Continuing on our way, we saw this pile of huge stones. I told Lilian that in Suomenusko, the old Finnish beliefs before Christianity came to Finland, stones as well as trees were seen to have spirits. People conversed with stones and trees for healing and for wisdom, going out into the forest for the medicine of trees and stones. Of course, stones and trees have been symbolically important to many peoples and cultures. I told Lilian, well, I don't need to tell a Palestinian like you of the importance of stones. Today stones are the remnants of the Palestinian houses that Israel has destroyed and demolished. Palestinian youth take up stones as resistance against occupation. Indeed, a new documentary called The Stones Cry Out uses the metaphor, reality, and spiritual strength of stones to tell the story of the ongoing Nakba of Palestine, focusing on its Christian population and heritage.
Showing posts with label justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label justice. Show all posts
Thursday, June 13, 2013
the tree of life on my morning path
Continuing on our way, we saw this pile of huge stones. I told Lilian that in Suomenusko, the old Finnish beliefs before Christianity came to Finland, stones as well as trees were seen to have spirits. People conversed with stones and trees for healing and for wisdom, going out into the forest for the medicine of trees and stones. Of course, stones and trees have been symbolically important to many peoples and cultures. I told Lilian, well, I don't need to tell a Palestinian like you of the importance of stones. Today stones are the remnants of the Palestinian houses that Israel has destroyed and demolished. Palestinian youth take up stones as resistance against occupation. Indeed, a new documentary called The Stones Cry Out uses the metaphor, reality, and spiritual strength of stones to tell the story of the ongoing Nakba of Palestine, focusing on its Christian population and heritage.
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Canada vs Finland
Team Canada vs. Team Finland, April 5, 2013, the 2013 IIHF Ice Hockey Women’s World Championships. Photograph: Wayne Cuddington,
Ottawa Citizen
While there is plenty to say about hockey in
relation to Canada and Finland, it is debatable which nation tops the
other.
On the other hand, on the topic of mothers,
Finland clearly beats us: Save
the Children’s 2012 report ranks Finland
no.1 in the world for mothers; Canada trails at no. 22. What holds us back? No
universal daycare and shocking numbers of impoverished children—indeed, 4800 in
Thunder Bay (2006, Thunder Bay
Economic Justice Committee Poverty Report) [pdf]—whose mothers, unsurprisingly,
are also poor, contribute to our lacklustre ranking. A shocking 50% of
Aboriginal children in Thunder Bay live in poverty (2012,
LSPC) [pdf]. These shameful political and social realities reveal that on
supporting mothers in all our diversities, our government is negligent, lagging
behind Finland.
That is not to say that Finland is a utopia
for, like Canada, it too participates in the policies and ravages of neoliberal
economics. So Finland’s ranking as #1 for mothers must be seen in the context
of global-wide neoliberal cutbacks on social spending.
However, unlike Canada, Finland keeps
changing its national identity with an eye to a better world for everyone.
Finland strives not only to improve the well-being of its citizens but also to
spearhead positive change for the most deprived people globally.
This is especially evident in Finland’s progressive position on Palestine. Finland, along with
Denmark, recently granted full diplomatic status to Palestine, upgrading theirPalestinian missions to embassies. Finland, a member of the advisory commission
of UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency), focuses its monetary aid to
Palestine on education and improving water supplies and sanitation, along with
developing freedom of the press and a civilian police.
Since 1997, PALFEP,
the Palestinian-Finnish Education Programme, has worked on assisting the educational
goals of Palestinians. Even Finnish
Church Aid unequivocally assists Palestinians as part of their mandate of
“working with the poorest people, regardless of their religious beliefs, ethnic
background or political conviction.”
While some churches in Canada, such as the United Church,
have a progressive position on Palestine, the Christian Zionism of the
religious right has
sway over the federal government, buttressing a fervent support of Israel
even while Israel builds illegal settlements in the West Bank, dispossesses
Palestinians from East Jerusalem, and regulates and humiliates Palestinians daily
at checkpoints and the ‘security wall.’
Recently, Canada’s actions have served to bring
hardships to—even offend—Palestinians and their dreams of a self-determining
nation state. Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird recently
met with Israeli Justice Minister Tzipi Livni in occupied East Jerusalem. Nabil
Shaath, a former Palestinian foreign minister, called this action a “slap
in the face to the Palestinian people” and an “unprecedented offence that
severely damages” Canada’s relationship with Palestine and the Arab world.
Canada’s seven-year-long support of the
blockade against Gaza continues; a blockade which The International Committee
of the Red Cross and the UN Human Rights Council consider illegal. In 2012, Canada
strongly opposed granting Palestine non-observer status at the UN General
Assembly. Why? Baird expressed fears that Palestinians
will file war crimes against Israel in the International Criminal Court and
demand the stop of settlements.
This is nothing less than confounding: The Jewish
settlements on Palestinian land are illegal according to international law. Why
would we want to stop a nation from filing war crimes? Aren’t we for
justice? For using legal methods to get results?
This is also a contradiction as the majority
of Canadian aid to the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank so far has
focused on security, prosecution services, and the criminal justice system,
including $50 m. for building a court house. We give them money to develop legal
and security infrastructure, yet we don’t support Palestine’s legal claims
internationally?
It seems we have no shame in exposing our
hypocrisy and, once again, scorning and abandoning international standards as
we see fit.
Canada’s training of Palestinian security forces is to the benefit of Israel.
(Issam Rimawi / APA images)
(Issam Rimawi / APA images)
But it is building security forces that Canada is most interested in; as Yves Engler, writing for Electronic Intifada reports, "Most of the Canadian aid money has gone to building up a Palestinian security force overseen by a US general," a security force which benefits Israel. Engler cites former deputy foreign minister Peter Kent as saying the bulk of the $300m. in aid went to security, and Canadian security personnel numbers in Palestine are the second largest deployment after Afghanistan.
The above aid, which also included private
sector economic development and lastly, flip to Finland’s humanitarian focus,
health and education assistance, expired in March. It is now under review. In
punishment for the Palestinians seeking (and gaining) non-observer state status
at the UN, Canada
suspended the renewal of $300 m. in aid to the West Bank Palestinians. Baird
has threatened that the Palestinians will have “consequences” if they take
Israel to the ICC. Baird also demands that the Palestinians “immediately resume
negotiations with Israel without preconditions.”
It is unclear why Baird believes Canada has the
global clout—or reputation—to demand acquiescence of another sovereign nation.
Does he believe that the Palestinians will bow to Canada’s demands in fear of
losing $300 m.? In light of the Jerusalem Post recently reporting that
PM Harper has transformed Canada into Israel’s most dependable ally, why would
Palestinians grovel for more slaps in the face?
Canada’s new global identity as arrogant
bully is troubling. On the other hand, one thing that marks Finland as
exceptional is its commitment to prescient thinking to enable peaceful global co-existence
for all peoples, including the Palestinians.
On the question of Palestine, Finland leads
Canada.
political cartoon from the Halifax Herald; image sourceSaturday, March 16, 2013
Israeli General on 'security fencing': "it is indeed a monster"
Israel has recently completed its 'security fence' along its border with Egypt. This line snakes ominously through the Negev Desert.
Q: beside Israel, what other nation is entirely physically fenced in?
True, the US has built a separation wall on its border with Mexico, but it does not yet have a physical wall on its northern border with Canada, although it had been suggested by some. That plan was scrapped; instead, drones, "boots on the ground and greater integration with Canadian law enforcement" will be manning the border (and I think 'manning' is not sexist in this usage as most of those "boots" will be male and the ideology of militarism and security come firmly from militarised masculinity and the power of the male military hierarchy, even though there are women eager to perform hegemonic masculine militarism).
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu said the fence [through the Negev]
"was a sign of improved Israeli security. He has called the fence evidence of his efforts to insulate Israel from the turmoil of the Arab Spring revolutions and the influx of mostly Eritrean and Sudanese migrants, which he has portrayed as a national-security threat. ... Israeli security officials say Sinai has increasingly become a haven for militants from the Gaza Strip, local Bedouin tribes and global jihadist groups. Israel is also building a fence on the border with Syria, the prime minister's office said."
Netanyahu's rationale echoes the security apparatus and Islamophobic discourse common in Western nation states such as Canada and the US, a discourse embedded with racism of which Israel has its own multiple forms.
Ironically, the workers who have been building the barrier along Israel's border with Egypt are the very people that Israel wants to keep out of the country and one of the reasons it is building the 'fence': the Sudanese.
Israel already has a 'fence' along most of its border with Syria, but Israel is adding to it as well as fortifying it (appropriate word, 'fortifying' as it is linked to settler colonials building forts against the so-called natives).
Below is a photo of part of the Israeli security wall along what Israel defines as its border with Syria.
After finishing the 'security fence' along the Egyptian border, Israel will then build a 'security fence' along its border with Jordan.
Also, Israel has been busy fortifying its 'fence' along its border with Lebanon:
I wonder if these are "Arab Isreali" workers building the 'security fence'?
Of the 'security fence' being built along Israel's border with Egypt, deputy director general of the Israeli Defense Ministry, Brig. Gen. (res. ) Bezalel Treiber states:"It is indeed a monster...Seen from the Egyptian side, the fence overall is quite frightening."
Mice may well burrow their way to the other side, but will other desert animals pass in their migratory routes? And what of the Bedouin, whose traditional migratory land this is?
The 'fences' mapping out the borders of Israel are part of its system of segregation, of which the Apartheid Wall is its most heinous human rights abuser. It not only appropriates Palestinian land, but causes untold suffering to Palestinians caught in its oppressive encircling through restricting and preventing access to lands, education, health, recreations, community, religious institutions and is a formidable military tool of death, injury, and humiliation to Palestinians.
image source: Tear Down the Wall
This image is very gothic. I'm reminded of Frankenstein. It is dystopian. The wall is, of course, horrifically detrimental to the Palestinians, but what must it be like for the Israeli soldiers who go inside this dungeon?
Thursday, March 14, 2013
$10 million & 9 million of Canadian taxpayer dollars
The Canadian government wastes exorbitant amounts of taxpayers' money on security and corruption. In an example that has recently come to light, Canadians don't even know exactly how much was spent! Meanwhile, those on social assistance or employment insurance (which used to be called 'unemployment insurance') are accountable for every last red dollar--including getting 'home visits' if the feds think you're lying.
For the dam --or should I say, damn-- project, we only know that about 10 million dollars was paid to a private security firm--and we know that this company is well known for its links to crime and corruption. Interesting, but not surprisingly, one of our own Canadian crime-and-corruption firms, SNC-Lavalin, is again caught up in scandal and, most likely, illegal actions. SNC-Lavalin, a powerful Canadian engineering firm/military contractor, is part of yet another outrageous mis-use of funds, and no doubt corruption and paying off powerful elites plays a role in the Dahla dam case in Afghanistan, as they did in Lavalin's corrupt dealings with repressive power lords in Libya:
For the dam --or should I say, damn-- project, we only know that about 10 million dollars was paid to a private security firm--and we know that this company is well known for its links to crime and corruption. Interesting, but not surprisingly, one of our own Canadian crime-and-corruption firms, SNC-Lavalin, is again caught up in scandal and, most likely, illegal actions. SNC-Lavalin, a powerful Canadian engineering firm/military contractor, is part of yet another outrageous mis-use of funds, and no doubt corruption and paying off powerful elites plays a role in the Dahla dam case in Afghanistan, as they did in Lavalin's corrupt dealings with repressive power lords in Libya:
Canada spent about $10 million on security in Afghanistan at its $50-million Dahla dam project, where private security contractors were linked to allegations of corruption and involved in an armed standoff with Canadian security officials.
One of Canada’s signature projects in Afghanistan, the Dahla dam was guarded in part by Watan Risk Management, a controversial Afghan security firm with alleged ties to crime and corruption. How much they were paid remains secret.
There's no other word but outrageous for this disgusting abuse of taxpayers' money. Where are the regulations and overseers to prevent this kind of crime? Seems our neoliberal government supports "security" and paying off foreign firms with terrible records of criminality. Maybe $10m is a drop in the bucket, as it seems $9 million was also spent covering up crime: this time on greenwashing environmental destruction:The Canadian International Development Agency contracted the project to SNC-Lavalin, which was responsible for security.
The Canadian government's ad campaign hid the gutting of environmental laws.
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Mary, Mary
Downtown in front of the Waverley Library each December a large nativity scene is set up. This is Mary, mother of Jesus, with one of the wise men and a sheep behind her. Her hands look awfully big for her face, which looks childlike.While the male figurine is brown-skinned, Mary is not. Western Christians have re-imaged the mother of Jesus, making her more European-looking -- and sounding. Jesus's mother's name was Miriam, but that was changed to Mary in English.
Here is what the nativity scene looks like. Joseph on the right, the Three Wise Men in the back and the cows and sheep scattered about. The empty space in the straw bed is for the baby Jesus, who is put there either on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day. If Jesus is not there yet, shouldn't Mary's stomach be heavily pregnant? Or is her body also miraculously un-womanly looking even while she was pregnant? Strange. This nativity scene is quite traditional.
This, however, is more what the nativity scene would look like if we envisioned Bethlehem beyond the myth -- to the reality of occupation. Today, if Jesus were to come to earth and be born in a manger in Bethlehem, Mary and Joseph and the three wise men and the animals would have to deal with the Apartheid Wall. Now, Mary and Joseph, being Jewish, would be able to pass through the Wall without permits. I'm not sure about the Three Wise Men, though, as they would be arriving from Iran, Arabia, and India. Maybe they were all Jews, too? Not sure. Would the IDF let them through?
The olive wood nativity scene above is made by a Palestinian
Christian artist from Beit Sahour, trans. the Shepherd's Field. (The nativity scene is for sale; click on the link below):
In 2007 as an act of quiet resistance, he made a "walled nativity set" - a nativity scene where the wall stopped the wise men from getting through to the Holy Family. He said “I made these sets as a protest at what is happening to the local community of Bethlehem and Beit Sahour”. Beit Sahour - is in the Bethlehem area, where 87% of the land has been taken by the Israelis. "We are surrounded by the wall and our freedom of movement is denied".
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Christmas in the looking glass
image source
It's the beginning of December, and I'm already getting irritated by the glee of Christmas that I find everywhere I turn. People all around me, folks on Facebook, work colleagues, and people who should know better are all falling into the well of simulacra, Baudrillard's idea that what is false is more believable and desirable than actual reality.
The more untrue, the more we believe it to be true. The bigger the illusion, the happier our delusion.
When are Western Christians today going to move beyond the myth that they have created about the Holy Land? Believing in the story about Bethlehem in the Bible as if it were alive today? When are the majority of Christians going to wake up to what is really happening in Bethlehem today? Do they know there is an Apartheid Wall built by the Israelis and policed by the IDF that restricts the movement of the residents of Bethlehem? Do they know that the people of Bethlehem need passes and permits? Do they care?
It's this living in the looking-glass world where everything is childishly innocent and joyful that I find so irritating.
Oh Come All Ye Faithful, indeed. Get ye head out of the Christmas card and look hard at the wall.
It's the beginning of December, and I'm already getting irritated by the glee of Christmas that I find everywhere I turn. People all around me, folks on Facebook, work colleagues, and people who should know better are all falling into the well of simulacra, Baudrillard's idea that what is false is more believable and desirable than actual reality.
The more untrue, the more we believe it to be true. The bigger the illusion, the happier our delusion.
When are Western Christians today going to move beyond the myth that they have created about the Holy Land? Believing in the story about Bethlehem in the Bible as if it were alive today? When are the majority of Christians going to wake up to what is really happening in Bethlehem today? Do they know there is an Apartheid Wall built by the Israelis and policed by the IDF that restricts the movement of the residents of Bethlehem? Do they know that the people of Bethlehem need passes and permits? Do they care?
It's this living in the looking-glass world where everything is childishly innocent and joyful that I find so irritating.
Oh Come All Ye Faithful, indeed. Get ye head out of the Christmas card and look hard at the wall.
Monday, December 3, 2012
The Child is Not Dead
The other day, talking with a woman who I had not met before, we got into a discussion of poetry. She told me that she recently watched a movie about a South African poet called Black Butterflies; it is fictionalized history about the life of Ingrid Jonker, a white South African writer. Jonker, like a number of other white female poets of the 60s and 70s such as Sylvia Plath and Ann Sexton, committed suicide. Like Plath and Sexton, her words could not save her. Jonkers, like Virginia Woolf and the fictional Edna Pontellier of Kate Chopin's The Awakening, walks into the waves and drowns herself.
The woman I met told me that Jonker struggled with her racist father who supported apartheid. She said that Nelson Mandela had used lines from a poem by Jonker when he gave the first address to the first African Congress. The story goes, Jonker had written the poem for her father, to help him move beyond his apartheid thinking; instead, after she read it to him, he tore the poem in two. I guess she must have expected that as he had a high-ranking position in the National Party as a censure of writing.
When I looked up her poem and read it, I immediately thought of how her narrative thread leads to Palestine and resonates with other poems written by other women who are also writing about children who live--and are killed--within racist apartheid violence. I thought of poems by Ibtisam Barakat, Naomi Shihab Nye, and Lisa Suheir Majaj. The lines of hope with which Jonker ends her poem, hopefully, will one day come true for Palestinians as they have for black South Africans: no more passes. The demonstration in Sharpeville in 1960 was an anti-pass rally; 169 black people were killed by the Afrikaners police; today we commemorate this massacre on March 21, the International Day Against Racial Discrimination.
Al-Dalu children killed by Israeli missiles in Gaza this November 18. There names and ages: Jamal Mohammed Jamal 6; Yousef Mohammed Jamal 4; Sarah Mohammed Jamal 7; and Ibrahim Mohammed Jamal 1. You can find the names of the 33 children killed by Israel this November on the Palestinian Centre for Human Rightswebsite.
When will Palestinian children be able to travel the land without passes? When will Palestinian children be able to step from behind the shadow of an Israeli soldier? Not be dead? When will Palestinians no longer be subjected to a racist and humiliating pass system? Gain the human right of free movement not policed by Israelis? No checkpoints. Without a pass. When will that day come?
The child is not dead
by Ingrid
Jonker
The child is not dead
The child lifts his fists against his mother
Who shouts Afrika ! shouts the breath
Of freedom and the veld
In the locations of the cordoned heart
The child lifts his fists against his father
in the march of the generations
who shouts Afrika ! shout the breath
of righteousness and blood
in the streets of his embattled pride
The child is not dead not at Langa nor at Nyanga
not at Orlando nor at Sharpeville
nor at the police station at Philippi
where he lies with a bullet through his brain
The child is the dark shadow of the soldiers
on guard with rifles Saracens and batons
the child is present at all assemblies and law-givings
the child peers through the windows of houses and into the hearts of mothers
this child who just wanted to play in the sun at Nyanga is everywhere
the child grown to a man treks through all Africa
the child grown into a giant journeys through the whole world
Without a pass
The child is not dead
The child lifts his fists against his mother
Who shouts Afrika ! shouts the breath
Of freedom and the veld
In the locations of the cordoned heart
The child lifts his fists against his father
in the march of the generations
who shouts Afrika ! shout the breath
of righteousness and blood
in the streets of his embattled pride
The child is not dead not at Langa nor at Nyanga
not at Orlando nor at Sharpeville
nor at the police station at Philippi
where he lies with a bullet through his brain
The child is the dark shadow of the soldiers
on guard with rifles Saracens and batons
the child is present at all assemblies and law-givings
the child peers through the windows of houses and into the hearts of mothers
this child who just wanted to play in the sun at Nyanga is everywhere
the child grown to a man treks through all Africa
the child grown into a giant journeys through the whole world
Without a pass
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