Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

All's well in the kingdom of Canada

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • All's well in the kingdom of Canada

    Toronto Star, Canada
    March 8 2009


    All's well in the kingdom of Canada


    Mar 08, 2009 04:30 AM
    Haroon Siddiqui

    In the five years since it was established by some students at the
    University of Toronto, Israeli Apartheid Week has spread to 40 cities
    around the world, according to its organizers.

    Dr. David Naylor, U of T president, famously called it "the worst week
    of a president's life." Administrators are bombarded with demands by
    pro- and anti-Israeli camps:

    Ban the name; abolish the "hate-fest." It creates "a toxic
    environment" for Israel advocates, who are "intimidated" by "mobs"
    peddling anti-Semitism.

    Uphold freedom of speech and assembly. Stand up to "pressure." Don't
    equate criticism of Israeli policies with anti-Semitism or use it as a
    club to kill off debate.

    This year, Carleton and Ottawa universities banned a pre-event poster
    showing an Israeli helicopter firing a missile at a Palestinian child
    labelled Gaza.

    At York University, a dispute over the student union's role in the
    strike by teaching assistants became a proxy battle over Israel, given
    the union's pro-Palestinian tilt.

    Two rallies, Feb. 12 and 17, prompted York to impose penalties on four
    student groups for disrupting classes. An ugly Feb. 11 incident led to
    an inquiry, still ongoing, into the behaviour of three students.

    All this happened before the designated week.

    On Monday, the U of T student paper, The Varsity, carried two columns:
    "Why Israel is not an apartheid state," by Jeremy Bluvol, and "Why
    Israel's actions constitute apartheid," by Ahmed Mahmoud.

    The kickoff event was that night at Ryerson University. I counted 14
    people waving Israeli flags. Two guys were having an argument, drawing
    no audience.

    Inside a packed hall, the atmosphere was collegial, with the feel of a
    1960s anti-Vietnam war rally. The audience was a mix of ethnicities
    and, more pleasantly, of all ages.

    The MC, Golta Shahidi, a U of T student, laid down the rules: No
    heckling, no disruptions, no anti-Semitic or other racist remarks.

    Author Naomi Klein said she was proud to be there "as a Jewish
    Canadian, to stand in firm solidarity" with the Palestinians.

    "We are here to speak about a great unspeakable. You can tell by all
    the people telling us to shut up.

    "Talk. Talk a lot. Debate. Make talking normal. Every transformative
    movement goes through this stage: The silence is broken, long
    suppressed truths are spoken. There is great rage and denial. And then
    change begins."

    On the banned poster: "You have heard the argument that the image of
    the child under an Israeli missile incites hatred. It is the bombing
    of civilians that incites the hatred. That poster makes our stomach
    turn because it shows us something that's true. Seeing those kinds of
    images doesn't incite hatred. It inspires righteous indignation."

    Omar Barghouti, the well-known Palestinian activist, spoke next. He
    also spoke softly but delivered a tough message about Canadian
    complicity in Israeli "war crimes."

    Events over the next three days at the U of T and York also went off
    smoothly ` flag-waving; a mock wall here and barbed wire there,
    depicting the Israeli security barrier; some sloganeering (against
    both Hamas and Israel at York Thursday), but no untoward
    incident. Police did not lay a single charge.

    "All in all, a quiet week," said Robert Steiner, assistant
    vice-president at U of T. Robert Tiffin, vice-president at York, and
    Heather Lane Vetere, vice-provost at Ryerson, reported the same.

    Naylor said campuses are places for passionate debate, within reason,
    be it pro-choice and pro-life, or over the Armenian genocide, Sri
    Lanka, the Middle East, etc.

    He said the term apartheid could not be banned ` "if you Google it,
    you'll find 300,000 entries." Nor could he impose censorship. "We'd
    rather focus on maintaining a reasonable climate." Which they did.

    I found the officials at all three universities to be reasonable,
    even-handed and calm in the face of provocation and pressure.

    Contrary to all the claims and counter-claims, at times repeated by
    gullible media, all is reasonably well in the kingdom of Canada.

    http://www.thestar.com/comment/article/59 8099
Working...
X