Thursday, 12 May
4 pm Pacific/7 pm Eastern
Join webinar (no advance registration required): https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87226244593
12 May, Online Event: Nakba Commemoration – Personal Story and Panel Discussion
Write a letter: Don’t let McGill University Silence Palestine Solidarity
The Palestine Solidarity Policy was approved by the undergraduate student body of McGill University, with 71% of the vote! However, the McGill administration has threatened to terminate an agreement with the undergraduate student union that would withhold its funding after the student union adopted the Palestine Solidarity Policy in its campus referendum.
Read the full Palestine Solidarity Policy: https://bit.ly/MGillPalestinePolicy
Subsequently, McGill University has threatened to terminate its Memorandum of Agreement with the Students’ Society of McGill University (SSMU).
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network joined with Roger Waters, Richard Falk, John Dugard, Libby Davies, Yann Martel, Chris Hedges, as well as several hundred other academics, artists, lawyers and activists, and many civil society organizations have signed a letter already. Join with them in sending your letter directly to McGill Principal and Vice-Chancellor Suzanne Fortier. See the letter below.
More than 25 universities across Canada have passed BDS oriented resolutions. Over the last few weeks, motions have been passed at five universities including McGill, Concordia, UBC, Simon Fraser and University of Toronto.
The Letter
Dear McGill University Principal & Vice Chancellor
We are alarmed to learn that McGill University has threatened to terminate its Memorandum of Agreement with the Students’ Society of McGill University (SSMU) following students voting to adopt a “Palestine Solidarity Policy”. Your threat is both anti-democratic and anti-Palestinian.
Endorsed by 71% of students in a referendum, the Palestine Solidarity Policy calls for SSMU to divest from and boycott “corporations and institutions complicit in settler-colonial apartheid against Palestinians.” The vote essentially commits SSMU to take a stand against Israel’s system of racial discrimination. The Palestine Solidarity Policy aligns with a growing consensus among human rights researchers, from Amnesty International to Human Rights Watch, B’Tselem to Al-Haq, that have concluded Israel is practicing apartheid against Palestinians. It’s also not dissimilar to measures students promoted in the 1980s – opposed by administrators then – targeting apartheid in South Africa.
In opposing students’ democratic choice, the McGill administration claimed the Palestine Solidarity Policy encourages “a culture of ostracization and disrespect due to students’ identity, religious or political beliefs.” But, the policy does not mention ethnicity or nationality. It only targets institutions complicit in oppression.
In effect, your administration is seeking to silence debate on Palestinian dispossession and block McGill students from protesting Israel’s abuses. McGill students should be commended, not condemned, for pushing their Student Society to uphold its mandate to “commit to demonstrating leadership in matters of human rights and social justice.”
By threatening to terminate the agreements by which SSMU receives its fees, the McGill administration has threatened student democracy and is undermining the Palestinians quest for liberation.
We call on you as Principal and the Administration to not take any action against the SSMU for freely expressing their views democratically.
Sincerely,
Organizations
Africa4Palestine, South Africa
ِAl Harah Theater, Palestine
Al-Haadi Musalla, Toronto
Al-Quds Committee, Toronto
Australians for Palestine
Baladi Center for Culture & Arts, Bethlehem – Palestine
Bathurst Street United Church, Toronto
Boycott from Within (Israeli citizens for BDS)
Boycott Israel Network (UK)
Canada Palestine Association Vancouver
Canadian BDS Coalition
Canadian Foreign Policy Institute
Coalition against Israeli Apartheid, Victoria, BC
Edmonton Small Press Association, Edmonton, AB
Friends of Sabeel North America (FOSNA), USA
Global Peace Alliance Society, BC
Hamilton Coalition To Stop The War
HR4A Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK
Just Peace Advocates/Mouvement Pour Une Paix Juste
Justice For All Canada, Toronto
Justice for Palestinians
Knowledge Track Inc.
Let Kashmir Decide
Niagara Movement for Justice in Palestine-Israel (NMJPI)
Oakville Palestinian Rights Association (OPRA)
Palestine Solidarity Alliance, South Africa
Palestine Solidarity Campaign – Cape Town
Palestinian and Jewish Unity, Montreal
Palestinian Youth Movement – Greater Toronto Area
Peace Alliance Winnipeg
PPSWU Palestine
Ramallah Center for Human Rights Studies (RCHRS), Palestine
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network
Solidarité populaire Estrie, Sherbrooke
The Australian Friends of Palestine Association
The Muslim Youth Movement of South Africa
Toronto Raging Grannies
UJFP, Paris
Youth Political and social forum YPSF, Palestine
Individuals:
Ahmad Al-Dissi, Professor
Ahmed Abbes, Research Director in Paris
Alan Wolinski , Retired Civil Servant
Alexander Kuilman, Ex- lawyer
Anand Pillay, Academic
Andrew Brook, Retired Academic
Angus Geddes, Agricultural Economist (Retired)
Anne Bryce, Retired Health Service Manager
Anne Gardner Remley, Writer-journalist retired
Anne Henderson, Filmmaker
Annick Suzor-Weiner, Academic
Bill Skidmore, Retired professor
Bill Walton, Retired
Bruce R. Allen, Paralegal
Candice Bodnaruk, Writer and Activist
Carmel Conway, Human Rights Advocates
Carmen Aguirre, Theatre artist and author
Cathy Gulkin, Filmmaker
Charlotte Kates, International coordinator, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network
Cheryl Gaster, Lawyer (Retired), Chartered Mediator, Adjudicator
Chris Hedges, Journalist
Christine McMillan, Retired teacher and tax officer.
Claude Brasseur , Activist
D Neibert, Hospital Administrator, Systems Engineer, R.Ph.T.
Daina Z. Green, Alumna McGill
Daniel Slapcoff Graduate Student
Dave Bleakney, trade unionist
David Cannon, Chair of Jewish Network for Palestine UK
David Fairn, Teacher
David H. Finke, Retired printer; Quaker minister
David Low, Clergy
David Peters, Human Rights Advocate
David Swanson, Author
Deborah Jackman, Artist
Desmond Sequeira, Multi-Faith Chaplain (Retired), Ex-Jesuit Priest
Diana Chaplin, Palestinian supporter
Diana Neslen, Concerned grandmother
Dorar Abuzaid, Academic Support Staff
Dorothy Field, Artist, writer
Dr. Barry Heselwood, Academic
Dr. Don Crewe, Academic
Dr. S.Sayyid , Academic
Dr. Dwyer Sullivan, High School teacher of Social Justice and World Religions
Dror Warschawski, Academic
Ed Lehman, President, Regina Peace Council
Elena Putley, Artist
Elizabeth-Anne Malischewski, Community activist
Emilio Alvarez, Artist
Enver Domingo, Activist
Eric Mills, Editor
Father Robert Assaly, Former McGill Faculty Lecturer
Frances Baskerville, Artist
Frances Combs, United Church of Canada clergy
Francis Collins, Human Rights Advocate
Frank Roles, MD PhD FRMS, emeritus professor Ghent University
Frank White, retired
Garry Potter, Professor
Genie Silver, Ph.D., Academic
Gerry Hobden, Human Rights Advocate
Glenn D Tarver, Human Rights Advocate
Glenn Michalchuk, Peace and human rights activist
Gordon Doctorow, Ed.D, Retired academic
Hassan Husseini, Labour Negotiator
Helen Marks, Secretary, Liverpool Friends of Palestine
Henry Zaccak, CEO
J.W.Freeman, Mathematics Lecturer, retired
Jake Javanshir, Human Rights Advocate
Jalal Kawash, Academic
James Benham, Lawyer
James Dickins, Human Rights Advocate
James Prothero, Artist
Jan C Steven, Human Rights Advocate
Jane Collier, Academic
Jean Gagne, Supporter, Independent Jewish Voices Montreal Chapter
Jeff Winkelaar, Retired
Jennifer Whitfield, Human Rights Advocate
Jim Mitchell, MDCM 1964
Joe Modeste, Retired teacher
John Coates, Professional Engineer
John Dugard, Former Judge ad hoc Int Court of Justice
John Garrett, Academic (retired)
John Grant, Retired Adviser
John Greyson, Film/video artist
John Liss, Lawyer
John M. Darling, Archivist
John Molgaard, Retired academic
John Philpot, Lawyer
John Porter, IT specialist
John Price, Emeritus Professor, University of Victoria
John Steinmeyer, Independent Researcher
Jonathan Rosenhead, Academic
Jooneed Jeeroburkhan, Writer & Human Rights Activist
Judi McCallum, Retired librarian
Judith Cravitz, Exec member, Jews for Justice for Palestinians (UK)
K & S Selfop, Solidarity Activists
Karen Evans, Human Rights Advocates
Karen Platt, Jewish retired college instructor
Karen Rodman, Exec Director, Just Peace Advocates
Kate Chung, Retired, grandmother
Kate Langton, Research manager
Kate Randle Hardy, Academic
Kathleen Von Riesen, RN
Ken Stone, Treasurer, Hamilton Coalition To Stop The War
Kevin Gould, Academic, Dept of Geography, Planning and Environment, Concordia University
Khaled L. Mouammar, Former Member, Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada
Larry Grand, Retired, taxpayer, citizen
Lawrence Sutherland, Activist
Les Levidow, Academic
Lesley McGorrigan, University staff
Libby Davies, Former Member of Parliament
Lilian Patey, Clergy
Louise Seidel, Disabled Theatre Artist
Marilyn Hay, Human Rights Advocate
Marina Barham, Human Rights Advocate
Marion Davis, United Church of Canada clergyperson
Marlena Santoyo, Member, Women’s International League for Peace & Freedom
Martin Fontaine, Agent de pastorale
Maruf Dewan, Human Rights Advocate
Mary Brown, Human Rights Advocate
Mary Lou Jorgensen-Bacher, Government Worker
Maryanne Stone-Jimenez, Lactation Consultant
Maureen, Retired Teacher
Michael A. Lebowitz, Professor emeritus of economcs, SFU
Michael Wilde, Retired Lecturer
Michal Sapir, Writer and musician
Miguel Figueroa, Human Rights Advocate
Mike Cushman, Academic
Miko Peled, Author/activist for Palestine
Nadege Couamin, Human Rights Advocate
Naheed Gilani, Human Rights Advocate
Nahla Abdo, Professor of Sociology/Carleton University
Nora Lester Murad, Writer, educator
Norma Rantisi, Academic
Odette Dabit, a proud Palestinian
Ofer Neiman, Israeli citizen
Omer Aijazi, Academic
P. I. Gomes, Sociologist
Paul Waley, Academic
Paul Wimpeney, former Assistant Director, Hopwood Hall College, Rochdale, Greater Manchester
Peter Eglin, Professor Emeritus, WLU
Peter Jackson, Acoustic Engineer and Technical Director (Retired)
Peter Purich, Retired
Phyllis Creighton, Retired adjunct faculty, Trinity College, Faculty of Divinity, Toronto
Pouya Valizadeh, Professor
Prof. Haim Bresheeth-Zabner, Author, filmmaker, academic researcher
Prof. Emeritus Bob Brecher, Retired academic
Professor Gregory Philo, (Emeritus) Academic
Professor Megan Povey
Professor Richard Seaford, Academic
Rabab Abdulhadi, Director and Senior Scholar, Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Studies, San Francisco State University
Rabbi David Mivasair, Parent of two McGill graduates
Rachel Reesor-Taylor, Academic
Rajesh Ravisankar, Human Rights Advocate
Ralph Carl Wushke, Clergy
Rasha Soliman, Academic
Rashmi Luther, Retired professor, School of Social Work, Carleton University
Razan AlSalah, Academic
Reem Kelani, Singer, musician, broadcaster
Regina Birchem, Ph.D.
Renee Nunsn-Rappard, Retired nurse
Reuben Roth, Professor Emeritus, Laurentian University
Rev. Dr. Robin Wardlaw, retired United Church minister
Rev. F. Mark Mealing, Ph.D. retired academic Folklorist, unretired Anglican priest
Rev. Steve Berube, Human Rights Observer Palestine/Israel
Richard Falk, Professor of International Law Emeritus
Rina King, Human Rights Advocates
Robert Boyce, Academic
Robert D. Kent, Emeritus Professor, Computer Science, Academic
Robert Fantina, ِAuthor and journalist
Robert Gowenlock, Retired
Robin Boodle, Concerned Canadian
Roger Waters, Musician/Activist
Ron Benner, Artist, Adjunct Professor, Dept. of Visual Arts, Western University
Roz Isaac, Concerned citizen
Ruth Ballardie, Academic
S.L. Bondarchuk , NPO Administrator, Artist
Sally Campbell, McGill BA 1968 Lawyer/Mediator, Retired
Samuel Halévy, Artist
Sara Traub, Human Rights Advocate
Sasha Lofquist Human Rights Advocate
Sherry Ann Chapman, Academic
Sheryl Nestel, Independent Scholar
Sid Shniad, Member, Independent Jewish Voices Canada
Stephen Aberle, Performing artist
Stephen Tiller, Human Rights Advocate
Susan Czarnocki , Retired
Susan Stout, Retired
Suzanne Riddell, Human Rights Advocates
Sylvat Aziz, Academic
Tamara Lorincz, Academic
Thomas Brown, Professor Emeritus, Mathematics
Tony Greenstein, Writer and journalist
Trevor Goodger-Hill, Writer and Poet
Victor Woods, Research Human Health
W. T. Beckett, Human rights activist
Wael Hallaq, Avalon Foundation Prof. Columbia Univ.
Wendy Gichuru, Social activist
William – known as David Berryman, University Chaplain, UK
Wolfe Erlichman, Member, Independent Jewish Voices
Yann Martel, Author
Yom Shamash, Teacher
Campaign initiated by
Canadian Foreign Policy Institute (CFPI)
15 May, Vancouver: Nakba 74 Rally and March
Sunday, 15 May
2 pm
Vancouver Art Gallery
Vancouver, unceded Coast Salish territories, BC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/565376358091078/
VANCOUVER, ALL OUT FOR PALESTINE. 74 years of settler colonialism, ethnic cleansing, and genocide as Palestinians continue to resist and fight against Israeli aggression since the Nakba in 1948. Every year we watch in horror as we witness the same acts of violence committed.
We have witnessed an escalation in the past couple of weeks with heightened aggression around times of worship during Ramadan and attacks against Al-Aqsa mosque, just like last year’s Unity Intifada, where Palestinians in Palestine and the diaspora rose up together internationally.
Last year, a flame was lit in the Palestinian resistance as Palestinians of Lydd, Haifa, Yaffa, Akka, and across the West Bank and Gaza rose up against 74 years of Zionist colonialism. All power to our people defending Jerusalem and Palestine for 74 years from Zionism and land theft. From Turtle Island to Palestine, we resist settler colonialism in all its forms.
15 May, Brooklyn/NYC: Nakba Day March for Palestinian Resistance and Return
Sunday, 15 May
1:00 pm
72nd and 5th
Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, NYC
More info: https://www.instagram.com/p/CdQrblmuzuP/
Bring your flags, keffiyehs, and your rage.
After 74 years of ongoing ethinc cleansing and genocide, how could anyone expect anything else from Palestinians but resistance?
In response to the latest wave of attacks on Palestinians in Jerusalem by zionist settlers backed by the full weight of the occupation, Palestinian youth are rising up and confronting their oppressors with stones in hand, destroying security cameras, raising the Palestinian flag and defending Al-Aqsa, Jenin, Masafer Yatta, and all of Palestine.
From Jerusalem, to Gaza, to ‘48, to the West Bank, to the camps, to everywhere where Palestinian refugees currently live in exile, we must defend the Palestinian right to resist zionist settler violence and support Palestinian resistance in all its forms. By any means necessary. With no exceptions and no fine print.
We must not only commemorate the Nakba but also support Palestinian resistance in all it’s forms! Join us to celebrate our youth resisting and overcoming against the occupation in Jerusalem and declaring that all Palestinians refugees will return within our lifetime!
13 May, Webinar: Double Standard — Canada’s terrorist list, the IDF, Palestinians and the case of Khaled Barakat
Friday, 13 May
1 pm Pacific/4 pm Eastern/8 pm UTC/10 pm central Europe/11 pm Palestine
Register here to join: https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_fZaKNSQLSQSGrMHdIP5QsA
Double Standard: Canada’s terrorist list, the IDF, Palestinians and the case of Khaled Barakat
Organized by the Canadian Foreign Policy Institute and Just Peace Advocates.
Panelists
Miko Peled is an Israeli-American activist, author and international speaker. He is author of the books The General’s Son: The Journey of an Israeli in Palestine and Injustice: The Story of the Holy Land Foundation Five.
Yavar Hameed is a lawyer, mediator and conflict resolution practitioner and teaches at Carleton University’s Department of Law.
Khaled Barakat is a Palestinian writer and journalist.
Moderator: Bianca Mugyenyi, Director of Canadian Foreign Policy Institute
Write a letter: Join over 60 organizations and thousands of people to stop the smears targeting Palestinian advocacy and defend Khaled Barakat
Recently, the Canada Palestine Association, together with the Canadian Foreign Policy Institute, Just Peace Advocates, Palestinian and Jewish Unity and BDS Vancouver – Coast Salish, launched a collective statement of solidarity in support of Palestinian writer Khaled Barakat and Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network in response to a smear campaign from the right-wing newspaper, the National Post, and multiple Zionist organizations. Over 60 organizations have already signed on!
You can take action in support of the statement and in defense of Khaled Barakat and Samidoun by sending your letter to Canadian PM Justin Trudeau and Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino to tell them that you join with the 60 organizations that have called to “Stop the Smear Campaigns against Palestinian Advocacy”. Thousands of letters have already been sent, but we need to make the message clear.
Click here to send your letter and stand with us!
Recently, we have witnessed an intensified campaign by the pro-Israel lobby in Canada to smear Palestinian activists and their supporters. Last week, the National Post (NP) ran an online article about Palestinian-Canadian writer Khaled Barakat and the advocacy organization Samidoun. On April 30, the same article was splashed across their front page of their paper and has since been referenced in the Canadian Senate and the Jerusalem Post.
A year ago, over 35 concerned organizations issued a statement detailing their rejection of attempts to criminalize Samidoun, a Palestinian advocacy group for prisoners, by the Centre for Israel and Jewish Advocacy (CIJA). They asked at that time: Should Canada’s policies on these important issues be decided by what the Israeli government and its lobby dictates?
Is this renewed attack an attempt to deflect attention from the multiple student union resolutions in support of Palestine at major Canadian universities? Or an effort to distract from the growing number of organizations that have expressly condemned Israeli practices as apartheid, such as Amnesty International? Or a distraction to cover up Israel’s continuing ethnic cleansing, most recently in the villages of Masafer Yatta?
The new statement calling for an end to these ramped-up smear campaigns is supported by diverse solidarity and community groups in Canada and abroad, as well as prominent individuals like Roger Waters, Jonathan Kuttab and Tony Greenstein.
Join with them to tell the Canadian government that the old smear tactics of “trial by fire” are not acceptable. This attack is an attack on all of us who are advocating for the liberation and dignity of the Palestinian people.
Click here to send your letter and stand with us!
Organizational signers of the statement — write to cpavancouver@gmail.com to endorse or use this form: https://bit.ly/StopPalSolSmear
Canada Palestine Association-Vancouver
BDS Vancouver-Coast Salish
Endorsed by:
Academics for Palestine – Concordia
Bayan Canada
BDS Caucus UTGSU
Barnard-Boecker Centre Foundation, Victoria BC
Canada Palestine Support Network (CanPalNet)
Canada-Philippines Solidarity for Human Rights
Canadian BDS Coalition
Canadian Foreign Policy Institute
Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid-Victoria
Communist Party Canada
East Indian Defense Committee (EIDC)
Edmonton Small Press Association
Friends of the Filipino People in Struggle – Coast Salish Territories
Free Palestine Halifax
Free Palestine YEG, Edmonton
Global Peace Alliance BC
GTA Palestine Movement
GT4BDS (Greater Toronto 4 BDS)
Hamilton Coalition to Stop The War
Independent Jewish Voices Canada
Independent Jewish Voices Vancouver
International League of Peoples’ Struggle Canada
Just Peace Advocates
Just Peace Committee-BC
Justice For All Canada, Toronto
Justice for Palestinians, Calgary
Labour for Palestine – Canada
Niagara Movement for Justice in Palestine-Israel (NMJPI)
Oakville Palestinian Rights Association OPRA
OPIRG Carleton
Palestinian and Jewish Unity PAJU
Palestinian Student Society Association (PSSA), Guelph
Palestinian Youth Movement PYM
Palestine Solidarity Network – Edmonton
Peace Alliance Winnipeg
Socialist Action
Students Against Israeli Apartheid U of T
Sulong UBC
Toronto Raging Grannies
Vancouver Peace Council
Venezuela Peace and Solidarity Committee, BC
Alkarama (Palestinian Womens Movement), Spain
Communist Youth of Sweden, SKU, Sweden
Friends of Sabeel North America
Free Speech on Israel, UK
Indonesian Palestine Alliance IDPAL, Indonesia
Jewish Network for Palestine (UK)
Jews for Palestinian Right of Return, USA
Labor for Palestine, US
Nevadans for Palestinian Human rights, Las Vegas
NYU Law Students for Justice in Palestine, NYC
PAAF PEOPLE AGAINST APARTHEID AND FASCISM, Cape Town
Palestine Solidarity Alliance, South Africa
Palestine Solidarity Campaign – Cape Town
Palestinian Union in Latin America
Peace, Justice, Sustainability NOW, Florida
Popular Conference for Palestinians Abroad, Lebanon
(لبنان – المؤتمر الشعبي لفلسطينني الخارج)
Revolutionaire Eenheid, The Netherlands
Students for Justice in Palestine at Butler University
Students for Justice in Palestine, Chicago
Students for justice in Palestine – Rutgers, New Brunswick, NJ
Students for Justice in Palestine at UC Davis, California
Students for Justice in Palestine, Wayne NJ
Students United for Palestinian Equal Rights – University of Washington
Veterans for Peace, CA, USA
Samidoun statement on smear campaigns targeting Palestinian liberation and anti-Palestinian racism in Canada
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network condemns in the strongest terms the smear campaign targeting Palestinian Canadian leftist writer and community organizer Khaled Barakat as well as the work of Samidoun, by the right-wing National Post, intentionally forwarding the agenda of pro-Israel lobby organizations in Canada. It is clear that this is not a random attack; the content, far from its packaging, is in reality warmed-over retreads of various attacks from the Israeli occupation regime and Zionist publications over the years, with an added attempt to sensationally criminalize and stigmatize Palestinian organizing and activism in Canada.
Let us be clear. We will not be deterred by Israeli’s designations or by smear campaigns such as this. We stand with Khaled Barakat. We stand with the Palestinian people, their resistance, and their 4,500 Palestinian prisoners, leaders of the resistance and of the movement for justice and liberation in Palestine, from the river to the sea.
The front-page placement of the article coincided with multiple Israeli-government-backed campaigns internationally targeting Palestinian community and Palestine solidarity organizing. It is clear that this reflects these forces’ growing anguish and concern about the reality that the majority of people around the world, and even inside countries like Canada and the U.S., where governments provide the Israeli occupation with significant military, diplomatic and political support, stand with the Palestinian people and their efforts to throw off colonialism, occupation and apartheid.
Why did the National Post publish this article? Of course, the National Post has never hesitated to engage in right-wing, pro-imperialist and anti-Palestinian argumentation and attacks. Most recently, in the past two months, four major Canadian university student bodies and/or student governments have passed new resolutions and policies in support of Palestinian rights and implementing boycott, divestment and sanctions policies against the Israeli occupation: at McGill, Concordia, University of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University. This comes in addition to multiple resolutions that have been adopted over the years by Canadian labour unions, student unions and student bodies, and even the limited resolutions adopted by the federal New Democratic Party (NDP).
In May 2021, during the Unity Uprising in Palestine, tens of thousands of people took to the streets in cities and small towns across Canada, as they did around the world. At the same time that the Palestinian people’s resistance on the ground in Palestine was making clear that the occupation would not be able to freely commit its ongoing war crimes and crimes against humanity, people here were taking action to demand a change in Canadian policy and an end to complicity in these crimes — along with accountability and real justice for Indigenous peoples of this land.
It’s quite clear: Israeli colonization, occupation and apartheid are losing ground. Major human rights and legal institutions have spoken out, from Human Rights Watch to Amnesty International to the Harvard University Law School legal clinic to the United Nations’ ESCWA. Millions of people are taking to the streets for justice in Palestine. The Palestinian resistance is perhaps stronger than ever before, amid a growing resistance camp in the region and internationally.
The response of the occupation has been to escalate their use of the “terrorist” label to the extent that international advocacy groups like Samidoun, Palestinian community organizations in Europe, and six major Palestinian NGOs like Addameer, Defense for Children International and Al-Haq, are currently being labeled as “terrorist” by the Israeli occupation regime. Israeli president Isaac Herzog has even labeled an ice cream brand not selling in illegal settlements “a new form of terrorism.”
This has been combined with efforts pushed by various official entities, including Israeli intelligence, the “Ministry of Strategic Affairs,” the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, etc, with the marketing of “dossiers” so thinly evidenced that even Western governments have found them lacking (yet appear to be relied upon in the National Post report). The attempt to silence advocacy for Palestine by using the “terror” label is failing. In fact, Samidoun has grown more since our designation in one year than in any single year prior.
In France, where exactly these same types of smears were used to push for the French government to ban the Collectif Palestine Vaincra and other pro-Palestine associations, the French government has already lost the first legal challenge — not only is the Collectif once again actively marching for Palestine, but the government was required to pay 4500 EUR for the violation of its rights. A German court found in March of this year that it was illegal for Berlin’s interior minister to ban Khaled Barakat’s speech on U.S. foreign policy, Palestine and the Arab countries. Nevertheless, we see the National Post, working hand in hand with expressly Zionist organizations, in an attempt to push the Canadian government down a similar failed path of criminalization through an astroturfed campaign of smears and attacks.
As Samidoun, we know first and foremost that attacks on us are primarily aimed at the Palestinian prisoners, seeking to isolate them from international solidarity and support. As we write today, there are 4,500 Palestinians jailed in occupation prisons. Of those, over 500 are jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention. They have been engaged in a boycott of the military courts since the 1st of January 2022. Two are currently on hunger strike to end their arbitrary detention, Khalil Awawdeh and Raed Rayan. They are joined by hundreds of Palestinian children locked behind bars. Every one of those Palestinian prisoners deserves front-page coverage in Canadian mainstream media — not a smear campaign, but a real look at their suffering and steadfastness and the injustice against them, which is enabled by the complicity of governments like Canada’s. While the National Post can find plenty of column inches and front-page space to smear Palestinians in diaspora, Canadian journalists face silencing and have apologized for so much as mentioning the word “Palestine.”
Further, this is clearly an attack on Palestinians organizing in exile and diaspora. The Israeli colonial regime has already forced Palestinians from their homes and lands for over 74 years of Nakba, denying their inalienable right to return, and yet, is unable to throw these Palestinians in Canada, the U.S., Europe, Latin America and elsewhere in administrative detention or invade their homes in midnight raids. Its inability to do so is apparently frustrating, especially as new generations of Palestinians come forward to lead the struggle inside and outside Palestine; this type of smear campaign is a transparent attempt to silence the voice of the Palestinian people in exile and specifically the Palestinian-Canadian community.
We also see these campaigns as an attempt to undermine our collective solidarity through the targeting of individuals and specific organizations and to police the movement, as well as to instrumentalize and deploy anti-Palestinian racism and incite state and individual violence against Khaled Barakat and other Palestinian activists. These attacks underline more than ever the importance of a collective defense of all of us against the perpetrators and promoters of colonialism, imperialism and racism. This is not a lone example; far from it — it reflects the attacks on Prof. Rabab Abdulhadi in the United States, hundreds of mostly Palestinian and Arab Canadian and American students profiled on smear websites like Canary Mission, educators like Javier Davila and Nadia Shoufani, or restaurants like Foodbenders in Toronto.
Similarly, we note that this front-page National Post smear campaign comes one day before the ADL in the United States announced an escalation in its decades-long campaigns attacking organizations advocating for justice in Palestine. It comes days after B’nai Brith Canada released a spurious “audit of antisemitism” that highlighted the slogan: “Israel and Canada: Partners in Apartheid, Partners in Colonialism”, indicating that their real target is the anti-racist movement that stands with Palestine. This report was nonetheless given favourable and unchallenging coverage in Canadian media.
It also happened at the same time that the occupation (with the apparent complicity of the U.S.) was denying travel to two Palestinian human rights defenders — part of the “designated six organizations” — to attend the World Social Forum in Mexico. All of this is an attempt to silence the voices of the Palestinian people — but if 74 years of Nakba, state violence, colonialism and mass imprisonment have not done so, escalating smear campaigns are certainly bound for failure.
The most important response that we can make is to build the movement for Palestine. One of the goals of such campaigns is to divert our compass away from our ongoing campaigns and instill fear in the community. By organizing and building the movement for Palestine, we can show our support for Khaled Barakat and the Palestinian people and cause as a whole. Certainly, we will work to hold the National Post accountable — but it’s the movement for Palestinian liberation that is at the core of the issue.
We urge all people in Canada to take to the streets on May 15 and the Week of Palestinian Struggle, remembering 74 years of ongoing Nakba and celebrating the ongoing struggle for liberation. (See the events in Vancouver and Montreal here — more to come!) We further urge everyone to join us on June 1-4 in Ottawa for the International League of People’s Struggle Assembly. Khaled Barakat will be speaking on behalf of the Masar Badil, the Alternative Palestinian Revolutionary Path, and we’ll also hear from Charlotte Kates of Samidoun, Hanna Kawas of the Canada Palestine Association, and many more strugglers for justice — and discuss how we can build and strengthen our anti-imperialist movement.
We also want to invite supporters of justice and liberation in Palestine to get involved with Samidoun. We’re organizing in Vancouver, Toronto, Ottawa and elsewhere, and we can be even more effective and stronger as we grow and build. We want to work together with your organizations and groups, develop new chapters and welcome new members, and we invite you to join us in struggle. Contact us at samidoun@samidoun.net to learn more about how you can get involved, or click here to donate to support our work.
From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!
International Workers’ Day 2022: Behind bars and in the streets, Palestinian workers lead the resistance
“The imperialist-Zionist-[reactionary Arab regime] alliance safeguards not only the imperialist interests, but the Zionist interests and the interests of the ruling reactionary bourgeois class in the area as well. We must build the alliance of the workers and peasants, Palestinian, Lebanese, Syrian, Arab, Middle Eastern, and internationally, that destroys this alliance. We are one hundred percent capable of that, and the movement of history points in this direction….Let us struggle to increase the role of the working class and the real proletarian leadership, not the vanguard that, once in leadership, tails the bourgeoisie and forgets its masses. We want the leadership that remains among the workers and the peasants and lives as they live and raises their voices, carrying their pains!” – George Habash, Palestinian revolutionary and founder of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, May 1980
“The sons and daughters of the popular classes of Palestine, the workers, the farmers in the villages, the refugees of the camps, have always been the leaders and the driving force of our Palestinian national liberation movement. The Palestinian popular classes have been the freedom fighters, the strugglers and the resisters on the front lines, confronting the occupation and Zionist colonization in Palestine. And so it is the case that the popular classes of Palestine fill the ranks of the Israeli prisons, the builders of the Palestinian prisoners’ movement continuing on the front lines of resistance, building the ongoing Palestinian revolution.” – Kamil Abu Hanish, imprisoned Palestinian struggler, 2017
On International Workers’ Day 2022, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network reiterates our solidarity with the working class and popular masses of Palestine and the world. 1 May is an international day of struggle for liberation from capitalism, exploitation, racism, imperialism and Zionism. Everywhere our chapters and affiliates are located, we are taking to the streets with our comrades to advance our collective struggles for liberation.
Palestinian workers are on the front lines of daily struggle. It is the popular masses of Palestine that make up the vast majority of Palestinian prisoners, martyrs and freedom fighters. We urge all international workers’ unions and movements to stand in solidarity with Palestinian workers fighting for life and liberation by escalating their role in the boycott of the colonial occupation, including the so-called Histadrut trade union. The liberation of Palestine is part and parcel of the liberation of the global working class.
(We have revised and updated the following text for International Workers’ Day 2022. All images are classic posters of the Palestinian revolution via the Palestine Poster Project.)
Palestinian workers and the popular classes have always played the key, leading role as the force of the Palestinian liberation movement, inside and outside Palestine. The prisoners’ movement is no exception; indeed, the vast majority of Palestinian prisoners come from the working and popular classes, the refugee camps and the villages, and it is these workers who put their bodies and lives on the line for freedom.
Palestinian workers: A history of leadership in struggle
Palestinians have engaged in labor organizing from the early days of the 20th century, organizing unions, defending their work against Zionist attempts to exclude Palestinian labor from Palestinian land, and taking action to defend their rights as workers and as indigenous Palestinians.
General strikes have always been a key mechanism of Palestinian resistance, from the earliest revolts of the Palestinian people against British and then Zionist colonialism. In the 1936 revolution, Palestinian workers’ six-month general strike was at that time the longest in the world. This continued over the years, as Palestinian workers in exile built the Palestinian liberation movement and its organizations, and as Palestinian workers and labor unions led in the organizing of the first intifada. UNRWA workers and others in the Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon paved the way for the modern revolution, as revolutionary leaders like Abu Maher al-Yamani organized refugees for liberation and return on the basis of their trade union work before the Nakba in Palestine.
In the 1950s, Palestinian labor organizers in occupied Palestine ’48 were jailed as they attempted to keep their organizations intact under martial law. At least seven Palestinian trade union leaders were deported from the West Bank between 1969 and 1979. These attacks happened as Palestinians inside Israeli jails fought to end forced labor, a victory that was achieved only through great sacrifice. Omar Shalabi, a Syrian prisoner, was killed under torture in October 1973 during the protests against Israeli forced labor.
Targeting and imprisonment of Palestinian workers
Palestinian workers are regularly subject to colonial forms of imprisonment, from the political targeting of workers’ organizations to the mass criminalization of Palestinians seeking employment inside occupied Palestine ’48. Palestinian workers are frequently arrested for “entering Israel without a permit,” despite the fact that many of these same workers are Palestinian refugees denied their right to return to their original homes and lands for the past 74 years. The systematic siege and subjugation of the Palestinian economy, from the texts of the Paris Protocols to the latest normalization agreements promoted by U.S. imperialism through their sponsorship of reactionary Arab regimes, has forced thousands of Palestinians to seek work with or without permits as day laborers, often in construction.
At any given time, there are approximately 1000 Palestinians arrested, detained or fined for seeking to work in their own homeland; they are not classified in the Israeli colonial system as “security” prisoners and are thus missing from the statistics related to Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails. However, it is clear that everything about these workers’ situation is deeply political – they are imprisoned for their Palestinian existence on Palestinian land, specifically as Palestinian workers.
Palestinian workers are subjected to ongoing abuse at checkpoints, systemic discrimination on the job from the river to the sea, and economic isolation, starvation and siege meant to compel workers into becoming construction workers and servants in illegal settlements. The siege on Gaza is yet another attack on Palestinian workers. There are officially 372,000 people unemployed in Palestine, and the Gaza Strip has the highest levels of unemployment in Palestine due to the deliberate targeting of the Palestinian economy and its productive basis, including workers, fishers and farmers.
There are currently over 4,500 Palestinian political prisoners jailed by the Zionist regime, including over 600 jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention. The administrative detainees are currently engaged in a complete boycott of the occupation military courts, since 1 January 2022, and two — Khalil Awawdeh and Raed Rayan — are on hunger strike, their lives on the line for freedom. The Palestinian prisoners are on the front lines of Palestinian resistance on a daily basis. They are leaders in the Palestinian, Arab and international camp of resistance — and like the freedom fighters and martyrs of Palestine, they represent the workers and popular classes of Palestine, those who face multiple forms of exploitation and oppression at the hands of the Zionist regime. Freedom for Palestinian prisoners is essential to the liberation of the Palestinian working class and popular masses — the central feature of the liberation of Palestine from imperialism and Zionism, from the river to the sea.
The Histadrut: A colonialist entity that must be boycotted
The drive to exclude Palestinian workers has always been part of the Zionist colonial project. This has been reflected in the founding principles and continued operation of the Israeli Histadrut, a trade union federation founded with the explicit purpose of promoting Zionist colonization of Palestinian land and excluding Palestinian labor. Despite having a fraternal relationship with the AFL-CIO and other major labor unions worldwide, it actually exploits Palestinian workers inside Israel by deducting fees from their salaries while denying them benefits. Its role predates the Nakba and continues to reflect this colonial relationship, which is why Palestinian workers and labor union solidarity activists have urged a boycott of the Histadrut by international labor federations.
Palestinian workers in exile and diaspora fight back
Palestinian workers in exile also continue to struggle against exploitation and oppression. In Lebanon, amid the economic crisis and the targeting of Lebanon by imperialist powers and financial exploiters, Palestinian refugees continue to be denied access to numerous professions, leading to massive unemployment and frequent despair among the working class. Palestinian refugees forced to flee to Europe, North America and elsewhere from Lebanon, Syria and occupied Palestine confront racist, repressive policies that inhibit their right to work and threaten them with deportation, detention and exclusion.
They confront the racism of “Fortress Europe” and criminalization of refugee workers alongside fellow migrants and workers seeking safety and refuge from the military, social, environmental and economic disasters forced upon their home countries by the very imperialist states that then deny their rights. They face severe exploitation in black market labor. Still, these workers continue to struggle despite all odds not only to confront racism and exclusion in the imperialist countries but also to organize to confront imperialism and win their liberation. Palestinian workers are marching in, leading and organizing the demonstrations that took massively to the streets of the world during the 2021 Unity Uprising and the battle of Seif al-Quds, and are the first to be targeted for these actions by police and state repression. Inside and outside Palestine, the workers and popular masses are protecting Palestine and pushing the struggle forward, without compromise.
Confronting imperialism, Arab reactionary regimes and the Oslo Palestinian Authority
Israeli occupation and oppression reflects the sharpest edge of capitalist exploitation for the Palestinian working class, backed up fully by the most powerful and dangerous imperialist powers, especially the United States. However, they also face Arab reactionary regimes that are complicit with the exploitation and marginalization of Palestinian workers even as they pursue normalization with the Israeli state. Palestinian workers are exploited by the ruling class of these states directly in exile and diaspora as well as through their direct engagement with and promotion of the colonial economy of Zionism.
Palestinian workers also confront Palestinian capitalists and the Palestinian Authority, formed as a security subcontractor to the Israeli occupation. The Jordanian monarchy acted in the 1970s and 1980s to repress union organizing in the interests of Palestinian capitalists, while ultra-wealthy Palestinian capitalists like Bashar al-Masri are on the first lines promoting normalization and undermining the boycott of Israel.
Imperialism is on the attack around the world, using its military might and its weapons of siege and sanctions against peoples around the world. As always, it is workers and the impoverished classes who bear the heaviest brunt of these assaults. Fighting back against imperialism, including U.S., Canadian and EU sanctions on Venezuela, Cuba, Iran, Syria and indeed, nearly one-third of the world, in addition to its military interventions, warmongering and ongoing violent attacks on all forms of resistance to imperial domination, is essential to building the movement for Palestine.
A call to the workers’ movements of the world
On International Workers’ Day, we once again amplify the words of Kamil Abu Hanish, speaking from Israeli prison, urging the escalation of the boycott of Israel: “Today, we call upon you, the fighters for freedom and justice in the world, the workers’ movements, the strugglers for socialism, the movements of revolution, to escalate your support for our struggle, for the Palestinian people and for the Palestinian prisoners. We urge you to act to isolate the occupation state, to hold it accountable for 70 years of crimes against the Palestinian people…The workers’ movements, the movements of the popular classes, the movements of the oppressed, can and must take part in this battle around the world, as part and parcel of the struggle against racism, imperialism and capitalism.”
Labor unions continue to escalate their support for justice in Palestine and the boycott of the occupation, including the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, the Congress of South African Trade Unions, the National Union of Teachers, Public Services International, the Norwegian Confederation of Trade Unions (LO), the Quebec Confédération des syndicats nationaux, the United Electrical Workers union, the Scottish Trade Union Congress and more labor organizations in Ireland, the Philippines, India, France, Sweden, Belgium, Basque Country, Spain, Galicia, Brazil and more. International workers’ solidarity with Palestine has a long and proud history, including the leading role of Black and Arab autoworkers who struck in 1973 in Detroit against their union’s purchase of Israel Bonds to today’s Block the Boat campaigns, stopping ZIM ships from docking at ports globally.
We urge workers’ organizations around the world to continue to build and grow this solidarity with Palestinian workers, the leaders of the Palestinian liberation struggle, including immediately implementing the boycott and isolation of the Histadrut and a boycott of Israeli bonds and all investments in the colonial apartheid regime. Campaigns like Block the Boat illustrate the power of organized workers, the Palestinian community and people of conscience in dealing a material blow to the economy of colonialism and exploitation, and can and must be expanded.
We also express our solidarity with the struggling workers of the world, including the imprisoned labor union and workers’ movement leaders who are held behind bars or face death threats and repression for their role in defending oppressed workers. From India to the Philippines to France, from Colombia to Egypt to Turkey and Morocco, we stand with these labor movements targeted for repression. The liberation of Palestine is fundamentally linked to the liberation of all from imperialism, exploitation and capitalism.
On International Workers’ Day, these struggles must become an occasion to escalate our work to support Palestinian workers, free the prisoners, and liberate Palestine, from the river to the sea.
Palestine Nakba 74: Statement by Canadian Organizations
Nakba 74: We support Palestinian refugees to return to their homeland
What is Nakba?
The British occupation/mandate of Palestine (1917-1948) supported and facilitated a colonial-settler project in Palestine called Zionism. Settlers came mainly from Europe. Israel was created in 1948 on Palestinian land after Zionist militia destroyed more than 500 Palestinian villages and cities, and forced 750,000 Palestinians (3/4 of the population) out of their homeland. The refugees now number over seven million spread across the region and around the world.
This is what Palestinians call the Nakba (Catastrophe) and commemorate every year on May 15.
Nakba as ongoing process of ethnic cleansing
Israel today continues its violent project of dispossessing Palestinian land and expelling and oppressing Palestinians. It refuses to allow Palestinian refugees to return to their homeland, steals land from Palestinian owners in Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Naqab, enforces a brutal siege on the Palestinian people of Gaza for more than 16 years, and discriminates against Palestinians inside Israel (occupied Palestine 1948). Palestinians are fighting back against ethnic cleansing and injustice.
Palestinian ongoing resistance
We support the struggle of our Palestinian sisters and brothers in the refugee camps and in exile and diaspora around the world to return to their homeland, and of those inside historic Palestine itself, including in Jerusalem, Gaza, the West Bank and Israel (occupied Palestine ‘48), to enjoy dignity, freedom and safety in their homeland.
Unfortunately, part of the official Palestinian leadership, namely, the Palestinian Authority, is engaged in security collaboration with the occupation and oppression of Palestinian dissent, including journalists and writers, as part and parcel of the Oslo process. We condemn the destructive policy of the PA, which acts as a subcontractor for the occupation and enables, rather than challenges, the ongoing Nakba.
Our vision for the future
We strongly believe that the Palestinian refugees must have and implement the right to return to their homeland, that Israeli settler-colonial structures should be fully dismantled, and that a new system should be developed where every person in historic Palestine can enjoy full dignity, freedom and safety regardless of their religious background. This is the political meaning of “liberation of all of Palestine, from the river to the sea”. In order to make this happen, the international community must isolate the Israeli regime and hold it accountable. The United Nations has a responsibility to implement Palestinian rights, including and especially the right of Palestinian refugees to return (Resolution 194).
Canada has a role to play in achieving a positive outcome by ending its complicity in the ongoing Nakba. In 1947, Canada had a large role in formulating and passing the Partition Plan (Resolution 181) for Palestine at the UN General Assembly (The New York Times called the partition plan “The Canadian plan”), which brought about the catastrophe. Since that time, the Canadian government has continued to support Israeli occupation and oppression. It is time for these policies to come to an end.
Statement co-signers (in alphabetical order):
- Arab Left Forum (Montreal)
- Canada Palestine Association – Vancouver
- Canadian Arab Society London
- INSAF (Student Group – University of Ottawa)
- Labour for Palestine – Canada
- Masar Badil – The Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement in North America
- Nakba Commemoration Initiative Ottawa
- Palestine House (Toronto)
- Palestinian Canadian Congress (PCC)
- Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM)
- Samidoun – Palestinian Prisoner Solidairty Network
29 April, NYC: 2 demonstrations for Palestine — Al Quds Day and Rally Against CUNY Complicity with Zionism
Please join us at both of these two important demonstrations for Palestine today!


Friday, 29 April
3:30 pm
Herald Square
NYC
Info: https://www.facebook.com/events/500911681509388/
Friday, 29 April
5:30 pm
365 5th Avenue
NYC
Info: https://www.instagram.com/p/Cc59P1vJRYS/
On International Day of Quds, people of conscience gather to express solidarity with all the oppressed human beings of the world and particularly the innocent civilians of Palestine who are victimized by the oppressive and racist Zionist regime.
We invite all peace loving people to voice their opposition to the unjust and illegal occupation of the great Al-Aqsa Mosque and the usurpation of the Holy Land by the Zionist regime.
We, the citizens of the United States reserve the right to boycott any and all parties involved in practicing racist, discriminatory, and oppressive policies.
Stand with us! Stand for your rights!
We will rally at Herald Square where our speakers will shed lights on the atrocities being committed by the Zionist state on the oppressed people of Palestine.
Endorsing Organizations
– International Action Center
– Workers World Party
– Samidoun: Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network
– Neturei Karta
– Jafria Association of North America
– Muslims United for Justice
– United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC)
– With Our Lifetime
– BDS App
-Al-Awda
*
NOTE: “Muslim Congress and its AlQuds subcommittees in respective cities have no affiliation with any foreign entity.
Funds for Al-Quds events are generated by local community organizers who strongly believe in exercising their legal right to protest against oppression.
**
EMERGENCY RALLY Friday April 29th at 5:30 PM in front of CUNY Grad center.
Any CUNY orgs that would like to endorse please DM us ASAP!
The @cunychancellor recently announced he is currently on a political normalizing junket trip with 10 deans and presidents of CUNY. The statement posted on April 26th reads “Tonight I will lead a delegation of CUNY college presidents and deans to Israel to participate in a weeklong tour of the country’s cities, historic sites, and higher education institutions.”
Not only are they breaking boycott and normalizing by visiting the zionist state, they are doing this on Eid, as if to celebrate the suffering of the Palestinian people who are forced to celebrate Eid under occupation. Furthermore, this comes after multiple Zionist attacks on Al-Aqsa, dozens of Palestinians killed, and hundreds injured and jailed in just the last few weeks alone.