View as
webpage
Dear John,
This week, CIJA celebrated removal of a donation platform from a terrorist
organization,
applauded
exclusion of
two speakers with documented histories of antisemitism and
other hate from a prominent Canadian Muslim group’s convention,
and discussed the
recent legislative actions in Israel and the discontent that has
resulted from
it. For more on this and on
our upcoming
Antisemitism: Face
It Fight It conference
and important mission for young leaders, read on.
Read on to learn more about
both.
- The CIJA Team
CIJA was part of a coalition of 11 international
organizations that, in late August, issued a letter to
the major payment processor Stripe demanding that they stop handling
donations for Alliance for Global Justice, which was providing fiscal
sponsorship and payment services to Samidoun. Samidoun is a Canadian
not-for-profit that has been widely acknowledged as affiliated with
the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), a Canada-,
EU-, US-, and Israel-designated terrorist organization.
This week, Stripe announced that is no longer handling
donations for an "anti-capitalist" and "progressive" charity following
multiple Washington Examiner
reports on the nonprofit group's terrorism
ties.
CIJA was pleased to learn that, after inquiries from the
National Post, Egyptian Sheikh
Nashaat Ahmed, a man who, as noted in the Post,
openly prays “for the Jewish people to be destroyed, and who refers to
Jews as evil beasts, the worst of the earth’s living creatures, and
the descendants of apes and pigs” was pulled from the speaker list of
the Muslim Association of Canada’s annual convention last
weekend.
Amira Elghawaby, Canada’s first Special Representative on
Combating Islamophobia, was also scheduled to speak at the conference;
however, after queries from the National
Post, Canadian Heritage confirmed on Thursday that
she had been pulled from the speakers
lineup. This is not
the first time that MAC has promoted speakers associated with
antisemitism, homophobia, misogyny, and other hatred. While we are
pleased action was taken to remove the Government representative and
one of the speakers who promoted antisemitism, several others at the
conference nonetheless also had histories of hateful rhetoric that
contrast starkly to Canadian values.
As noted by CIJA’s President and CEO Shimon Koffler Fogel in
the Post article, “Year after year,
the Muslim Association of Canada platforms speakers with records of
promoting virulent antisemitism, homophobia, misogyny, and hatred at
its convention. A major Muslim organization representing a community
that itself is the target of hate should know better than to promote
that same hatred towards other marginalized groups. Instead, they
choose to amplify bigotry, prejudice, and intolerance. This year’s
conference is a missed opportunity to show unity against the vitriol
we all face. It is the responsibility of each of us to combat hatred
and racism, and we should expect no less from Canadian
Muslims.”
Next week,
Israel’s High Court will hear
appeals against a
key plank in the judicial reform plan of Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu’s government. CEO and President Shimon Koffler Fogel recently sat down with Ellin
Bessner from the
Canadian Jewish News about Israel’s controversial judicial reform, the
resultant civil
unrest
and political
turmoil in
Israel, and how
Canadian Jewish
leaders are figuring out how to navigate the crisis domestically and
abroad.
(Interview starts at 3:58)
Antisemitism: Face It,
Fight It. Your opportunity not just to
make, but to be, the difference, in the fight against
Jew-hatred.
CIJA in the
News
Community
Calendar
September 15-17 | Rosh
Hashanah September 24-25 | Yom
Kippur October 16-17
| Antisemitism:
Face It, Fight It
Careers
Executive
Director, Hamilton Jewish Family Services
|