Justice

KAIROS Reconciliation in the Watershed - October 14, 2017 @ 10 am – 4 pm

In partnership with the Sisters of St Joseph in Canada – London, KAIROS Canada will host a full-day Reconciliation in the Watershed workshop at King’s University College on Saturday, October 14, 2017. Supported by the Echo Foundation, this workshop is part of a series being delivered by KAIROS Canada across Canada this fall.  The KAIROS Reconciliation in the Watershed Program aims to increase the number and diversity of Canadians who are, knowledgeable about their immediate watershed, able to identify issues related to its protection, and make connections between local ecological issues and Indigenous rights.  The full-day workshop aims to renew the relationship between Canadians’ and their local watershed on a path towards reconciled relationships with Indigenous Peoples.

Wherever we live in creation we are part of a watershed, an interdependent eco-system nested in a larger eco-system, which is also a watershed.  We all have a relationship with the bodies of water that sustain our lives and we too are living parts of a watershed.  In Canada, our watersheds continue to be threatened by mining, fracking, oil exploration, pipeline development, agriculture, water bottling, and more.  The impacts of colonialism and industrialization have alienated us from our watersheds by creating political territories that ignore watershed boundaries and turning our water and natural resources into commodities.  Colonialism has also damaged the relationship between non-Indigenous and Indigenous peoples. Indigenous peoples, who affirm the interconnectedness of our watersheds, continue to offer gracious welcome to settlers and seek partnership in a just transformation of the land. 

It is time to repair these relationships and build relationships of ecological integrity with our local watersheds and between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples.  To do so, we need to go in to our watersheds and listen to the voices of Indigenous peoples who were its first protectors and stimulate learning, affection, and ultimately a commitment to protect our water. The Reconciliation in the Watershed workshop is a great place to start! 

This day of learning, relationship-building, and action, will include presentations and activities focused on decolonization, Indigenous rights, environmental issues, and reconciliation.  In the afternoon, the workshop will move to the Museum of Ontario Archeology, where participants will learn about the history of the land and the watershed’s first peoples.  Participants will also engage in a medicine pouch activity, to learn about the importance of medicine pouches to Indigenous nations and the sacred plants that are used, as well as the significance of the Medicine Wheel.   

Registration for this event is $20 regular/$10 students and includes lunch and activities at the Museum of Ontario Archeology.  Register here or email Mary Shamley at mshamley@csjcanada.org.

Flyer

Guest blogger: Beth Lorimer, KAIROS: Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives

Make Your Voice Heard

On July 26th, listening to the evening news on the car radio, I was elated to learn that the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that sonic testing by oil companies must cease on the waters in the Arctic.  This decision is the result of a hard- fought battle by the people of the tiny hamlet of Clyde River in Nunuvut. Now, marine mammals like beluga, bowhead and narwhals will be protected from deafening seismic blasts. The decision goes against National Energy Board’s agreement to allow 3 Norwegian companies seeking to fire air guns into the waters of Baffin Bay and Davis Strait.  As part of the ruling, the Inuit community of Clyde River received long term assurance that their culture and way of life will continue.  Most importantly, the ruling stated that the federal government must ensure that Indigenous concerns are heard and treaty rights are honoured.  There must be honest consultation.

Throughout the last three years, the Greenpeace Canada website had been collecting online signatures from the public to support the Inuit community’s local efforts to stop the underwater testing which would wreak havoc on marine life.

Of all the online appeals for signatures to support various causes that pop up on my computer screen, I felt compelled to add my signature to Green Peace Canada to support the people of Clyde River in their quest to halt the big oil Goliath.  As Green Peace regularly reported, the online signatures grew steadily to an astounding over 400,000 advocates petitioning the federal government to stand up for Indigenous rights and stop seismic testing.  Finally, after much work by the Clyde River Inuit and supported by signatures and interventions, justice prevailed.  Clyde River WON their case at the Supreme Court of Canada.  I felt that my signature played a tiny part in that victory.

As to becoming involved in various online pleas for support, it is easy for me to give a cursory glance at the issue presented and press “delete”.  Presto! I have one less thing to consider on a busy day.  However, I’m learning to take a second look and put some time into researching various causes and choose initiatives where my support might make a difference.

I’m proud that I supported the fight to halt a dangerous oil exploration project that threatened the Canadian Arctic.  All it took was some time and effort --- and pressing “click” on the Green Peace website.

Jean Moylan, CSJ

 

 

 

 

 

 

At long last: Canada makes amends to Omar Khadr

There has been intense and divisive debate in Canada over the past two weeks following news that the Canadian government has reached a settlement with Omar Khadr. The settlement resolves the lawsuit he had brought for compensation related to Canada’s role in the abuses he experienced during a decade in US ‘war on terror’ detention.

It is worth going back in time and recapping what brought Omar and the Canadian government to this moment.

Fifteen years ago, almost to the day, 15 year-old Canadian citizen Omar Khadr found himself in the midst of a firefight and airstrike in a compound in Afghanistan.  He was, in fact, a child solider, and should never have been there in the first place.  But his father, now well known for his extremist views and links to Osama Bin Laden and other Al-Qaeda leaders, had willingly propelled his teenage son out onto the battlefield.

By the time the fighting was over, the militants with whom Omar had been partnered were dead.  Omar was so badly injured as to be near death.  One US soldier had been killed and another badly wounded.

Omar was, however, rescued by US forces. He had life-saving surgery and did not die on the battlefield that day.

And thus began an unimaginable journey through injustice for young Omar Khadr. A journey he will likely never be able to completely put behind him.

No one would have anticipated on that day, however, that Canada would become complicit in the injustice and abuse he endured.

Omar Khadr was eventually accused with having thrown a grenade during that firefight that killed the US soldier who had died.

It was a full eight years – April 2010 – before a trial against him on those charges finally got underway at Guantánamo Bay. 

Omar had been transferred to Guantánamo 3 months after he was captured.  He had first been held at the notorious US detention facility at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, where torture and ill-treatment was rampant.  15 year-old Omar was threatened, terrorized and abused while he was held there.

At Guantánamo Bay, Omar Khadr experienced the range of human rights violations for which the off-shore US detention camp quickly become globally infamous.  He was held first for years without charge or trial.  He continued to experience torture and ill-treatment, including the cruel ‘frequent flyer program’, which subjected prisoners to sleep deprivation over days at a time, a form of treatment widely recognized to be a particularly debilitating form of physical and mental torture.  His young age was never taken into account: not by acknowledging that he was a child soldier and as such a victim of human rights abuse for that reason alone; and not by treating him as a juvenile detainee and ensuring he was given access to educational and other programming.

And finally, in 2010, when his ‘trial’ began, he experienced another dimension of Guantánamo’s many layers of injustice: the deeply unfair military commission hearings process, which fell far short of international fair trial standards.

And where was Canada?

Certainly not standing up for Omar Khadr’s rights.

Instead, Canadian intelligence officials showed up at Guantánamo Bay two times in 2003 to interview Omar Khadr and did so knowing that he had been through the ‘frequent flyer’ treatment just before their arrival.  The Supreme Court of Canada, in rulings in 2008 and 2010, slammed Canadian officials for that conduct and unanimously found that Omar Khadr’s Charter rights had been violated.

Canada certainly did not come to Omar Khadr’s rescue.

While the government of other Western nationals held at Guantánamo Bay did advocate on behalf of their citizens and, one after another, gained their transfer back home, Stephen Harper’s government defiantly refused to lift a finger.

Canada made things worse for Omar Khadr.

It was not that the Harper government remained silent; instead they deliberately and consistently fueled an inflammatory and bigoted campaign of untruths and half-truths about Omar Khadr.  It was clearly all about politics. It guaranteed that Omar would stay at Guantánamo for a very long time. 

Omar Khadr eventually entered into a plea deal with his US jailors.  He pled guilty in return for an 8 year sentence.  He served 2 further years at Guantánamo Bay before he was finally transferred back to a Canadian prison in September 2012 to serve the balance of his sentence.

And then in May 2015, on the basis of positive reports from corrections officials and an appeal of his conviction in the US courts considered to have a likely prospect of success, Omar was released on bail.

During the past two years Omar has lived openly in Edmonton.  He has pursued studies.  He has made a strong and positive impression on everyone who has crossed his path.  It has truly been remarkable to see the resilient and hopeful young man who has emerged from these many years of abuse, torment and suffering.

The announcement of compensation and an apology should have marked a celebratory moment of justice.  And it was and is; most certainly.  And we should indeed celebrate.

But it has also been truly disheartening to once again see an eruption of hate and vitriol unleashed against Omar backed, very sadly, by the Conservative Party, now in Opposition.  That has been a sobering and cautionary reminder that we have more to do in working against intolerance and racism, shoring up a commitment to human rights in our national security practices, and standing firm for fundamental concepts of equality and fairness.

The Sisters of Saint Joseph have been valiant partners in Omar Khadr’s long struggle for justice.  From very early stages, long before there was wide sympathy and support for his plight, the Sisters clearly understood what was at stake.  I was always struck by how much interest and concern there was to have an Omar Khadr update every time I came to visit.  I was so bolstered myself, feeling tremendous support and solidarity every time I headed down to Guantánamo for trial observations.  And I know that many letters, petitions and cards made their way from London, Ontario to Washington, Ottawa, Guantánamo and to Omar personally, demanding justice and sending best wishes.       

Tempting as it would be to close the Omar Khadr file, we aren’t there yet.  The Conservative Party has said they intend to bring the issue of the settlement to Parliament in the fall.  A legal case by the widow of the US soldier who was killed and the other soldier who was injured, seeking to enforce a default court judgement they won against Omar in a Utah Court several years ago, is also going ahead.

All of that aside, however, justice has been done.  That truly is tremendous and so very much long overdue.

In reaching this settlement the Canadian government has acknowledged and recognized that Omar Khadr was wronged by his own government and that for that we must make amends.  And that matters, very much.

Guest Blogger:
Alex Neve, Secretary General,
Amnesty International Canada

 

So what ARE we Celebrating on this 150th Birthday of Canada?

After having just returned from the Kitchi Blanket Exercise on June 2, on Parliament Hill and having been involved in “blanketing the city of Ottawa” that same morning, in 16 different locations, by presenting the Blanket Exercise, we KAIROS facilitators asked ourselves:
“WHAT are we really celebrating this July 1st?”

I guess it depends on the lens through which one views the birth of Canada. If we celebrate the British North America Act of 1867, through Indigenous eyes, we are celebrating the resiliency and firm commitment of the Inuit, Metis and First Nations Peoples in Canada, to seek Truth in order to find Reconciliation, as they rightfully strive to have jurisdiction over their lands ….lands which they occupied long before the settlers arrived.

In light of the Truth & Reconciliation Commission findings and the 94 Recommendations, how can we NOT live in the reality of walking with each other as two nations, instead of one?

Reconciliation is in the Wind. Is THIS not what we need to be celebrating and toward which we MUST be moving? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bh2Ol48mSmE

The Blanket Exercise is one very effective Teaching Tool that is literally blanketing Canada at this time. It is a movement that is rapidly expanding, sweeping across this land uncovering the TRUTH of our birth. One participant, Heenal Rajani, of the Blanket Exercise expressed his experience of it on April 9, 2001 when he first encountered the harsh truth of our history for the first time. Heenal expressed it in this rap, which is a 6 minute overview of the Blanket Exercise.

https://soundcloud.com/heenal-rajani/kairos-blanket-exercise-poem

After you have heard this rap and read this blog, you are invited to answer the question, Just WHAT ARE we really celebrating?  What do you and I WANT to celebrate in order to bring about Reconciliation?

Kathleen Lichti, CSJ

Women’s Voices Grow Stronger…

The United Nation’s Commission on the Status of Women recently hosted their 61st Forum with a focus on Women and Girl’s Economic Empowerment in the Changing World of Work. More than 8000 women, feminists and women’s organizations, and some men, united for a common purpose. If women are to achieve gender equality by 2030 (Equality and inclusion are at the heart of the 2030 Agenda for the UN’s Agenda for Sustainable Development), we must all recognize the gender gap in work and employment and create a cohesive action-oriented plan that all NGO’s can support.

The Sisters of St. Joseph have an NGO office in New York at the UN. This gave me the opportunity to join this global effort to work towards gender equality and economic empowerment for women and girl’s. It is not possible to describe in a blog the multiple workshops with women presenting what is happening in their part of the world. Rather I would like to outline in a series of short blogs the incredible accomplishments already achieved by women (previous gatherings and conferences) and critical work that still needs to happen in order to achieve equality, given the multiple challenges faced by women today. 

The Forum gives women, an opportunity to come together and ensure through the good work that is happening around the world that on one is left behind. There is still much to do. We must continue to reach out to the most marginalized women and girls, and those experiencing multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination. Civil society plays a critical role in addressing the unique needs of these women and girls and capitalizing on their strengths and agency to move toward substantive equality, a Planet 50 – 50 by 2030.  We in Canada, although better than some parts of the world, still have work to move the needle along to achieve gender equality.

This ambitious goal offers me inspiration and possibilities for strengthening partnerships and alliance so efforts can continue to increase the diversity and number of people working on the achievement of gender equality. Wherever you are, we all become more conscious of how our places of employment are working to achieve gender equality.  We each can do something to help move us along toward achieving this goal by 2030.  Our voices are needed and they are growing stronger.

Joan Atkinson, CSJ