Saturday, April 1, 2006

BC Business: What historical event would you like to attend?


DREAM BIG SECTION
What historical event would you like to attend?



MARK WEINTRAUB, chair of the Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region and estate litigation lawyer with Clark Wilson LLP
"I'd like to witness the proceedings of the UN from 1947 to 1948. During that year the general assembly passed two important resolutions - one calling for the establishment of the modern state of Israel, and one that passed the universal declaration of human rights. Both resolutions draw from the wellsprings of the most necessary of all human attributes - eternal hope for a better world. I could think of few more awe-inspiring historical events than those two."

Friday, March 31, 2006

CBC News: Auschwitz Escapee Rudolf Vrba Dies


March 31, 2006
CBC News

Rudolf Vrba, an Auschwitz death camp escapee who is credited with saving hundreds of thousands of lives, has died in Vancouver. He was 82.
Vrba, a Czech Jew, was imprisoned in Auschwitz at age 19. He was put to work removing the dead from trains arriving at the camp.

In 1944, when he learned that a million Hungarian Jews were about to be sent to Auschwitz, he decided to warn the world.
Vrba and fellow prisoner Alfred Wetzler hid inside a construction wood pile for three days.
After escaping, Vrba and Wetzler gave the first detailed accounts of the death camp and its operations.
Initially, their testimony was ignored and political leaders allowed half a million Hungarian Jews to be deported.

"Sadly they were very, very slow to act, " said Bernie Farber of the Canadian Jewish Congress. "But it's calculated as a result of Rudolf Vrba's escaping Auschwitz and getting this information to the allies that possibly upward of 200,000 Jews were saved."
In 1985, Vrba's testimony was also key in convicting Holocaust denier Ernst Zundel.
"He was a man who took no guff," Farber said. "I guess that's the best way that I could put it."
Vrba became a professor of pharmacology at the University of British Columbia. He went on to write books and lecture about his experiences.
"I think he would just want to be remembered as he said, in a sense, a man of the people who made an effort to make the world a better place," said his friend, Dr. Rob Krell. "He never sought vengance, he sought justice."
Vrba is survived by his wife, daughter and two grandchildren.

Saturday, March 11, 2006

CJC Notice: Philosophers Café


Philosophers Cafe
Saturday, March 11, 2006
7:30 to 9:00pm L'Chaim Lounge
Vancouver Jewish Community Centre
950 West 41st Avenue
Is There a Jewish Obligation to Prevent Genocide?
The Talmud reminds us that "whoever saves even one life, it is as if he or she has saved an entire world." What are the limits, however, if any, to our involvement? Do we really have to help others when we, ourselves, are among the smallest nations, a persecuted people?
Moderator: Rabbi Dr. Laura Duhan Kaplan
Guest: Mark Weintraub is currently Chair of Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region. For almost 20 years he has represented the Jewish community in response to anti-Semitism and racism and has coordinated community action in relation to human rights violations in Bosnia, Darfur, and Indonesia. He has written and lectured on such issues as combating hate crime, Jewish support for aboriginal justice and redress for Japanese War crimes.
Cost per session: Advance: $5 plus GST. At the door: $8.
Advanced registration is recommended. To register, visit JCCGV reception or register online at https://secure.inetwave.com/jccgvbc/forms/progReg.php.
The Philosophers' Cafés are being presented by the JCCGV and Simon Fraser University's Interdisciplinary Programs in Continuing Studies, with generous support from Yosef Wosk and the B'nai B'rith Foundation of British Columbia.
Mira Oreck
Acting Regional Director
Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region Suite 201-950 West 41st Avenue
Vancouver, BC V5Z 2N7
Tel: 604-257-5101
Fax: 604-257-5131
E-mail: mirao@cjc.ca

Monday, February 27, 2006

CJC News Release: Jewish and Aboriginal communities strengthen ties through CJCPR



Feb 27, 2006 - Jewish and Aboriginal communities strengthen ties through CJCPRInteractive Teleconference Addresses Shared Concerns

Vancouver - Jewish and First Nations leaders discussed residential schools, historical and contemporary discrimination and future opportunities for joint dialogue in a recent teleconference convened by B.C. non-governmental organization Worldviews Strategies.

The teleconference, chaired by Canadian Jewish Congress Pacific Region Chair Mark Weintraub and Chief Robert Joseph, chief of the Gwa wa enuk First Nation and a survivor of the Indian residential schools system, included Aboriginal and Jewish community leadership as well as representatives of NGOs and government.

Each province and territory was represented and many social justice advocates from across Canada, the United States and Europe took part in the call to hear from Aboriginal and Jewish community leaders.

“When we speak of social justice concerns we must first speak of justice for Aboriginal people,” said Weintraub. “Our collective anti-racism work must place at the heart of our concerns the ongoing consequences of an historical massive assault against the spiritual and cultural structures of indigenous people. Our communities have a deep friendship that stems from common historical narratives, determination and hope in the face of pervasive and institutionalized racism and a connection to land that permeates our ancestral culture.”

Chief Joseph noted that the communities are natural allies. “Our pasts have defined our contemporary communities and we can build together not only to heal our spirits, but to help heal the world,” he said. “Each time we reach out to each other the darkness fades a little more.”

The PodCast of the teleconference will be available on the Canadian Jewish Congress website in the coming days. An interactive e-forum and follow up materials are available on the Worldview Strategies website www.worldviewstrategies.com under the “Teleconferences” banner.

CJC acts on matters affecting the status, rights and welfare of the Canadian Jewish community.

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For more information, please contact:

Jeff Bradshaw
Education Director
Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region
604-257-5101
jeffb@cjc.ca
www.cjc.ca

http://www.cjc.ca/template.php?action=news&story=783

Thursday, February 16, 2006

CJC News Release: CJCPR kicks off multiculturalism week at community gathering



Feb. 16, 2006 - CJCPR kicks off multiculturalism week at community gathering

Vancouver - B.C. Attorney General Hon. Wally Oppal discussed some of the advantages British Columbia derives from its unique approach to multicultural inclusion at the kick-off to 2006 Multiculturalism Week hosted by Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region earlier this week.

CJCPR Vice Chair Richard Kurland chaired the event, held at the Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver. Minister Oppal spoke extensively about the work of Canadian Jewish Congress in fighting racism and working towards building a society in which multiculturalism thrives. He discussed the historical role the Jewish community has played as advocates for human rights and inter-group relations.

As an honour to the Jewish community and a kick-off to multiculturalism week, Minister Oppal presented a framed copy of the Multiculturalism Week proclamation to CJCPR Chair Mark Weintraub.

“Multiculturalism Week is an opportunity for all British Columbians to celebrate our unique commitment to cultural diversity,” said Weintraub. “It is also a time for multicultural organizations to reflect upon the successes of the Canadian experience and to recognize the important role the Jewish community must play,” he added.

Representatives from cultural and faith organizations from across Vancouver, including SUCCESS, the Multifaith Action Society, AMSSA, the Committee for Racial Justice, the Ismali Council and various other ethnic community leaders, took part in the event, which also included 10 high-school students from Vancouver public schools.

CJC acts on matters affecting the status, rights and welfare of the Canadian Jewish community.

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For more information, please contact:

Mira Oreck
Acting Regional Director
Canadian Jewish Congess, Pacific Region
604-257-5101
mirao@cjc.ca
www.cjc.ca

http://www.cjc.ca/template.php?action=news&story=779

Sunday, February 5, 2006

Globe and Mail: Jewish groups rally for Darfur

February 5, 2006

Jewish groups rally for Darfur

RICHARD BLACKWELL AND JANE TABER

TORONTO and OTTAWA -- For Mark Weintraub, it's no surprise that Jewish groups have been in the forefront of efforts to get international action to stop the killing in the Sudanese province of Darfur.

While Jews have always been disproportionately involved in social movements because of their concerns for justice, that's not the whole story, said Mr. Weintraub, chair of the National Darfur Committee at the Canadian Jewish Congress.

"There's no question that in this particular case -- after the shame of Rwanda -- that the possibility the world would sit silent for another possible genocide sent shock waves through some of us in the community," he said.

That was felt particularly strongly among Holocaust survivors, who "knew full well that the silence of the world condemned their relatives and friends to death."

The lobbying efforts of the Canadian Jewish Congress, along with the work of a number of politicians, culminated in last night's "take note" debate on Darfur.

Their efforts can be seen around the Hill, where MPs and senators are wearing green ribbons -- a symbol of the tragedy in Darfur.

The CJC initially ordered 1,500 ribbons, targeting MPs and senators and members of the British Columbia and Ontario Legislatures. It came up with the idea over Passover and had all of three days to make it happen -- designing and ordering the ribbons and calling officials from the four parties, asking them to give them out to their caucus members.

Yesterday, CJC chief executive officer Bernie Farber said he has placed an order for another 4,000.

"We're just being inundated with calls from people who want to wear green ribbons," Mr. Farber said.

"Canada in many respects is leading the way and the Canadian public has taken it to heart."

The CJC has been concerned about Sudan for years, Mr. Weintraub said. The focus on Darfur emanated from the Vancouver arm of the organization, after the community of Darfur nationals there approached the CJC a couple of years ago and asked that it use its advocacy skills on their behalf.

Around the same time a B.C. senator, Mobina Jaffer, was named as the Liberal government's special envoy to Darfur.
The CJC met with B.C. ministers in the federal government, and persuaded them to take the issue to the cabinet table in Ottawa.

While there appeared to be some progress last year as the carnage subsided, it soon became apparent that those advances were temporary. That prompted the CJC to beef up its efforts, encouraging rabbis to discuss Darfur during Passover, and boosting its lobbying in Ottawa.

Meanwhile, Jewish organizations in the United States set April 30 as the date for a major Darfur rally in Washington, providing a focal point for lobby groups, politicians, individuals, and now -- movie actors -- to get their message to others.

Having actor George Clooney and other Hollywood celebrities discover Darfur has been a huge benefit, Mr. Weintraub said.

"The people of Darfur have suffered from a lack of media attention and celebrities can create that media interest," he said. "We have been trying to penetrate the front pages of newspapers for a long time. Sometimes we were successful, [but] for the most part we were not.

"We wish there were a hundred other George Clooneys," he added.

At the same, a number of politicians have been championing the cause.

When the House of Commons returned after the election, the new government asked opposition parties for their debate priorities. Former finance minister Ralph Goodale, in his new role as Opposition House Leader, suggested a debate on Darfur.

"We were anxious to have a discussion about Darfur," he said. "... we were asked if we had suggestions for special subjects to be considered in special debates and we indicated that Darfur would be one of our priorities."

The debate was originally planned for last Tuesday -- Holocaust Remembrance Day -- but scheduling realities shifted it to last night.

At the same time, Liberal MP Keith Martin has put together a motion calling for Canada to present a resolution to the United Nations Security Council, calling for the UN to assemble and deploy a "peace-making force with a Chapter 7 mandate as soon as possible." (The Chapter 7 mandate allows soldiers to use force to protect civilians.)

Dr. Martin was able to submit his motion with the help of Conservative MP Maurice Vellacott and NDP MP Alexa McDonough. He said the Bloc Québécois was concerned with his motion because it used the word "genocide."

The government has put together its own motion calling for action on the Darfur situation. Dr. Martin, who has seen the government's motion, says it is a "hybrid" of the motion he has on the House of Commons order paper. It does not talk about genocide, but refers to "crimes against humanity," he said.

The government will not introduce its motion until the situation with the peace process becomes clearer over the next 48 hours, Dr. Martin said.


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060502.DARFURGROUPS02/TPStory/National

Thursday, February 2, 2006

Jewish Tribune: 'Jewish-owned' media blamed for candidate's defeat in BC

February 2, 2006 - Shvat 4, 5766

‘Jewish-owned’ media blamed for candidate’s defeat in BC

By Jewish Tribune Staff

RICHMOND, BC – In a scathing, antisemitic diatribe, a campaign manager for a BC Conservative candidate in last week’s federal election blamed a Jewish-owned, liberal-biased media for some of the challenges of the campaign.

Ignoring the fact that Canwest Global’s newspapers in the Vancouver area endorsed Stephen Harper’s Conservative Party in the election, Robbie Robertson, campaign manager for Conservative candidate Darrel Reid, told the Richmond News, “The CanWest Global media empire is controlled by a Jewish family (the Aspers) and they have been the most aggressive family to attack Christians, especially Conservative Christians,” in answer to charges that his candidate had shunned the media.

Robertson added, “Darrel has answered his questions and he still gets called because it doesn’t suit the agenda of the CanWest management team that are getting some kind of direction.

“(This is) a family that fought against persecution and here they are putting their scribes on Christian candidates. That’s something they fought against. Then it’s okay for them to do it.”

David Asper, CanWest’s executive vice president and chairman of the board at the National Post, personally came out in favour of Conservative candidate Peter Kent in Toronto’s St. Paul’s riding.

Dismissing Robertson’s remarks as unfortunate, Reid told the Richmond News that Robertson has been on medical leave and doesn’t speak for him or the campaign.

He told his supporters, “We have fought a good fight. Congratulations to Mr. (Raymond) Chan” on his reelection.

Both B’nai Brith Canada and the Canadian Jewish Congress Pacific Region strongly condemned Robertson’s vitriolic statements.

“The hurtful remarks of Mr. Robertson targeting the Jewish community are all too reminiscent of age-old antisemitic conspiracy theories of Jews plotting to take over the world,” said Frank Dimant, executive vice president of B’nai Brith Canada commenting on the published news report of Robertson’s remarks. “Such reprehensible comments stand in direct contradiction to cherished Canadian values such as tolerance and respect – the very same values that candidates of all parties and from all walks of life proudly exemplified during the election process.

“Mr. Reid and the Conservative Party that he represents have always stood for a strong Canada, inclusive of all minorities, and we are, therefore, gratified by his quick repudiation of the remarks of his campaign manager.

“Robertson’s remarks are even more perplexing given the distinguished reputation enjoyed by CanWest Global as a reliable news source and the fact that its owners are well known for having supported diverse political streams and parties.”

Mark Weintraub, chair of the CJCPR, said, “Robertson’s statements feed off ugly, antisemitic conspiracy theories and show an appalling ignorance of the very positive state of Christian-Jewish relations in Canada today.”

He added that his organization “is gratified that Mr. Reid, (many) of his supporters and Conservative Party leadership have forcefully repudiated and condemned Robertson’s remarks.”

http://www.jewishtribune.ca/tribune/jt-060202-02.html

Saturday, January 28, 2006

Richmond News: Local Tories doing damage control


Local Tories doing damage control
By Eve Edmonds
The Conservative party's Richmond riding association is in full-blown damage control following comments a former campaign staffer made about Jewish-owned media.
It even tried to revoke Robbie Robertson's membership - before learning he didn't have one.
"I can confirm he's not a member. I don't know if he ever was," said riding association president Gary Cross.
Robertson, Conservative candidate Darrel Reid's former campaign manager, caused a stir earlier this week when he referred to a liberal bias in the Jewish-owned CanWest media empire.
"The CanWest Global media empire is controlled by a Jewish family and they have been the most aggressive family to attack Christians, especially Conservative Christians," Robertson told the News on the day of the federal election.
Robertson said he thought Christian Conservative candidates were unfairly targeted by CanWest MediaWorks.
Reid immediately distanced himself from the comments saying Robertson doesn't speak on his behalf.
Since then, Holden Bowker, Reid's current spokesman has contacted media outlets to inform them that Robertson is no longer affiliated with the campaign and hasn't been for a number of weeks.
Robertson has been on medical leave, he explained. That information was kept from the media, said Bowker, to protect Robertson's privacy and to stave off any notion that the campaign was in disarray.
Nonetheless, Robertson hasn't retracted the statements, but admits they should have been "prefaced" with the fact "we were creating an organization and asking the questions as to the slant of CanWest Global. Without that preface I thought it looked like a conspiracy theory coming from me. I didn't intend that."
Robertson said he noted that CanWest is owned by the Asper family, who are of Jewish heritage, because "this is a community that suffered the worst persecution. You'd think they would be the last people to persecute people publicly."
Nevertheless, evangelical Christian Conservative candidates were systematically singled out and "isolated" by CanWest reporters, he said.
"We have to ask, why? Who gave that direction?"
Mark Weintraub, chairman of the Canadian Jewish Congress Pacific Region, said Robertson's comments are "highly offensive."
"They really traffic some of the discredited and conspiratorial theories about Jewish power that have no place in Canadian society," he said, adding that he doesn't believe the comments reflect the ideas of mainstream Canadian society or the Conservative party.
Nor does he believe the comments reflect Reid's view.
"We met with Mr. Reid to articulate our concerns about hate crime and how to combat hate crime. Everything we heard from Mr. Reid was very supportive."
In fact, Gerry St. Germain, a Conservative senator and perhaps the most senior Tory in B.C., went so far as to phone the CJC to stress that these views do not reflect the views of the Conservative party.
While Weintraub dismissed Robertson's comments as an "aberration" and "absurd," he suggests they have to be addressed, which is why the CJC issued a press release denouncing them.
Howard Jampolsky, who ran against Reid for the nomination, is a director on the Richmond Conservative riding association board. He is also Jewish, and said the comments are a shock.
When Jampolsky lost the nomination, he warned of the problems that could ensue if the Conservatives focus on a socially conservative agenda, however, he says, "I couldn't have foreseen comments like this coming out."
He added that Robertson's views are not shared by the party. To that end, he said he is proud of how swiftly the Conservative party has reacted to the comments.
published on 01/28/2006
http://www.richmond-news.com/issues06/014206/news/014206nn1.html

Thursday, January 26, 2006

University of the Streets Cafe: Reconciliation - Weaving Webs of Community


Reconciliation - Weaving Webs of Community: Conversations About Indigenous and non-Indigenous Relations
.
Jan 26 Jewish - First Nations Joint Initiatives
January 26th 2006, 10am PST / 1pm EST
Three years ago, the media focussed on First Nations leader, David Ahenakew's anti-semetic remarks; however, there is another story of collaboration and connection between First Nations and Jewish communities. For example, did you know that Holocaust survivors and Indian residential school survivors have an initiative to learn from each other and teach the world? Or that the Canadian Jewish Congress is hosting an on-going Jewish - First Nations dialogue? Have you heard about a recent Native American peace mission to Israel and Palestine and how these trips are impacting Jewish - First Nations relations in Canada?
During this teleconference participants learned about Jewish - First Nations dialogues about land, genocide, cultural survival, and human rights with Special Guests Mark Weintraub from the Canadian Jewish Congress and Chief Robert Joseph from the Indian Residential School Survivors Society of BC.


Guests: Mark Weintraub and Chief Robert Joseph
Mr. Weintraub is a commercial and estates trial lawyer. He was called to the British Columbia Bar in 1983. He is currently a partner with the Vancouver law firm of Clark, Wilson, a member of the firm's Business Litigation Practice Group and the firm's senior trial lawyer for disputed estates and elder law. For over 15 years, Mark has played a leadership role in the national advocacy organization of Canadian Jewish Congress. Mark has served as National Vice-President and was National Chairman of Community Relations Committee. He has also participated in and led various projects involving CJC and other community organizations related to various public policy issues. During the course of his legal work and community volunteer work, Mark gained experience with the media in several different capacities. He has acted as a Jewish community spokesperson to the media on issues related to antisemitism and Israel. See http://www.cjc.ca/ for more.

Chief Robert Joseph, Kwun Kwun Wha Lee Gei Gee 'Big Thunderbird', is a Hereditary Chief of the Gwa wa enuk First Nation. He is also an Indian Residential School Survivor who spent 10 years at St. Michael's Indian Residential School at Alert Bay on the central coast of British Colombia. He spoke only Kwa Kwala as a six year old boy entering this Residential School. He was beaten many times for speaking his own language and endured other hardship and abuse. He recognizes the destructive impact that this experience had on his life, family and community. This same experience has given him the inspiration to assist aboriginals in seeking hope, healing and reconciliation in his position as Executive Director for the Indian Residential School Survivors Society.


Joseph has spent most of his working life as an advocate for aboriginal people. He has worked for provincial organizations in BC including the Union of BC Indian Chiefs, Native Brotherhood of BC, and the First Nations Summit. He has also worked for Tribal Councils like the Nuu-Chah-nulth, Kwakiulth District Council, and Musgamagw Tribal Council. In addition, he has worked for large and small Bands as Band Manager.

Joseph has a broad experience in dealing with public and government institutions.


Joseph also has some experience in media having been the first native reporter for the Vancouver Sun. He also worked on small weekly publications. In addition, he was involved with the aboriginal media including the Native Voice, Indian Voice and Neseika as well as with the Radio Audio Visual Education Network. Joseph has served on numerous charitable organization Boards both Aboriginal and Non-Aboriginal. He has served on Credit Union and Hospital Boards. Joseph also strives to be active on a volunteer basis. He has led fund-raising drives both for United Way and Heart Drive in the past.

Recently Joseph has been awarded with an Honourary Doctorate of Law Degree from the University of British Columbia for his distinguished achievements in serving BC and Canada through the Indian Residential School Survivors Society and for preserving the traditions and cultures of the First Nations of BC. He has always sought to bridge the differences brought about by intolerance, lack of understanding, and racism. Recently, as chair of Native American Leadership Alliance for Peace and Reconciliation, Joseph was part of a peace delegation to Israeal and Palestine. Joseph understands that faith, hope and healing for Aboriginals well ultimately require the bringing about of good will between many parties. See http://www.irsss.ca/ for more.


Impressions of Participants

A selection of comments we received via email during or shortly after the teleconference.
  • "Here I am to say that was a very impressive way of getting people to talk about sensitive issues with hope and transparency."
  • "The presentation about land touched my heart deeply."
  • "The work you are doing is so important and so necessary."
  • "Wow Jessie! This is awesome!!!" (email sent by a participant during the teleconference)
  • "I thought the teleconference a remarkable initiative."
  • "I felt there was so much respect and understanding in this teleconference."
  • "I admire the work the two speakers had done in terms of understanding each others history and collective pain."

To download or listen to the podcast teleconference, go to: http://www.worldviewstrategies.com/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=41#pod

CJC News Release: CJCPR Strongly condemns anti-semitic statements.

January 26, 2006 - CJCPR strongly condems anti-semitic statements

Vancouver - Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region strongly condemned the antisemitic statements made by Robbie Robertson to the Richmond News on January 24, 2006. Mr. Robertson is the former campaign manager to Darrel Reid, the Conservative candidate in Richmond.

Mr. Robertson attributed Mr. Reid's election loss to a Jewish-controlled, anti-Christian CanWest media.

"CanWest, which has shown an understanding of and a sensitivity to Christian points of view can well defend itself against such scurrilous charges," stated CJCPR Chair Mark Weintraub. "I am particularly dismayed that someone participating in the democratic process would purvey libelous lies that are so hurtful to the Jewish community and undermine Canada's values of inter-group understanding and respect."

Mr Weintraub added that "Robertson's statements feed off ugly, antisemitic conspiracy theories and show an appalling ignorance of the very positive state of Christian-Jewish relations in Canada today."

Mr Weintraub noted that "CJCPR is gratified that Mr. Reid, numerous of his supporters and Conservative Party leadership have forcefully repudiated and condemned Robertson's remarks."

Mr. Weintraub concluded that "Canadians must be mindful that the type of singleminded, pathological obsession with Jews shown by Robertson has long historical precedent and only continual education and advocacy will keep it suppressed."

CJC acts on matters affecting the status, rights and welfare of the Canadian Jewish community.

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For more information, please contact:

Mira Oreck
Acting Regional Director
Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region
604-257-5101
mirao@cjc.ca
www.cjc.ca

http://www.cjc.ca/template.php?action=news&story=768

Tuesday, January 17, 2006

Vancouver Courier: Muslim, Jew work together to mobilize help for Darfur


By Cheryl Rossi-Staff writer
Port Coquitlam's Nouri Abdalla was a veterinarian, an animal pharmaceutical company worker and an exporter of pharmaceuticals and information technology to Africa before he found himself involved in peace talks in Darfur.
But the Darfuri national felt compelled to get involved when he heard in 2003 that villagers in Western Sudan were being raped and killed by the Arab-dominated Sudanese government's proxy Janjaweed militia.
He started a B.C. chapter of the Toronto-based Darfur Association of Canada in 2004 and sought organizations to help him bring awareness to the atrocities occurring in the homeland he'd left in 1990.
The Muslim man found a strong ally in the chair of the Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region, Mark Weintraub, who he met while speaking about Darfur at SFU.
"We who brought to the world the mantra of 'never again,' we who know what it's like to be targeted and know how important it is to have a world community who cares, were motivated and mobilized once we started hearing about a possible genocide in Sudan to do all we could to activate public opinion, and to get the Canadian government to take a lead role in the international community to ensure that a genocide would not occur," Weintraub, a Vancouver lawyer, said.
Abdalla is now a full-time human rights activist, who represented the people of Darfur during the seventh inter-Sudanese peace talks in Abuja, Nigeria, from November 2005 to May 2006. He's also a freelance consultant for the U.N. in West Africa. He flew to Nairobi, Kenya, Jan. 13 to try to address the inequitable distribution of power and wealth in Darfur.
Canada became the second largest donor to a humanitarian crisis for the first time in its history when it committed half a billion dollars to Sudan in 2005, Abdalla said.
The government's commitment resulted from hard work by people from the Lower Mainland and B.C. Abdalla and Weintraub joined organizations across the country to bring awareness to the genocide and pressure the Canadian government to take action. They encouraged B.C. Senator Mobina Jaffer, already the special envoy to Sudan, to tighten her focus on Darfur, and she obliged.
An estimated 300,000 to 400,000 in Darfur have been killed and 2.5 to 3 million refugees are living in camps. After the African Union produced a peace agreement that was rejected by most last May, the situation went from horrific to worse.
"We've been trying to get the international community to bring in a robust United Nations peacekeeping force to bring security and tranquility to the region and tackle or reverse the humanitarian crisis," Abdalla said. "Canada has not been doing as much as it's supposed to do recently within the past few months, and maybe that's due to the change of government. The new government needs to be put up to speed in terms of what needs to be done."
Senator Mobina Jaffer is no longer the special envoy to Sudan, and humanitarian groups want another to be appointed.
"We are told that there are Canadian flags in Darfur on helicopters and on other transport vehicles and that the people of Darfur see Canada as playing a lead role of conscience, and given the energies and efforts we have expended to date, we would like to see the job finished," Weintraub said. "That can only come through continued pressure on our leadership, letters and telephone calls and within church groups and human rights groups and synagogues and mosques and schools, that this issue continue to have a profile, because, in fact, the profile seems to be bearing some fruit, albeit several years too late for those who have died."

Friday, December 9, 2005

Canadian Jewish Congress article

Native Injustice “Template” for Canadian Discrimination: CJCPR Chair In a recent major address to a symposium on hate-motivated crimes, CJC Pacific Region Chair Mark Weintraub urged Canadians to address the festering injustice perpetrated against First Nations in order to facilitate justice for all.

“We need to reverse the tendency to add racism against Aboriginal peoples to the end of the list of concerns and congratulate ourselves for even thinking about these issues,” Weintraub told a packed audience of police, Crown counsel, politicians and others at the forum, which was sponsored by the Justice Institute of B.C. “Rather, we could benefit by considering how relations with Aboriginal peoples perhaps provided a template for how subsequent minority populations have been treated.”

Weintraub spoke of the history of discrimination against Aboriginal Canadians and praised the communities’ patience.

“In light of all this,” Weintraub said, “we should think ourselves fortunate that there still remains a wellspring of generosity within Aboriginal communities to meet any sincere attempt at reconciliation.”

Thursday, December 8, 2005

Canadian Jewish Congress article

Antisemitic materials show up at Toronto universities, BC’s Fraser Valley Antisemitic flyers landed on three of Canada’s largest university campuses in the Greater Toronto area last month, while extremist flyers were passed around in British Columbia’s Fraser Valley area.

In both cases, the materials are believed to have originated with white supremacist groups in the U.S.
CJC Ontario Region was notified by staff at Hillel of Greater Toronto when the pamphlets, entitled Jewish Supremacism Unmasked, were discovered on the campuses of Ryerson University, University of Toronto and York University. Their content was “graphic, hateful and comprises deeply painful themes of classic antisemitism coupled with radical anti-Israel vitriol,” said Hillel Executive Director Zac Kaye.
CJCONT was in touch with University administrators and security at all three campuses, as well as with Toronto and York Regional Police Services. “We were most concerned with limiting the spread of the pamphlets and minimizing their impact on all students on campus,” noted CJCONT Regional Director and General Counsel Steven Shulman.
In British Columbia, CJC Pacific Region expressed its condemnation for extremist literature that was distributed in the Fraser Valley. CJC, PR remains in contact with local police about this incident. Police have not yet identified those responsible for distributing the material, whose content targets immigrants and immigration and which appear to originate from a Virginia-based white supremacist group.
"The danger in materials like these lies in the fact that this type of clearly mean-spirited attack exploits ignorance and pre-existing prejudice,” said CJC, PR Chair Mark Weintraub, who noted that B.C.’s Hate Crime Team will investigate to determine whether Criminal Code charges for promotion of hatred should be laid.
“We cannot permit those with ignorant minds and hard hearts to harm our fellow Canadians,” he added.
http://www.cjc.ca/template.php?action=ioi&item=82

Friday, December 2, 2005

Jewish Independent Editorial


December 2, 2005
Editorial
With a federal election now underway and a Grey Cup under our belts, last week’s first ministers’ meeting on Aboriginal affairs may seem a long time ago already. But the Kelowna conference – and the announcement of compensation for victims of residential schools that came just before the meeting opened – will go down in history as a turning point in this country’s relations with our First Peoples.
The announcement of plans to compensate victims of residential schools and to commemorate their experiences reflects a first step in addressing the problems. Many of the social ills affecting Aboriginal Canadians were bred in the residential schools system. The values that the schools inculcated were intentionally antithetical to those of native Canadians’ traditions. The schools had, among other explicit purposes, the goal of eliminating aboriginal culture and assimilating the students into the dominant European-Canadian culture.
This failed for a range of reasons. The imperialist objective of assimilation was not sustained by any inculcation of alternative values. Having their traditions beaten out of them on a daily basis in the estranged and isolating environment of church-run residential schools, the curriculum that young First Nations people learned from our dominant culture were lessons of violence, coercion, verbal and physical abuse, sexual exploitation and torture.
Like victims of any social catastrophe, the survivors are forever affected by their experiences. The social crises in many First Nations communities – poverty, educational outcomes, addiction, abuse and unemployment among them – can be traced back in varying degrees to the experiences of past abuse of Aboriginal Canadians at the hands of religious, educational and governmental authority figures.
The announcement of an agreement-in-principle for compensation and commemoration of the residential schools experience last week was a prerequisite to the first ministers’ summit that followed. Until we recognize the significance of the residential school system on the trajectory of First Nations’ well being since European contact, we will not be able to sufficiently or fairly address the contemporary challenges. Canada, it seems, has finally recognized this fact.
As this historic process has unfolded, the Canadian Jewish community’s leaders have been vocal in support of the First Nations cause. National and local leaders of Canadian Jewish Congress have gone on record marking this issue as a priority.
“We are pleased that Canada has finally understood its responsibility for a shameful part of our country’s history, and is seeking to rectify its actions,” Canadian Jewish Congress national president Ed Morgan said in a news release on the residential schools agreement.
“Canada has made a crucial and substantive step toward recognizing our national culpability for this grievous historic wrong,” added CJC Pacific Region chair Mark Weintraub.
But why, of all issues, has the treatment of aboriginal Canadians become a core Jewish issue?
The reasons are numerous and can be interpreted in ways both simple and complex.
In a purely self-interested sense, it is in the interest of Jewish Canadians to nurture an environment where historic wrongs are recognized and ameliorated. Sensitivity to the historic wrongs of one people will presumably engender sensitivity to the historical experiences of all.
There are also a variety of complex theological and cultural parallels, which are best left to experts in their respective fields to elucidate. But, in its simplest sense, First Nations welfare is a concern to the Jewish community because at the core of the Jewish tradition is the interdiction to seek justice. As peoples who have both seen their cultures, histories and identities subjected to attempted eradication, Jews and aboriginal Canadians share a unique and dark perspective on human capability.
Canadian Jews support the struggle of First Nations for a variety of reasons, but primarily because it is the just thing to do. This, we believe, is all the reason we need.
http://www.cjc.ca/template.php?action=itn&Story=1602

Thursday, November 24, 2005

CJC News Release: CJC welcomes government recognition of residential school abuse victims


November 24, 2005
For immediate release
CJC welcomes government recognition of residential school abuse victims

OTTAWA - Canadian Jewish Congress welcomed the Canadian government’s announcement of plans to compensate Aboriginal Canadians who were abused while attending government-run residential schools, which includes funds for a truth-and-reconciliation commission.
"We are pleased that Canada has finally understood its responsibility for a shameful part of our country’s history, and is seeking to rectify its actions," said Canadian Jewish Congress National President Ed Morgan.
"Canada has made a crucial and substantive step toward recognizing our national culpability for this grievous historic wrong," added CJC Pacific Region Chair Mark Weintraub.
"As this process moves forward, survivors' and Aboriginal voices must be heard in the development and implementation of the programs being created on their behalf. The Jewish community will certainly lend its unqualified support to authentic reconciliation," he noted.
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For more information, contact:
Wendy Lampert
National Director of Communications
Canadian Jewish Congress
416-631-5844 (office)
416-845-4674 (cell)

Saturday, November 12, 2005

Voiceonline.com: Is the RCMP doing enough to stop hate propaganda by scumbags?


IN FOCUS WITH RATTAN

#3. Is the RCMP doing enough to stop hate propaganda by scumbags?

What on earth are the Mounties doing about incidents of hate crime against Indo-Canadians and other minorities? The latest racist incident against Indo-Canadians, Jews and gays took place in Langley and the RCMP kept it a secret until someone who also received the hate material in their mailbox contacted the media last weekend. Why didn't the Langley RCMP inform the media so that other victims could come forward. WHY? Decent white Langley residents expressed their disgust at the flyers that denounce mixed race marriages, homosexuality and minorities. Langley RCMP told the local media that there had been some complaints about the hate flyers and claimed that this material had first been distributed throughout that city and was now being distributed in the township. Meanwhile, the Canadian Jewish Congress strongly condemned extremist literature that has been distributed in the Fraser Valley. It said it had spoken about the flyers with police, who say their content targets immigrants and immigration. They also say the flyers appear to originate from a Virginia-based white supremacist group. Police have not yet identified those responsible for distributing the material locally. "All non-Aboriginal Canadians are immigrants or descendants of immigrants, which makes this extreme anti-immigration material seem quite absurd," said MARK WEINTRAUB, Chair of Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region. "The danger lies in the fact that this type of clearly mean-spirited attack exploits ignorance and pre-existing prejudice," he added. Weintraub noted that it is also distressing that the materials appear also to highlight a hate-based Internet site. He said the provincial Hate Crime Team will investigate to conclude whether the flyers promote hate and will determine charges under the Criminal Code accordingly. "I am proud that here in Canada we have established a culture of respect for diversity. We cannot permit those with ignorant minds and hard hearts to harm our fellow Canadians. CJC, Pacific Region, is confident that the police will identify the perpetrators in this case, and that they will be dealt with appropriately under the law," he said. Well, let's wait and see what the RCMP do in this case.

http://www.voiceonline.com/voice/051112/JUSTMINUTE.php

Friday, November 11, 2005

Langley Advance: Racism: Hateful mail distributed in Langley


Racism: Hateful mail distributed in Langley

Flyers filled with anti-immigrant messages have been found in Langley and throughout the Fraser Valley.

by Erin McKay

Racist hand-outs have ended up in Langley mailboxes, and while their message is offensive, the RCMP's Hate Crimes Unit is not too worried about them.

"We'd love to know who is doing it," said Sgt. Mark Graf, "but we are not spending a great amount of time or effort on them. There are other things that are higher priorities."

Over the past week or two, Langley RCMP received a handful of complaints from residents who found the flyers in with their mail.

The hand-outs did not get delivered with local newspapers.

Cpl. Diane Blain, spokesperson for the Langley RCMP, said such issues are not handled at a detachment level, but instead the information is collected and forwarded to E Division's Hate Crimes Unit.

The flyers have turned up in other communities, including Surrey and Mission, and while Blain said such racist attacks are "really unusual" in Langley, Graf noted that similar hand-outs circulate two or three times a year in the Lower Mainland.

"Nobody wants them in their mailbox," Graf said, but added that the two-man Hate Crimes Unit is responsible for all of the province, and puts a higher priority on dealing with more personal offences.

He added that it is not known who is responsible for distributing the flyers locally, and advised those who find a flyer to contact their local police detachment.

The Canadian Jewish Congress has condemned the flyers, which target immigrants and appear to originate from a Virginia-based white supremacist group.

"All non-Aboriginal Canadians are immigrants or descendants of immigrants, which makes this extreme anti-immigration material seem quite absurd," said Mark Weintraub, Chair of Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region.

"The danger lies in the fact that this type of clearly mean-spirited attack exploits ignorance and pre-existing prejudice," he added.

"I am proud that here in Canada we have established a culture of respect for diversity," Weintraub said. "We cannot permit those with ignorant minds and hard hearts to harm our fellow Canadians."

published on 11/11/2005

http://www.langleyadvance.com/issues05/112205/news/112205nn6.html

Tuesday, November 8, 2005

CJC News Release: CJC Condemns extremist literature



November 8, 2005 - CJC Condemns extremist literature

Vancouver - Canadian Jewish Congress strongly condemned extremist literature that has been distributed in the Fraser Valley.

CJC has spoken about the flyers with police, who say their content targets immigrants and immigration. They also say the flyers appear to originate from a Virginia-based white supremacist group. Police have not yet identified those responsible for distributing the material locally.

"All non-Aboriginal Canadians are immigrants or descendants of immigrants, which makes this extreme anti-immigration material seem quite absurd," said Mark Weintraub, Chair of Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region. "The danger lies in the fact that this type of clearly mean-spirited attack exploits ignorance and pre-existing prejudice,” he added.

Weintraub noted that it is also distressing that the materials appear also to highlight a hate-based internet site. He said the provincial Hate Crime Team will investigate to conclude whether the flyers promote hate and will determine charges under the Criminal Code accordingly.

“I am proud that here in Canada we have established a culture of respect for diversity. We cannot permit those with ignorant minds and hard hearts to harm our fellow Canadians. CJC, Pacific Region, is confident that the police will identify the perpetrators in this case, and that they will be dealt with appropriately under the law,” he said.

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Contact:
Pat Johnson
Acting Co-Director
Canadian Jewish Congress, Pacific Region
604-257-5101
patj@cjc.ca
www.cjc.ca

http://www.cjc.ca/template.php?action=news&story=756

Thursday, November 3, 2005

Justice Institute Speech

Speech addressed to Justice Institute, November 2005

Ladies and Gentlemen. I am honoured to have the opportunity to present my thoughts on issues related to hate crime to a group so dedicated to it’s eradication. I wish to first acknowledge our presence here on the traditional lands of the Musqueam people and express our thanks and gratitude.

This symposium is being held two days after the passing of the famed Nazi hunter, Simon Wiesenthal. It is therefore incumbent upon me that I preface my remarks by recognizing the enormous contributions he made to the post-holocaust world in which we live. Simon Wiesenthal was one of those individuals who helped us as a war torn world restore at least a modicum of faith in ourselves after the demonic years of the second world war. After surviving five Nazi death camps he insisted that war criminals be tracked down, apprehended and brought to justice and otherwise dedicated his long life to combating anti-semitism and other forms of prejudice in all of it’s ugly manifestations.

Wiesenthal demanded that the world not sink into denial and let the guilty ones slip away into the night; he fought against clandestine revenge killings, he demanded that these most vicious architects of mass hate face justice with all of the safeguards of an honest judicial system. He often said that his actuating passion was a personal responsibility to those who perished to bring the murderers to account, so that if he met them in “ the next world” he could say he had done everything within his power to ensure that the guilty would not go free; but he also wanted to teach the world that through the rule of just law, that the destructive impulse of human beings may in some small measure be checked. He was born a Jew and suffered only because he was a Jew but his message of the pursuit of justice was for the benefit of all of humanity.

All of us at this Conference have committed to this path that Simon Wiesenthal embarked upon some 60 years ago. I was one of those young university students who upon discovering the great courage of this man was inspired to try in at least some small measure to make a contribution to confronting genocide and I know there were thousands of others who were similarly humbled and motivated by his heroism.

I want now to discuss the eradication of hate in the largest context because I think it critical that we try and always appreciate that we are part of an ongoing historical process which demands continual reflection.

Our century brings into focus, perhaps more harshly than at any time in the past, the elastic quality of human nature; our capacity for great acts of creativity and compassion and our capacity for seemingly limitless destruction. For while extreme and massive acts of barbarism have characterized much of human history, never before has technology reached such a sophisticated level that we can now talk of the mass extermination of human beings. Technology, mass communication, mass ideologies and a revolutionary rate of change has all too frequently been a fatal combination in the modern era..
Hitler’s remark “Who today remembers the destruction of the Armenians?” was made in the context of the anticipated destruction by the Nazis of the European Jewish community. It demonstrates with full clarity that the lack of response by the world community to one set of crimes against humanity only encourages the killers into believing quite correctly that they can get away with other such crimes.

In the conflict in Europe only a few short years ago, two thirds of Europe’s Jewish population was destroyed; over two million babies and children perished along with a two thousand year culture, this in the heart of modern Europe. The Allied forces were ultimately victorious but the war against the European Jewish community was won by those who so skillfully exploited a time-honoured tradition of the teaching of contempt towards the resident Jewish populations. And of course the Nazi’s murder machine did not stop with the torture of the Jewish people. It included amongst other incomprehensible tragedies the Nazi brutalization of the Polish nation, the genocide of the Roma, the persecution of gays, those with mental and physical disabilities and ultimately the self-destruction of Germany itself.
But despite the sadistic Nazi cruelty and the complicity of nations, institutions and millions of “ordinary” citizens, we also witnessed an altruistic response in the heart of this darkness which compels us to reject pessimism as the final answer. We know that against all odds there were some high officials and a different type of “ordinary” citizen who were prepared to sacrifice their lives to save Jews. There were countless awe-inspiring acts of heroism and decency and we must continue to highlight this nobility of the human spirit. The haters amongst us would rather let us believe that we are all guilty as human beings; they would prefer us to believe that to be either passive or maniacal is innate to the human condition, for if all are guilty, then no one is truly guilty.
The record of Denmark and Bulgaria in protecting all of their Jews is part of the Holocaust narrative which must be trumpeted as an alternative path, not utopian, but very much attainable. Few know, but it is now indisputable, that tens of thousands of Bulgarian Jews were saved the fate of their European brothers and sisters because various church, political, business and labour leaders insisted that “their” Jews would not be transported. The historical and other reasons for this success are fascinating and bear much attention, for in Bulgaria and Denmark we see the triumph of national courage over fear, greed and hate. These countries were incubators of decency and if we study what occurred we can perhaps identify the necessary factors to create hate-free societies.
Notwithstanding the mind numbing, heart stopping catalogue of infamy of the Nazi era we are also heirs today of some of the post–war attempts to extract meaning from that evil- there have been affirmative responses to the Nazi horror including the establishment of the United Nations, the development of International Human Rights Codes, anti-genocide declarations and in our own country, the establishment of human rights tribunals, the criminalization of hate and the dismantlement of some, but still not all of the existing racist infrastructure which characterized pre- World War II Canada.
Our collective sanity requires that we relentlessly search to extract meaning from chaos and to always to live in the crucible of hope. In religious terms this is sometimes cast as the concept of redemption- to redeem means to rescue, to make whole and holy, to vest worthiness in that which might otherwise have been discarded.

Other than the weekly Sabbath, the most sacred day of the Jewish calendar is approaching: Yom Kippur, a 24 hour period for personal and collective redemption and the culmination of the celebration of the Jewish New Year.

It is a day wherein each Jew annually takes stock of his or her actions and misdeeds as a necessary pre-condition for a reconciliation with one’s fellow human beings and ultimately God. But the reconciliation must firstly be with our fellow human beings and we are mandated to seek forgiveness from those individuals we have harmed- only then do our traditional teachings tell us we are entitled to seek a restorative relationship with God. Yom Kippur is also a day, when the police are on special alert for attacks against our synagogues; for the haters exist amongst us still and on the days when the Jewish community gathers together in the greatest numbers, we need extra protection.

I refer to these oncoming days of Jewish reflection not to focus on the security needs of our community, but to provide an analogy for what I urge us to do collectively as a society. Our own secular New Year’s process of making resolutions emanates from the Jewish tradition of soul –seeking and affirming a new path but unfortunately the transformative power of the ancient tradition has been diluted. But on Yom Kippur we still strain to seek authentic redemption; we are exhorted to take account of the past; confront it honestly and then commit to change with powerful action; for our present moment in time and space cannot be disconnected from the past or the future. Analogizing to our current Canadian condition, if we are to learn from the past, if we are to embrace hope instead of pessimism in the struggle to dissolve hate, we must be bone deep honest in our evaluation of why there is hate in our society.

There is much that has changed in the larger social and political Canadian climate which now accepts on a certain level that hate crimes are an assault on the very dignity of the victim in ways that are even more searing than other crimes. The individual feels singled out and vulnerable for his or her identity which creates a bewilderment and shock; such attacks also must be seen as deeply anti-social because they fray the fragility of our multi-cultural, democratic fabric. We recognize this now and have implemented hate crime teams; statistics gathering and special provisions for sentencing. All of these steps are far from comprehensive and there is significant question as to how effectively the tools available to our judicial system are actually being used but nonetheless we have achieved substantial progress in creating a legal and ideological underpinning of respect for diversity and this should be properly acknowledged and the work of previous generations in breaking new ground be recognized with gratitude.

However, I do think that sometimes we tend to be too self-congratulatory and slide into denial. So, if the reference to Yom Kippur’s demand for penetrating self-reflection is apt for a larger societal introspection, then how can we talk about how “evolved” we are in terms of diversity, respect for others and progress in combating hate-motivated crime when we fail to recognize that in our own U.N. best ranked city we have had multiple disappearances and murders of females, economically disadvantaged and disproportionately Aboriginal with too little expressions of individual and institutional concern from most of us. We have lacked respect for our most marginalized fellow citizens- where was our love, our respect as a nation when we collectively insisted that First Peoples be dispossessed of all they held dear and then discarded to be barely tolerated on the margins of this fabulously wealthy country. And the contempt continues; now the focus is on the aboriginal inability to assimilate; the failure of aboriginal leadership- there seems to be always something deficient from the dominant perspective in the Aboriginal ways- from Europe’s first contact, the colonizing powers always had the first and last word in pronouncing judgment. I think we must face up to this, be truthful about it and in our own spheres of influence and power redouble our efforts to communicate this tragic reality.

There is nothing new in these statements; they have been said countless times in the past and they are beginning to make impact; but it is only in the last decade or so that the courts have begun to redress this horrific reality of attempted genocide and only most recently that our Premier has publicly acknowledged the need for a new relationship- reversing a hundred years of greedy, self-serving, dishonest and exploitive dealings by too many of those in power. Previous generations permitted the most vicious and rapacious dishonour to reign to such an extent that there are few if any aboriginal people today who do not bear the scars of the attempted decimation of the foundations of their way of life. It should not be a shocking statement to say Canada has and in too many respects continues, to manifest hatred to the land’s indigenous peoples.

Hate against First Nations must always be discussed as a unique and urgent matter separate and distinct from other challenging race and ethnicity issues because it still looms as our greatest unresolved shame. In my view, whether as Jew, Sikh , Christian, Muslim Buddhist, Hindu, newly arrived or 5th generation Canadian we must be stopped frozen in our tracks by our individual and collective neglect, our recklessness, our arrogance and for some of us, the fact that we have let our hearts turn to the hardest of stone.

During the Yom Kippur day of redemption, Jews in each of their own congregations publicly recite a list of errors and mistakes, not because we each necessarily committed the entire catalogue of misdeeds, but we say them publicly so as not to isolate individuals from the community and to communicate that we are all bound together in our actions; one of the “sins” we publicly seek redemption for is being “xenophobic” -fearful of strangers-, and another, (from a list of hundreds) is the sin of “betrayal”.

Juxtaposing these two I think it not a very controversial conclusion to note that too many of us have been fearful of the “stranger”-of the Other -and we have betrayed our own “Western” and Canadian oft stated ethical principles to treat well the stranger in our midst- indeed to begin to see the stranger as not strange at all but part of us – the one great human family. And need I make the point any more clearer to underscore that the stranger in our midst- the indigenous peoples of the Americas were actually very much home here; they were neither strangers to the Land nor did they treat the first colonizers with fear or contempt; for the most part they were greeted well and many an explorer and colonizer was saved through the generosity of an Indian- that is not a romantic version of what occurred; the historical records are unambiguous in their gratitude for First Nations knowledge and help- and therefore the sin of betrayal plays out on even more levels; not only the betrayal of our own stated principles; but betrayal of peoples who trusted our forefather’s words only to see treaty after treaty; promise after promise breached or modified. For the sin of xenophobia, for the sin of greed, for the sin of arrogance, for the many layered sins of betrayal, should we not be seeking redemption and thank ourselves fortunate that generosity within Aboriginal communities is still available to meet any sincere attempt at reconciliation with open, albeit with understandably guarded arms? In any discussion of hate and racism and discrimination, I am increasingly of the view that our relationship with Aboriginal peoples be examined first.

If we are to vest real meaning in our claim to Canadian values of decency, courtesy, social concern; if we are to take seriously our own religious or philosophic or country of origin traditions as having any kind of wise or compassionate wellsprings, we must demand from our leadership that we be directed to a place of redemption; a place of searing honesty; a place of such intense discomfort that we vow not to be complacent until we have addressed this malevolent dimension to our history and contemporary reality and we must demand with the most powerful voices we can muster that our political, educational and religious leadership take us to this new place with the greatest urgency, indeed with an almost panicked sense of urgency. aboriginal children aboriginal women, aboriginal men; aboriginal elders… each one bears what should be heart rendering witness to a dominant culture of superiority, of high regard for our own and low regard for the other.

So vested with the responsibility of speaking on behalf of the Jewish community’s central advocacy organization, I, with the support of the organized community insist that by reason of our own history and by reason of who we claim to be as Canadians, that aboriginal justice not be simply an add-on to the list of concerns when advocating on issues related to racism and hate crime; aboriginal justice must be at the heart and center of all of our work. That is not to say that the concerns of the Jewish community are not palpable; they are- we continue to be a targeted community and must vigorously seek all necessary protections; this does not mean that racism directed to Indo-Canadians and those of other Asian origins is not a critical issue for our organization – of course it is; neither does this mean that gay bashing and other forms of denigration based upon sexual orientation is not of grave concern- for it is and continues to be a much uglier problem than our media and schools and leaders would admit- gay men still continue to be the victims of the most violent attacks simply because of who they are. What I am saying is that we need to reverse the tendency to add racism against aboriginal peoples at the end of the list of concerns and congratulate ourselves for even thinking about these issues, but rather think about how relations were first structured with Aboriginal people as perhaps the template, or forerunner of how subsequent minorities were treated. To what extent there is a causal, or other link, reasonable people can disagree, but I am certain that since the contempt goes so deep, that at a minimum, we must put aboriginal justice at the core of our concerns as part of our critique and simultaneously acknowledge that the issues are also so fundamentally different that they deserve special and separate treatment apartment from our discussion of other types of racism.

Personally, I do believe that there is a deep nexus linking historical anti-semitism, the near genocide of indigenous peoples and intolerance, prejudice, and ultimately hateful violence against other vulnerable and essentially powerless minority groups-but whether or not one agrees with this type of analysis, few could cogently disagree that it is incumbent upon us to continually raise the question- why are Jewish places of worship desecrated, a Jewish school firebombed and Jewish individuals cowardly attacked for just being Jews? why are members of the Filipino community targeted by others? why are women still beat up and murdered in the sex trade; why does being gay mean you must risk bodily harm if you disclose who you are? why do we continue to force aboriginal people to fight alone for their dignity and turn our backs to the ravages of racism wreaked on First Peoples of Canada? Why must elderly Indo-Canadians now wonder whether they are safe on our streets, in our parks or even in their homes with hooligans wandering around looking for someone to torment? And why is that so many Canadians of Chinese ancestry still feel, after over a hundred years of meaningful contribution to our society that many of European descent still treat them with disrespect, and contempt. Why do Muslims register one of the largest number of reported hate crimes?

The questions could be posed on many more different levels and the answers multiple and not always unambiguous. These are extraordinarily complex issues and no one should dare to suggest that there is one correct or true or accurate analysis or approach. But the reality is there and begs for comment and discussion and one partial answer I would like to focus on is the structural societal foundations of our society as well as the all too human emotions and states of being like fear, greed and arrogance.I subscribe to the view that hate crime is only the most overt expression of a society still structured around the superiority of some over others, whether it be ethnicity, race, religion gender, sexuality or economics; there are many explanations for these hierarchies; we know certainly that the entire complex of hatred defies simple explanations and we will be discussing some of it’s dimensions later today- but I think as part of the discussion we must ask the fundamental question not only from a cultural or political or economic perspective but also from a, spiritual or philosophical perspective ; however you wish to frame it – why are we are not a culture of love or at least respect? Why are we are not a world defined by actualized love; why is it that we have these hierarchies of race and ethnicity that promulgate hatred?

And by referring to love I am not referring to transient emotional states but love in her greatest profundity – love that flowers in the pursuit of justice, love as understood and explained by the greatest spiritual teachers, by the greatest philosophers and by our greatest of leaders such as Gandhi or Martin Luther king, or Rabbi Abraham Heschel; or some of the Bahai, Islamic, Jewish and Christian and aboriginal leaders. There are thousands of others from myriad traditions and my omission is only by reason of time and the need to identify several who are most familiar to us. We do not truly embrace the dignity of each individual and so the question must be asked ..why not? generationally transmitted ideologies of superiority of one religion or people over another? Greed?

Why in the year 2005 do we still have too much public indifference; public indifference to the Hindu temple daubed with a swastika; public indifference to the killers of Aaron Webster; public indifference to the vulnerable position of those from the Filipino community; this relative indifference does not evince a commitment to the upholding of the dignity of each individual.

Where is the outrage, where is our passion; where is our sense that our neighbour is our extended family. These are questions that are rhetorical in nature but I pose them to permit me to stand back for a minute and say – this is absurd; this is irrational this is bizarre that human beings too often have permitted leadership to institutionalize in a myriad of ways the enshrinement of a culture of hate instead of a culture of love or at a minimum a culture of respect.

To illustrate the point however, that when we talk of a culture of love we are not talking about being naïve or idealistic; all of us promoting greater awareness of hate crime would vigorously argue that being indulgent to the perpetrators of hate or other crimes is not upholding the dignity of each individual; a society which permits abusers of the most vulnerable to receive greater leniency than the perpetrators of certain property crimes does not uphold the dignity of the individual so a culture of love does not mean permissiveness- it does mean recognizing and acting to protect the inherent dignity of each of us.

Protecting the vulnerable by well funded and well trained law enforcement; well paid and trained prosecutors; fair but firm sentencing and no nonsense parole terms do enhance the dignity of the individual; listening to the First Nations of this country is an act recognizing the dignity of the individual and ought to have occurred hundreds of years ago- perhaps then the wholesale confiscation of lands, the intentional obliteration of spiritual traditions, the devastation of disease and the intergenerational physical and emotional damage inflicted by the residential schools would have been avoided- our forefathers and foremothers apparently did not have sufficient teachings to choose the love ethic wherein the dignity of fellow human beings is respected – indeed revered. We now bear the consequences and must have courage and resolve to change directions.

We are afraid to talk about love; men perhaps more than women are socialized to be squeamish about love; we fear love because we think it means being soft and exposed; we are taught that love is not something for the real hard world, but I say that our most transformative leaders have been those who have helped us understand that love of our fellow being is not to be feared - that to live in a culture of love instead of violence or fear or hate can be our human destiny and can be the propelling force for each one of us as individuals and ultimately for our larger societySo what might actualized love look like in a society; isn’t love in part the recognition that no individual can rest contented if our fellow citizen is in a markedly deprived, humiliated or otherwise marginalized or alienated state; and isn’t it a place of being that moves from the philosophical or intellectual so that one’s entire consciousness is infused with the dedication to making improvement in the lives of our family, community, nation and world and that it this recognition that ultimately makes live worth living? Isn’t it ultimately premised on the ethic?

And if that consciousness is attained we will not then recoil in shame by what we see has been done to our disenfranchised and marginalized and be motivated by righteous anger that indignities could be committed against the most vulnerable in our name in the country we call Canada by the most powerful.

I can think of no better to place than talk about the obverse of hate and prejudice than Vancouver- one of our most beautiful cities and the birthplace of many positive forces in our county- for if racism and homophobia and anti-Semitism and similar type descriptive words encapsulate fear, lies irrationality, envy and ignorance – what is on the other side? Acceptance of people who are different; understanding of people who are different and ultimately empathy; promotion of harmony amongst different peoples and a deep seated unshakeable conviction to uplift those who are most compromised through historical structural forces and ideologies.

This means more education, more contact with others, more funding for the institutions such as the police and courts who are on the front lines and more leadership to bring about greater sanctuaries of peace.

The Canadian Jewish community through vehicles such as Canadian Jewish Congress and B’nai Brith envision a Canada as comprehensive mutual support system, a Canada united by a passion for the attainment of a just open and democratic society, free of threatening words and violent deeds and committed wholeheartedly to justice for First Nations; eradication and discrimination against our brothers and sisters whether they be Muslim, Indo Canadian, Filipiono Chinese, gay or disabled

This is the visioning but we in our own community and as part of the larger society must continually re-evaluate why discrimination is still too pervasive and why hate erupts against the vulnerable while the love ethic is so often absent. For once actuated by the love ethic we will be motivated as much to speak out on behalf of our fellow British Columbians who are subjected to indignities as we might for ourselves if experiencing a similar affront.

Our law enforcement officers are on the front lines and I know I speak for all of us here from minority communities that we are grateful for your commitment in combatting hate and we will continue to advocate for more funding so that you may have the adequate resources and the most trained resources to make your work even more effective.

I want to thank the organizers of this Conference who through setting the stage for today’s discussion are contributing to the creation of increasingly more expansive sanctuaries of personal dignity and harmony so that our magnificent commonalities and differences may flourish. It is of course a task that will not be finished in our generation but to paraphrase one of our time honoured teachings; we are not obligated to finish all of the work of the world, but we are certainly obliged to do our part.

Thank you for the opportunity to address this committed group of my fellow citizenry.