerners.

"All of us have watched with concern and alarm at the death, disease and destruction that has come to Darfur," British Prime Minister Tony Blair declared during his visit last fall.

Colin Powell, then U.S. secretary of state, walked the dusty paths of a refugee camp and voiced American resolve to ensure something was done. Even Angelina Jolie, the UN's goodwill ambassador, comforted children ripped from their homes.

But the situation has not improved. Indeed, it is worse.

"There are a lot of people in camps still effectively imprisoned because it's too dangerous to go out of the sites that they're sheltering in -- they are scared they'll get attacked or raped or beaten or killed," Jo Nickolls, an Oxfam worker, said over a crackling telephone line from Khartoum yesterday. "The situation has not improved. It's a massive-scale crisis. People are going to be increasingly dependent on external assistance."

Jan Egeland, the UN emergency relief co-ordinator, said this week the death toll has been about 10,000 a month since October, 2003. The number includes death from starvation and disease, but reportedly not those slain by militias. Close to two million people have been driven from their homes. Meanwhile, the UN was forced to pull its foreign staff out of parts of Darfur this week after the janjaweed threatened to target foreigners and humanitarian convoys.

Mr. Egeland stressed his latest figures are only rough estimates. Other international observers say the death toll could be much higher.

Eric Reeves, a professor at Smith College in Northampton, Mass., who independently produces some of the most comprehensive death-toll estimates for Sudan, said his latest analysis indicates more than 380,000 people have died in Darfur since the conflict began in 2003 -- far more than the UN figures suggest, and approaching half the number believed to have died in the Rwanda genocide a decade ago. He said the international community must immediately send troops.

"Under the circumstances, the only way to prevent ongoing genocidal destruction is to protect civilians acutely at risk. That can be accomplished only by military means at this point," Mr. Reeves said.

But the UN Security Council is bickering over which court should punish Darfur's war criminals, should they ever be arrested. The United States is opposed in principle to the International Criminal Court, established by the UN in 2002 to try such cases. It wants the killers to appear before the UN special tribunal in Tanzania, which was set up to deal with the perpetrators of the Rwandan genocide.

The United States accused the Sudanese government and the janjaweed of genocide last September, citing a report with 1,100 refugees that found 61% had witnessed the slaying of a family member.

However, Russia and China are also blocking sanctions against Sudan because of their own interests. Russia sells arms to Sudan, while China is a major consumer of the African nation's oil.

While the diplomats squabble, the task of policing Darfur, an area roughly the size of France, has been left to 2,200 poorly equipped African Union troops who do not have a mandate to protect civilians. The number is well below the 3,400 the African Union was scheduled to deploy and represents about a quarter the number the UN says is necessary.

"The bottom line is this: The UN is failing. The African Union is doing something, but it's underfunded, it's untrained," said Mark Weintraub, chairman of the Canadian Jewish Congress's Darfur committee. "There are thousands and thousands of Canadians who care about this issue. They do not want, five years from now, to be watching the movie Hotel Darfur," Mr. Weintraub said, referring to the recent film Hotel Rwanda about the Rwandan genocide.

The crisis in Darfur began in February, 2003, after two non-Arab rebel groups began fighting the Arab-dominated government for greater power and resources. International observers allege the Sudanese government responded by arming the janjaweed.

The government in Khartoum admitted arming some militia, but denies any links to the janjaweed, insisting they are outlaws.

"For countries to simply be in a state of paralysis -- or worse, be leaving Darfur -- sends a terrible signal to the janjaweed militia that the world doesn't care," said Stockwell Day, the Conservative party's foreign affairs critic. "I don't even want to think what the ramifications of that will be."

On Thursday, Mr. Day sent a request to Mr. Martin and Pierre Pettigrew, the Foreign Affairs Minister, urging the Canadian government and the international community to "show a presence" in Darfur.

"'I'm glad the Prime Minister was over there last year. He was only in Khartoum for 10 hours," Mr. Day said from Montreal on Thursday. "Now back up that 10 hours with some hard work pulling together a multilateral group that will simply go in there and be a deterring presence."

"The response to the tsunami has shown how much people can care about remote crises around the world," said Ms. Nickolls, the aid worker. "We need to make sure people are aware of the severity of what's happening in Darfur, because it isn't going to go away."

COUNTDOWN TO GENOCIDE

African farmers in Darfur, western Sudan, have a long history of clashes over land with Arab pastoralists:

1994 Khartoum gives Arab groups new positions of power.

1998-99 Hostilities break out in West Darfur when Arab nomads begin moving south with their flocks earlier than usual.

1999 First attacks from government-supported Arab militias, dubbed janjaweed.

FEBRUARY, 2003 Fighting breaks out between government forces and the rebel groups Sudan Liberation Army and Justice & Equality Movement after rebels demand a share in power.

APRIL The first refugees begin arriving in Chad as janjaweed start a reign of terror, raping, killing and pillaging; others flee within Darfur.

SEPTEMBER 65,000 refugees in Chad; UN estimates 500,000 people need humanitarian aid.

DECEMBER UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan expresses alarm at human rights violations. About 100,000 refugees are now in Chad, but the number continues to grow daily.

FEBRUARY, 2004 Khartoum agrees to give aid workers better access to Darfur.

MARCH For the first time, the UN says that what is happening in Darfur is genocide and compares it with Rwanda in 1994.

APRIL Ceasefire signed between Khartoum and rebels.

MAY UN calls Darfur the world's worst humanitarian crisis, estimating one million people have been displaced; the number of refugees in Chad tops 120,000; the Security Council calls on Khartoum to disarm the janjaweed.

JUNE UN estimates two million people have been displaced and says the campaign of genocide is continuing.

JULY Sudan pledges to disarm janjaweed and bring those responsible for human rights abuse to justice. Nothing else changes, leading the Security Council to adopt a resolution paving the way for action against Sudan and giving Khartoum a deadline of Aug. 30.

SEPTEMBER UN envoy says Sudan has not met targets for disarming janjaweed and must accept outside help to protect civilians. Then-U.S. secretary of state Colin Powell calls Darfur killings genocide.

NOVEMBER Security Council meeting in Nairobi fails to pass a resolution imposing any sanctions on Darfur combatants.

JANUARY, 2005 Security Council commission reports serious violations of international law have occurred in Darfur and recommends referral to the International Criminal Court. Between 180,000 and 380,000 civilians are estimated to have died.

http://www.cjc.ca/template.php?action=itn&Story=1216

Thursday, March 17, 2005

Canadian Jewish News: CJC urges Canadian action on Darfur


By PAUL LUNGEN
Staff Reporter

Canadian Jewish Congress is calling on the government of Canada to follow up its earlier pledges to help protect the residents of Darfur, Sudan from an “unfolding tragedy” that has already claimed 300,000 lives.


In a letter to Prime Minister Paul Martin, Congress urged the prime minister to make good on the “responsibility to protect” guidelines – which would give the international community the right to intervene in Sudan to prevent gross violation of human rights – that Martin has previously advocated.


“We trust that all necessary further steps will be implemented forthwith to ensure a successful Canadian foreign policy as it relates to Darfur. We also know from our advocacy work that many Canadians await with great anticipation the speedy enactment of an effective strategy, which will help protect the millions of innocents whose lives are at risk, while simultaneously bringing credit to us as a nation impelled by conscience,” states the letter from Mark Weintraub, chair of Congress’ national Darfur committee.


Following the NATO summit in Brussels recently, Martin said Canada was prepared to take part in an international force in Sudan. “We are prepared to do whatever is required, but we cannot simply sit by and watch what is happening in Darfur continue,” he said at the time.


Martin discussed the Darfur situation with British Prime Minister Tony Blair and hinted that Canada would support United Nations efforts to establish a UN peacekeeping force in the Sudanese territory.


Weintraub, however, said the UN route appears to be stalled.


“Notwithstanding the efforts of Canadian and others, the [UN] Security Council seems no closer to taking effective action to provide protection to the people so tragically affected,” his letter stated.


In a telephone interview from Vancouver, Weintraub suggested Russia, China and Algeria were blocking a proposed UN peacekeeping force. While Canada can’t overcome these roadblocks alone, it can shine a spotlight on these countries for obstructing action on Darfur, he said.


The international community must do something to prevent genocide in Darfur, whether under UN auspices or as part of a NATO operation, he continued.


“We don’t have the final answer here. We have skilled people in Ottawa and we need to have the political will to say, we are going to find a political solution here. This has got to be doable.”


The Jewish community in particular must lend its support to Canadian efforts to end the Darfur genocide, he continued.


The phrase “never again” must apply to all people, and Jews and Canadians face an “ethical imperative” to speak out against mass murder. “We don’t want to add Darfur to the list of genocides in five years and be watching Hotel Darfur (a reference to Hotel Rwanda, a film about the 1994 murder of Tutsis in that African state) in five years,” he said.


“For our own internal credibility, we have an ethical imperative here,” he said.


Congress has been urging the government for at least a year to take a leading role to end the crisis in Darfur. It is also calling on the Jewish community to lobby their MPs and other decision-makers on the issue.


Congress is sponsoring a national Purim petition that will be delivered to the government and it is working with rabbis to formulate a Passover program that might be included at seders to highlight the crisis in Darfur.


“The greatest response we’ve received is from the Holocaust survivor community, as this community wants to know their suffering was not in vain,” Weintraub added.


http://www.cjnews.com/viewarticle.asp?id=5816




Wednesday, March 16, 2005

Canadian Jewish News: CJC urges Canadian action on Darfur

March 16, 2005
By: Paul Lungen
CJC urges Canadian action on Darfur

Canadian Jewish Congress is calling on the government of Canada to follow up its earlier pledges to help protect the residents of Darfur, Sudan from an “unfolding tragedy” that has already claimed 300,000 lives.
In a letter to Prime Minister Paul Martin, Congress urged the prime minister to make good on the “responsibility to protect” guidelines – which would give the international community the right to intervene in Sudan to prevent gross violation of human rights – that Martin has previously advocated.
“We trust that all necessary further steps will be implemented forthwith to ensure a successful Canadian foreign policy as it relates to Darfur. We also know from our advocacy work that many Canadians await with great anticipation the speedy enactment of an effective strategy, which will help protect the millions of innocents whose lives are at risk, while simultaneously bringing credit to us as a nation impelled by conscience,” states the letter from Mark Weintraub, chair of Congress’ national Darfur committee.
Following the NATO summit in Brussels recently, Martin said Canada was prepared to take part in an international force in Sudan. “We are prepared to do whatever is required, but we cannot simply sit by and watch what is happening in Darfur continue,” he said at the time.
Martin discussed the Darfur situation with British Prime Minister Tony Blair and hinted that Canada would support United Nations efforts to establish a UN peacekeeping force in the Sudanese territory.
Weintraub, however, said the UN route appears to be stalled.
“Notwithstanding the efforts of Canadian and others, the [UN] Security Council seems no closer to taking effective action to provide protection to the people so tragically affected,” his letter stated.
In a telephone interview from Vancouver, Weintraub suggested Russia, China and Algeria were blocking a proposed UN peacekeeping force. While Canada can’t overcome these roadblocks alone, it can shine a spotlight on these countries for obstructing action on Darfur, he said.
The international community must do something to prevent genocide in Darfur, whether under UN auspices or as part of a NATO operation, he continued.
“We don’t have the final answer here. We have skilled people in Ottawa and we need to have the political will to say, we are going to find a political solution here. This has got to be doable.”
The Jewish community in particular must lend its support to Canadian efforts to end the Darfur genocide, he continued.
The phrase “never again” must apply to all people, and Jews and Canadians face an “ethical imperative” to speak out against mass murder. “We don’t want to add Darfur to the list of genocides in five years and be watching Hotel Darfur (a reference to Hotel Rwanda, a film about the 1994 murder of Tutsis in that African state) in five years,” he said.
“For our own internal credibility, we have an ethical imperative here,” he said.
Congress has been urging the government for at least a year to take a leading role to end the crisis in Darfur. It is also calling on the Jewish community to lobby their MPs and other decision-makers on the issue.
Congress is sponsoring a national Purim petition that will be delivered to the government and it is working with rabbis to formulate a Passover program that might be included at seders to highlight the crisis in Darfur.
“The greatest response we’ve received is from the Holocaust survivor community, as this community wants to know their suffering was not in vain,” Weintraub added.

Monday, March 7, 2005

News 1130 radio: Marijuana party candidate upsets Canadian Jewish Congress


March 7, 2005 - 11:49 pm
News 1130 AM All News Radio
Marijuana party candidate upsets Canadian Jewish Congress
Niki Upton/Tamiko Nicholson

The Canadian Jewish Congress objects to comments made by a pot activist comparing the plight of pot users to the persecution of Jews in Nazi Germany. The comments were made during a weekend interview with News1130 in reaction to the shooting of four RCMP officers in Mayerthorpe. Marijuana Party candidate Marc Emery, who’s running against BC’s Solicitor General Rich Coleman in the provincial election, was upset at media coverage that said a marijuana grow operation was behind the shootings. Emergy said, “I compared it to Crystalnacht in 1938 in Germany where a Jewish person, you know, injured a Nazi official and then the hysteria was so great that tens of thousands of Jews were prosecuted.”

News1130 chose not to air the possibly contentious comments until playing the tape for the Canadian Jewish Congress. Chair Mark Weintraub says the analogy is extreme and that it almost amounts to holocaust denial in the sense that such a comparison completely trivializes the destruction of an entire ancient civilization. He says it is inappropriate to compare genocide to criminal law.

Tuesday, March 1, 2005

Pacific Monthly CJC Newsletter

PRESENTATION TO VANCOUVER SCHOOL BOARD
In response to the brief CJCPR prepared and submitted to the Vancouver School Board regarding their Anti-Racism Programs and Plans, CJCPR Vice-Chair Mark Wexler, Officer Chris Friedrichs, and Community Relations Coordinator Romy Ritter made a formal presentation to the Vancouver School Board Trustees. The meeting provided an opportunity for CJCPR to put forward recommendations on how to make Vancouver public schools a safer and more inclusive environment and assist the VSB update and extend their anti-racism strategies. The VSB Trustees expressed their appreciation and interest in the recommendations and ideas put forward by CJCPR and invited CJCPR to have a representative serve on the VSB’s Race Relations Advisory Committee.

CRISIS IN DARFUR
CJCPR continues to make the ongoing crisis in Darfur, Sudan a priority for our community as evidence now reveals that some 300,000 people have died from starvation, disease and violence over the past two years.

Petition for Darfur
Responding to a request from Canadian Jewish Congress, Rabbis and other community leaders urged members of the Jewish community to act to prevent further catastrophic acts against humanity in Darfur by signing a petition that will be presented to Parliament. The petition, proposed by Rabbi Charles Feinberg of Beth Israel Synagogue, called for action to prevent continued bloodshed and displacement that has so far killed 300,000 and forced two million people from their homes in the Darfur region of Sudan. Signatories to the petition pledged not to be silent while crimes against innocent civilians in Darfur continue to be committed.
Letter to Prime Minister Paul Martin
Mark Weintraub, Chair of the CJC National Darfur Committee, wrote to Prime Minister Martin to commend the government for both its international advocacy and monetary commitments relating to the unfolding tragedy in Sudan’s Darfur region. As the situation worsens, CJC sought assurance that the government, in cooperation with other like-minded nations, will find appropriate means to provide protection to Darfur’s civilian population and that all necessary further steps will be implemented to ensure a successful Canadian foreign policy relating to Darfur.
To view the petition, visit http://www.cjc.ca/
Letter to Senator Jack Austin
In his capacity as Chair of the CJC National Darfur Committee, Mark Weintraub also wrote to Senator Jack Austin. In the letter, Weintraub acknowledged that the Prime Minister has shown leadership in his public pronouncements and that Canada is doing more than the public is aware of and that more should be done to bring those actions into the public light. As well, significantly more could be done to pitch Canada's leadership on this issue at the highest international levels. CJC urged Canada to take a higher profile and use whatever experience and expertise to take a leading role in facilitating peace and/or intervention.
Letter to Mr. Stockwell Day
Following a conference call with Mr. Stockwell Day, M.P. Okanagan-Coquihalla, Mark Weintraub, Chair of the CJC National Darfur Committee, corresponded with Mr. Day to express appreciation of his support of the issues of concern to the Jewish community as well as our deep concern about the crimes against humanity being perpetrated in Darfur. The letter stressed that a sustained effort by the Conservative Party, and all Canadians, could have a substantial influence on the world community in ensuring protection for the innocent civilians in Darfur.
LAUNCH OF CJCPR PUBLIC AFFAIRS ACTION AGENDA
CJCPR announced the launch of the Public Affairs Action Agenda 2004-2007. The 64-page triennial document acts as a summary of CJCPR priorities and guides the ongoing human rights work of the organization over the next three years, including a continued push for restoration of funding to the provincial Hate Crime Team.

The issues contained in the document are priorities for Jewish Canadians, but like so much of CJC’s work, they affect all Canadians. The Public Affairs Action Agenda 2004 - 2007 identifies six areas of particular concern, including Hate and Bias Crime; Hate Propaganda; Holocaust Education; Human Rights Protections in B.C.; Multiculturalism; and Affordable Housing. Each section includes background briefing, a summary of the issue’s current status, and recommendations for action. In addition, CJCPR will also be addressing issues pertaining to Aboriginal rights.
The recommendations spelled out by the Public Affairs Action Agenda 2004 - 2007 include a call on the provincial government to fully fund the province’s Hate Crime Team; intergovernmental cooperation on monitoring and combating hate propaganda; ensuring that Holocaust education remains part of B.C.’s required curriculum; the establishment of an information and advisory office within the provincial human rights apparatus; improved links between multicultural stakeholder groups; and increased funding for affordable housing, among other specific actions.
To view the CJCPR Public Affairs Action Agenda 2004 - 2007 click on the link below: http://www.cjc.ca/docs/RD/177_PAAA 2005.pdf

Thursday, February 24, 2005

Vancouver Sun: New meaning to 'never again'



New meaning to 'never again': B.C. Jews link the large-scale agonies of the Holocaust with the recent mass killings and rapes in Sudan's Darfur

Thursday, February 24, 2005
Page B2
Section: Westcoast News

By DOUGLAS TODD

Robbie Waisman is a Vancouver Jew who survived four years as a child labourer in the Buchenwald concentration camp. His parents and four brothers died during the Holocaust.

Nouri Abdalla is a Port Coquitlam Muslim who had eight relatives murdered in 2003 by machete-wielding, camel-riding Janjaweed militia in his homeland, the Darfur region of Sudan.

The African-born Muslim and Polish-born Jew, in a rare alliance, are at the forefront of a movement determined to end more than 60 years of global indifference that saw the world stand by while ethnic slaughter ravaged Nazi-occupied Europe, Cambodia, the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda and now Darfur.

Brought together by the Pacific Region of the Canadian Jewish Congress, Waisman and Abdalla are bent on transforming their grief and rage into an interfaith effort that will pressure Canada and the world to send United Nations peacekeeping troops to stop a massacre that's so far cost at least 100,000 lives, with some human-rights
agencies saying the total may be more than 300,000.

But the pleas of people such as Waisman and Abdalla are coming up against a wall of political and military torpor, despite the United Nations calling the massacres in Darfur "the world's worst [continuing] humanitarian crisis."

Some national leaders, particularly Prime Minister Paul Martin, have expressed grave concern about the horror in Darfur.

But little is being done to stop the killing or rescue the roughly two million Muslims in the region who have been raped, tortured or forced from their homes by a militia said to be backed by Sudan's Muslim fundamentalist government.

"Eight members of my extended family in the village of Shoba Mountains were hauled out and shot and hacked to death on July 25, 2003," says Abdalla, 44, a businessman who has lived in Canada for more than a decade.

"With 170 other people, their bodies were buried in a mass grave, which is now gone. When the killings began to be investigated by Amnesty International, the militia started taking the bodies out of the mass grave and burning them. It's happening all over Darfur."

As Waisman, a 74-year-old retired accountant, drinks coffee in the Vancouver condominium of Sheila Fruman, an official with the B.C. wing of the Canadian Jewish Congress, he listens to Abdalla tell the tragic story of his relatives' murders.

Then the Holocaust survivor says: "I feel anger. I have no words to describe the anger. Then I feel saddened the world hasn't learned a thing from the Holocaust. And then I feel encouragement that there are people of different faiths coming together to care about their fellow human beings."

Many call it an ethnic genocide -- a concerted campaign by nomadic Arabs to destroy a long-standing community of indigenous blacks. The perpetrators and the victims are all Sunni Muslims. But the Darfur rivalry has ripped apart their Muslim solidarity.

Abdalla says the people of Darfur grow furious when they hear Sudan's leaders and the Janjaweed raiders dare refer to themselves as authentic Muslims.

The atrocities in Darfur have galvanized activists from many spheres: Canada's major Jewish organization, Muslims, ecumenical Christians groups, European human-rights watchdogs, labour organizations in North America, black organizations in the U.S. and the former UN forces commander in Rwanda, Canada's Romeo Dallaire.

Mark Weintraub, chair of the Pacific Region of the Canadian Jewish Congress, says there would be little point in Canada's 300,000 Jews remembering the recent 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz concentration camp if they aren't determined to stop another genocide in the making.

"The Jewish mantra of 'never again' wasn't meant to protect only the Jewish community from annihilation," says Weintraub, a lawyer. The cause of anti-Semitism, he says, is about protecting all people from being scapegoated.

" 'Never again' was a battle cry for a fundamental shift in human consciousness," Weintraub says. The efforts of Jews to stop another Holocaust, he says, has already helped lead to the creation of the UN and initiated a drive for human rights throughout the latter part of the 20th century, especially in Canada.

"Unless the world utters a collective scream to stop the killing in Darfur," Weintraub says, "all the words about anti-Semitism and about the Holocaust, about Cambodia, about Kosovo, about Rwanda don't mean a damn thing."

Abdalla, who attends the Tri-City Mosque in Port Coquitlam, returned to *Darfur* in 2003. He keeps in constant touch. "You should see my phone bill."

His family of origin have so far been safe because they live in a large city, and not a vulnerable village. But Abdalla hears on a near-daily basis from family and others about unfolding catastrophes.

Given Abdalla's activism in Canada's Sudanese community, Weintraub asked him to speak last fall at a Vancouver synagogue during Yom Kippur, the most holy event in the Jewish calendar. Most Greater Vancouver synagogues devoted their Yom Kippur services to the mass murders in Darfur.

Still, the Jews and Muslim sitting around the table in Vancouver worry not nearly enough is being done at the geopolitical level to force the Sudanese government to stop the killing in Darfur.

They believe the Canadian government must give much greater support to the work of B.C. Senator Mobina Jaffer, a Muslim and Canada's special envoy to Sudan, who has been desperately trying to create a workable solution for Darfur.

The Vancouver-based human-rights advocates acknowledge, however, that one of their campaign's challenges has been creating an easy-to-grasp picture of what is going on in conflict-ridden Sudan, which is the size of France and has a population of 32 million.

In early January, in a deal separate from the Darfur atrocities, Sudan agreed to a peace agreement to end a 21-year civil war between the hardline Muslim government in the north and Christians and animists in the south. That conflict left 1.5 million people dead.

The peace agreement, signed under international pressure from the U.S. government, U.S. evangelical Christians and European nations, assured Christians and animists in the south they would get some access to Sudan's rich oil reserves and the right to vote on independence in six years.

Then, in early February the UN envoy to Sudan, Jan Pronk, argued the north-south peace deal will not last unless violence is also ended in the conflict among Muslims in Darfur, in western Sudan. Darfur's troubles were sparked in early 2003 when indigenous black rebels began fighting for greater independence from Sudanese authorities, maintaining the northern government had long favoured the region's Arabs over its blacks.

Pronk has urged the UN to send more than 10,000 peacekeeping troops to stabilize Darfur. However, some permanent members of the UN Security Council, China and Russia, are balking at moving in troops or imposing economic sanctions to force an end to the Darfur massacres.

Weintraub notes that China relies on Sudanese oil, and Russia profits from arms sales to Sudan's government, which claims it has nothing to do with the marauding Janjaweed militia.

International efforts to pressure the authoritarian Muslim rulers of Sudan were further complicated in early February when a UN panel report fell short of calling the massacres a "genocide," which can be defined as the obliteration of a people because of their nationality, ethnicity or religion.

Instead, the UN report said the killings in Darfur revealed "genocidal intentions" and amounted to a crime against humanity.

An official "genocide" label would have obliged the 15-member UN Security Council to take immediate measures to stop the killing.

In addition, the UN and the U.S. disagreed in early February over how to prosecute Sudan's wrongdoers.

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan urged that trials for those behind Darfur's atrocities be held at the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands. But U.S. President George W. Bush's administration has long opposed the Dutch-based international court, fearing it could someday be used to prosecute American soldiers. The
U.S. believes prosecutions should take place at a separate court in Tanzania.

Currently, only 1,200 UN-backed African Union soldiers are stationed in Darfur. They have been ordered to do little more than observe the so-called "ceasefire." They are not allowed to stop the massacres.

That's similar to the tragic situation Dallaire found himself in in Rwanda in the mid-1990s, says Fruman, who was once communications adviser to former B.C. premier Mike Harcourt and who has worked for pro-democracy organizations in the ethnically torn Balkans.

The Rwandan disaster, which occurred 10 years ago, has been the subject of many official apologies, says Fruman. The mishandled crisis has recently been depicted in Dallaire's biography, Shake Hands with the Devil, an award-winning documentary of the same name, and the new movie, Hotel Rwanda.

"Darfur is in the shadow of Rwanda," says Fruman. "The aid always seems to come too late. We don't want the seriousness of the conflict in Darfur to be the subject of another set of apologies 10 years from now."

Waisman, remembering his dead family members and the 1.5 million children killed in the Holocaust, adds: "As a survivor, our greatest fear is that all those people will have died in vain and we won't free the world of genocide. It affects us all. Mass murder always starts with an identifiable group. But it never ends there."

The interfaith campaign being launched by Waisman, Abdalla, Fruman and Weintraub is urging Martin to capitalize on Canada's good reputation in Africa. The group has already convinced the Canadian Jewish Congress to work with the mainline Christian organization, Kairos (Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives), to make Darfur a
priority letter-writing campaign.

The Vancouver group has also sent letters to Martin urging him to press harder for 50,000 UN peacekeeping troops to be moved into Sudan and particularly Darfur. They also want Martin to insist on a no-fly zone over Darfur. That's because when the Janjaweed militia are not storming into villages on horses or camels, they fly in in government-owned, Russian-made airplanes, causing villagers to rush in panic into the forests.

"They burn everything; and they kill everything they need to," says Abdalla.

The pro-government militia has been accused of torching villages, systematically raping women, throwing babies into fires, singling out men and boys for execution and torturing fathers in front of their families.

The Vancouver-based human-rights advocates want Martin -- who during a fall visit to Sudan urged President Omar al-Bashir to protect Darfur's refugees -- to inject more bite into the arguments he made before the UN last September.

That's when, addressing the UN General Assembly, Martin went further than most heads of state. He said the attacks on civilians in Darfur show that the world, under the auspices of the UN, must sometimes override the traditional sovereign rights of a country by sending in troops to intervene to stop massacres.

Although the activists sitting around the table in Vancouver regretted that Canada is now ranked only 37th in the world in terms of its commitment to peacekeeping troops, Weintraub is convinced the globe-trotting Martin is the prime minister who will launch a new era in Canada's foreign policy.

"Canada has often been able to punch above its weight" in global influence, says Weintraub.

Weintraub envisions Canada returning to the era of former Liberal prime minister Lester Pearson, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1957 for brokering a deal that avoided armed conflict over access to the Suez Canal.

If Canada fails to raise enough pressure to end the slaughter in Darfur, Weintraub worries Jaffer, as the country's special envoy, will "have to bear the cost of a vast humanitarian crisis."


Why do so many in the West seem indifferent to Darfur, or at least to making something happen to stop the deaths of an estimated 10,000 people each month?

Dallaire says the developed world virtually ignored the murders of 900,000 Rwandans for two basic reasons: Because they were black, not white; and because their land and resources were of no economic significance to the superpowers.

The people of Darfur suffer similar invisibility, say the Vancouver activists.

They are largely indigenous black subsistence farmers, victimized by nomadic Arabs bent on forcing them out of their villages so they can control their land and use it for grazing their animals.

Former British colonialists helped create Sudan's problems through their map-making. Just as they did throughout much of the Middle East, British rulers gave Sudan virtually unworkable borders, which allowed antagonistic groups to assume power over each other.

Even though Western colonialists have guilt on their hands in Africa, Fruman says, people in the West tend to write off Sudan's problems. They shake their heads and blame the troubles on Africans, saying the continent is such a mess nothing can be done about it.

Unlike some genocides-in-the-making of the 20th century, however, Fruman maintains that this time, leaders and citizens of the West can't honestly say they didn't really know what was going on in Darfur.

Modern communication technology, she says, has kept the world informed about Darfur's atrocities, whether we like it or not.

"We really have no excuse," she says. "Every day we know somebody is dying because we're not doing enough."

Friday, February 4, 2005

Jewish Independent: Shoah lesson for Sudan


February 4, 2005

Shoah lesson for Sudan
Now is the time to scream, says Holocaust survivor.

PAT JOHNSON

In the Buchenwald concentration camp, Robbie Waisman listened to his elders imagine a world without the sort of barbarism they were experiencing under the Nazis. They were sure that, once the world understood what people had done to other people during the Third Reich, such inhumanity would never be allowed to happen again.

"In the dark, in the bunks before falling asleep, I remember listening to some of the inmates who were important men before the war – learned, intelligent, politicians, writers and philosophers. They were there because they were against the Nazis," Waisman said last week on the 60th anniversary of the liberation of the death camp Auschwitz. "Their conversations gave me hope. I was a teenager. They believed anyone lucky enough to survive would live in paradise – no more war, no more hunger. That resonated within me, I wanted to live in that kind of world. I wanted to survive."

Waisman did survive, but his dreams, as well as those of other inmates, of a world without human-made atrocities, did not. Next to him at a table in the Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver Jan. 27 was Nouri Abdalla, a British Columbian who is a representative of the Darfurian community in Canada.

In Darfur, a region in the northeast African country of Sudan, armed militias and Sudanese government soldiers are perpetrating atrocities. The United Nations is debating whether the violence there should be called "genocide."

About 1.6 million people have been forced from their homes in Darfur, some escaping to neighboring Chad, but most displaced internally, without adequate food, water or shelter. About 70,000 have been killed, with hundreds of thousands more in immediate peril. As many as 12,000 villages have been burned in their entirety. Thousands of women have been raped, thousands of children have been abducted. International aid organizations say more than three million people in Darfur – half the population – are completely dependent on relief aid.

Waisman and Abdalla were speaking at a news conference convened by Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region, to mark the anniversary of Auschwitz's liberation but also to draw attention anew to the crisis in Darfur.Abdalla echoed Waisman's warning that the world must not avert its eyes again when it sees genocide looming.

"The world community has not learned at all from past experiences with regard to genocidal acts going back to World War Two, through Cambodia, Bosnia, Rwanda, and now we have a genocide standing tall in Darfur and it seems like nobody is doing anything about it, to stop it," said Abdalla. "The situation in Darfur today is worse than what it was six or seven months ago when the [United Nations] Security Council had actually started to intervene to stop the genocide, the mass killing, the mass raping and the mass abducting of children and the burning of villages in the Darfur region of Sudan."

In July 2004, the security council passed a resolution asking the Sudanese government to disarm the Janjaweed militias, which had been operating independently, but with the approval and active support of the Sudanese government. Although the Sudanese government maintains it is not directly involved in the conflict, evidence refutes this. Darfurian villages are being bombed from the air, said Abdalla, and the Sudanese government is the only entity in the conflict with air power.

"Unfortunately, what the Sudanese government has done since then is incorporated those Janjaweed militias, or members of the Janjaweed militias, into its paramilitary forces," said Abdalla. "It's incorporated them into their regular armed forces and now they're working with even more impunity in Darfur than ever."

Though the UN approved the intervention of 3,300 African Union troops in Darfur – a fraction of the number Darfurians and others say are needed – only 1,200 have been deployed and those are only observing. They are not empowered to intervene on behalf of endangered civilians.

"The intervention up to date is simply not working at all," said Abdalla. "What the security council is doing in Darfur is absolutely not working."

Reportedly, last week government troops raided civilian villages and government planes bombed three more Darfur villages.

"It has been such a great comfort for those of us who are Darfurians living here in Canada to see the Canadian government taking the lead. We have definitely been able to count on the prime minister to raise this issue to the highest level."

Abdalla commended Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin – one of the few world leaders to press the issue onto the international agenda – but urged the government and ordinary Canadians to do more.

"We are certainly looking for more from our government and from the prime minister," Abdalla said. He urges the international community to demand the immediate imposition of a no-fly zone over Darfur, an arms embargo against the Sudanese government and the complete disbanding of the Janjaweed.

"Without doing that, there is no end that I can see," said Abdalla.

Mark Weintraub, chair of Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region, said his organization has sent a second letter to the Canadian prime minister. It acknowledges the actions by Canada and calls on the government to "mobilize all resources – political, diplomatic and financial" to stop the suffering and prevent a genocide.

He urged Canadians to keep the issue at the top of the Canadian agenda by calling or writing politicians.

"Our message to the larger Canadian community is that we know Canadian leadership is deeply troubled by Darfur, but there are many issues with which our politicians are engaged and it is vital that Canadians speak out so our decision-makers know that many Canadians want and expect powerful leadership on this issue," said Weintraub.

Reflecting on the echoes of history, Waisman compared the near-silence of the contemporary world on Darfur to the silence of the world as the Final Solution unfolded.

"My eyes have seen unimaginable horrors. I'm a witness to the ultimate evil. I'm a witness to man's inhumanity to other humans," Waisman said.

"I represent one and a half million Jewish children who perished in the Holocaust and no one protested. The world remained silent," said Waisman. "Today, we have instant communication. There's no excuse for silence. I cannot understand why so many people with good intentions, with all the evil around them, choose to look the other way. We must not let it happen again.

"What do we need to do to finally learn the lesson and look out for one another?" he asked. "Now is the time to speak out. Now is the time to scream."

Pat Johnson is a B.C. journalist and commentator.

http://www.jewishindependent.ca/Archives/Feb05/archives05Feb04-01.html

Wednesday, February 2, 2005

CJC News Release: CJC seeks action from Prime Minister on Darfur

Feb 02, 2005 - CJC seeks action from Prime Minister on Darfur
For Immediate Release
TORONTO - Canadian Jewish Congress has sent a letter to Prime Minister Paul Martin appealing for the mobilization of resources to help end the crisis in Darfur.

The letter was sent just as a new United Nations panel strongly criticized the role of the Sudanese government in the catastrophic situation in Darfur and as U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan urged the Security Council to take urgent action to stop the killing.
In the letter, Victor Goldboom, Chair of CJC's National Executive, said "We very much appreciate the international advocacy on Darfur that has been forthcoming from you and your government. At the same time, the situation on the ground in Darfur continues to deteriorate and the African Union mission does not have the necessary troops and resources to protect civilians. This mandate must be strengthened and more international resources dedicated to support them."
"Whether or not what is occurring is technically 'genocide' should not deter Canada from recognizing that by all accounts, there is a great humanitarian disaster unfolding in Darfur," said CJC Pacific Region Chair Mark Weintraub.
In the letter, Weintraub said "Every tragedy has its own unique context. Our own experience with the Holocaust has taught us that such evil must be recognized and that we have a responsibility to ensure that it never happens again."
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Contact:
Wendy Lampert
Acting National Communications Director
Canadian Jewish Congress
416-631-5844 (office)