No. 34
May 23, 2024
Photo Review -- May 10 to 21
Actions in Canada and Around the World to End Ongoing Nakba and Stop Genocide
Montreal, Nakba Day march, May 15
CANADA
National Capital Region
Several hundred people gathered on May 15 at the student encampment in front of Tabaret Hall at the University of Ottawa for the 76th anniversary of the Nakba, which continues with the ongoing occupation, apartheid and ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people. A Palestinian flag flew high above a makeshift stage, where signs bore the names of children whose lives have been cut short by the Zionist forces.
Several people spoke about their personal experience with the Nakba, or that of their parents or grandparents. It was pointed out that this commemoration is like no other, coming as it has on the heels of over seven months of ongoing genocide. The spirit that prevailed was that Palestinians refuse to surrender and that return is inevitable and the resolve to liberate Palestine only grows stronger with each passing day.
A woman described her grandfather's escape to Canada with his family following the Nakba. Amongst other things she said, "The Nakba continues, but so do we. In our thousands and in our millions, we carry the pain of the Nakba and the anger at the Zionist regime's brutal siege of Gaza and the genocide of Palestinians and we will continue to fight for a free Palestine, until it is no longer a longing, but a reality."
Another young woman denounced the hypocrisy of those countries allied with the U.S. and its warmongering as they continue to speak about democracy, human rights and international law, while the U.S. and others fund and provide weapons to Zionist Israel that allow it to commit these massacres in Gaza. "Western governments are not only complicit, they are active members," she said. "Just yesterday, Canada recognized Israel 'Independence Day,' a day that was celebrated at the cost of our people. Canada has turned a blind eye to all human rights violations committed by the Zionist regime. This complicity extends to organizations and institutions, like this very university that funds the war machine."
People once more boldly marched through the streets of downtown Ottawa, through the Rideau Street shopping area, past the Prime Minister's office and up Laurier Avenue where, the day before, the City of Ottawa shamelessly hoisted the genocidal Zionist flag.
Nakba Day march, May 15
Also on May 15, students held a press conference at the
University of Ottawa (uOttawa) encampment to report on the
university’s response to its demands and to mark the 76th
commemoration of the Nakba. Student and faculty representatives
spoke.
Layan Ibrahim of the Palestinian Student Association uOttawa
said that the ongoing Nakba is not a metaphor but the assertion
of an existing reality, not a frozen moment in history,
that Nakba Day is more than a day of mourning for a past
injustice, it is a day of renewal of the struggle for a free
Palestine. She denounced the hypocrisy of the university which
teaches about democracy and human rights and international law
while investing in companies that profit from Israeli war
crimes.
Bessan Jasser of Students for Justice in Palestine Carleton
expressed solidarity with the uOttawa students and their demands
that the university disclose and divest. Jasser denounced the
university administrations in Canada and elsewhere who are using
police violence instead of listening to their students and
ending their complicity and asked people to remember that Israel
has destroyed all 13 universities in Gaza as part of their aim
to destroy the future of Palestine.
Susanne Spronk, past president of the Association of Professors
of uOttawa (APUO) brought their unequivocal support for the
right of students and faculty to protest at the uOttawa campus
and for the students’ calls for transparency and divestment from
corporations complicit in human rights abuses. She said that the
APUO calls on the university administration to respect the
encampment as a legitimate and peaceful form of protest and to
participate in good faith, transparent and meaningful dialogue
with the students.
Nir Hagigi, president of Independent Jewish Voices at Carleton
said that they are standing in solidarity with the uOttawa
students’ demands for an end to their institution's complicity
and genocide.
Sumayya Kherieddine, president of INSAF uOttawa reported that
after 16 days of occupation of Tabaret lawn students were able
to meet with the university’s chief investment officer to
discuss their demands. During the meeting the administration
stressed its responsible investment guidelines as well as its
commitment to neutrality. The implication is that the students’
demands are unreasonable and difficult to implement despite the
fact that uOttawa has already committed to divesting from fossil
fuels. The students insisted and got an agreement that the
university’s full investment list would be released on May 17.
She concluded: “We need you all to continue showing up and
supporting the students as they navigate negotiations with the
university administration. Our power is in numbers. Our power is
together until liberation and return.”
Ottawa students' press conference, May 15
On May 18 hundreds gathered at the Human Rights Monument for the No Rest Until Liberation demonstration.
Before the march, as people arrived, discussed among themselves, and shouted slogans against the genocide of the Palestinian people, a speaker pointed out: "We have been here for more than seven and a half months, and when I am asked why we will not stop, I answer that we want to be on the right side of history. The government keeps talking about two sides. They are right. There are two sides. There is the oppressor, and there is the oppressed. There are the colonizers and there are the colonized. And this is the side I want to be on."
He went on to denounce statements made by local politicians and others to the effect that people standing for Palestine and demanding an end to the genocide are being paid to protest. "Such accusations are shameful and it is disgusting that our politicians, our so-called leaders, go on TV while they are raising the flag of a genocidal State."
He called on people to support the student encampment at uOttawa by spending some time there during the week. Participants then marched up Laurier to the uOttawa campus, marching through the campus itself, expressing their support for the student encampment and calling on the university to stop threatening students, to respond to their demands. They shouted, among other slogans, Disclose, Divest! We Will Not Stop! We Will Not Rest!
Demonstration marches through campus (1st photo above), May 18
Nova Scotia
Halifax
On May 12, students from Dalhousie University, Saint Mary's
University, the University of King's College, Mount Saint
Vincent University and the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design
set up an encampment in the Dalhousie University Studley Quad.
These students have formed the collective Students for the
Liberation of Palestine Kjipuktuk (SLPK) to call on their
universities to disclose and divest from all settler-colonial
projects, including the Zionist state of Israel.
They stand in solidarity with the Palestinian struggle and
recognize that the Palestinian struggle is linked with that of
the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island. They stand with the
students of Palestine, recognizing the horror that there are no
universities left standing in Palestine. They recognize that
universities and colleges are places of higher learning and the
advancement of humanity and that engaging in genocide is
participating in the lowest form of human thinking and
attempting to drive humanity backwards.
Over 20 faculty and staff marched to the encampment to
demonstrate to the world that they stand with their students,
and that they too are against the genocide in Palestine and the
universities’ contribution to funding Israel. On May 16, over
250 people at the Dalhousie Faculty Association (DFA) annual
general meeting passed two motions. The first condemns
antisemitism, anti-Palestinian racism and violence against
civilians including Israeli attacks on Palestinian hospitals,
universities, heritage sites, schools and publishing houses and
calls for an immediate and permanent ceasefire.
The second motion calls on the university to end all
partnerships with Israeli academic institutions and to boycott
and divest from all Israeli companies.
The third motion, which was not discussed or voted on due to
lack of time, was for Dalhousie to support Palestinian students
by providing scholarships for Palestinian students to continue
their education at Dalhousie, providing financial supports for
Palestinian students, and supporting Palestinian educational
instructions by offering virtual instruction, exchanges, library
sharing, and more.
Some DFA members shared their view that this motion would have
also passed.
Many community members come to the encampment to support the
students and engage in discussion, programming, and cultural
sharing. At the opening of the encampment the students named the
liberated zone of Dalhousie Al Zeitoun University. Al Zeitoun is
the Arabic word meaning olive.
In March, the Dalhousie Student Union (DSU) Council passed a
motion submitted by the Dalhousie Palestinian Society and
supported by over 22 societies and student groups, to put
pressure on Dalhousie University to divest from all investments
and relations with Israel. The demands are as follows:
1) Stand in solidarity with the Dalhousie Palestinian Society
and student groups to demand that Dalhousie University
immediately cut ties with and divest from any corporations,
institutions, or individuals complicit in genocide,
settler-colonialism, apartheid, or ethnic cleansing in
Palestine,
2) Stand in solidarity with the Dalhousie Palestinian Society
and student groups to demand that Dalhousie University
immediately and publicly condemn the genocidal campaign and
siege on Gaza, and provide legitimate support to Palestinian,
Arab, and Muslim students.
3) Make an immediate and public statement condemning the ongoing
genocide and reaffirming its solidarity with Palestinian, Arab,
and Muslim students.
They also compiled a list of some companies that Dalhousie
invests in that are complicit in the Israeli genocide against
the Palestinians, including Oshkosh, ICL-Israel Chemicals Ltd.,
Mercury Systems Inc., Boeing Co., Leonardo DRS, AIMCo Realty
Investors LP, BCI QuadReal realty and BCIMC Realty Corp,
Woodward Inc., Bank of Montreal, Bank of Nova Scotia and
Toronto-Dominion Bank.
The motion points out that the university has failed to
recognize the oppression and occupation that has been ongoing
for decades and is the underlying cause of the current genocidal
campaign and all violence in Palestine and continues to invest
in and collaborate with corporations, institutions, and donors
complicit in Israel’s crimes against the Palestinian people. It
gives the example of Dalhousie’s collaboration with Tel Aviv
University through an exchange program. Trips are paid for by
two members of a pro-Israel lobby and students are expected to
return and promote the program and Israel to other students.
This motion passed but no action has been taken by the
university. Students can ask and demand, but in the end are
taking their own stands and fighting for them. The students are
taking responsibility for their future and saying “Who decides?
The Students!”
Quebec
Montreal
On May 10, the Coalition du Quebec URGENCE Palestine held an
international press conference to demand that Canada hold Israel
to account for its genocide in Gaza. Francesca Albanese, UN
Special Rapporteur on the Palestinian Territories took part by
video link to discuss the findings of her latest report to the
UN Human Rights Committee, Anatomy
of a Genocide, in which she stated that "the
overwhelming nature and scale of Israel's assault on Gaza and
the destructive conditions of life it has inflicted reveal an
intent to physically destroy the Palestinians as a group." She
said Israel was violating at least three elements of the
International Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
Crime of Genocide, which the Israeli government has ratified.
She said that there are plausible grounds to believe that the
threshold [of genocide] has been reached, citing the commission
of the following acts against Palestinians in Gaza: killing
members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to
members of the group; deliberately inflicting on the members of
the group conditions of life intended to bring about its
physical destruction in whole or in part.
Joel Bedda, from Al-Haq, the Palestinian human rights
organization based in Ramallah, provided evidence via video link
on the ongoing genocide in Gaza which he described as a second,
even deadlier Nakba. He emphasized that despite orders of the
International Court of Justice for provisional measures, Israel
has persisted on the path to the complete destruction of Gaza,
decimating its population and creating conditions in which the
Palestinian people are deprived of essential elements for their
survival. This genocide is not limited to the Gaza Strip, but
also extends to the West Bank, where settler violence is
intensifying, he added.
France-Isabelle Langlois from Amnesty International Canada
Francophone stressed the importance of respecting international
humanitarian law. She said, "As the occupying power, Israel is
required to ensure the security of Palestinians in the occupied
Gaza Strip, who are protected under the international
humanitarian law, and must in particular provide services and
food necessary for their survival. Not only does Israel fail to
do so, it continues to obstruct the provision of these services
to the civilian population of Gaza by UN humanitarian agencies
and international aid organizations since 2007."
Diane Lamoureux, speaking on behalf of the Coalition du Quebec
URGENCE Palestine, concluded by denouncing "the complicity and
procrastination of the Canadian government which not only
repeatedly reiterates its support for Israel, but fails to
fulfill its obligations under international law and all human
decency." She said that the Canadian government must apply
sanctions against Israel for its crimes and that Canada's
obligations under the Genocide Convention demand, at the very
least, an immediate halt to all military supplies to Israel.
Press Conference, May 10, 2024, discusses "Anatomy of a
Genocide" report and Canada's obligations under International
law
McGill professors, members of Faculty for Palestine (F4P),
issued a call to their colleagues across the country on May 12
to boycott the 2024 Congress of Humanities at McGill in response
to a request of the student organizers of the McGill encampment.
The students have asked that people and associations who
considered attending the 2024 Congress show solidarity with them
and their demands by boycotting the Congress until the
university meets their demands. In their call the
professors reiterate the students’ demands that McGill disclose
all investments in companies complicit in the Israeli genocide
of the Palestinian people, end all courses, internships,
cooperatives and exchange programs with apartheid Israel and
divest from all companies complicit in the Israeli occupation
and genocide including weapons and technology companies. These
demands follow a historic divestment vote of McGill students
with 78 per cent support, which the university has ignored.
Actions in solidarity with the students also defend against
threats by McGill of disciplinary action and efforts to have the
courts grant an injunction against the students to justify
police action against the encampment.
The national Faculty for Palestine responded to the call from
the McGill professors by cancelling their previously announced
meeting for F4P network members attending the Congress in
Montreal and urging everyone to boycott the Congress and email
McGill administration to express support for the students’
demands. To contact McGill administration: McGill President,
Deep Saini mcgill.president@mcgill.ca, McGill Provost,
Christopher Manfredi christopher.manfredi@mcgill.ca, and current
Deputy Provost, (and as of June 1st) Vice-President
(administration and finance),Fabrice Labeau,
fabrice.labeau@mcgill.ca.
On May 15, on the 76th anniversary of the Nakba, over a thousand people participated in an action in downtown Montreal reaffirming Palestinians' right to return. Speakers included a representative of Lawyers4Palestine who said, "Over the last eight months, the votes in the United Nations General Assembly have proven to the entire world that Israel is isolated. Israel, in complete defiance of international law, intensifies its attacks on the civilian population of Gaza and mocks the UN General Secretary, with the unconditional support of the United States and the manifest complicity of Canada."
"Imperialist powers claim that Israel has the right to defend itself. We know, however, that the right of self-defence does not apply to an occupying power ... against the nation it is oppressing," said the representative of Lawyers4Palestine. He elaborated that following international law and numerous resolutions from the General Assembly of the United Nations, "it's Palestinians who have the right to struggle for their liberation from colonial domination using all means at their disposal, including armed struggle."
He reminded people that Israel has mocked and trampled UN Resolutions on the right of Palestinians to self-determination, to independence and national sovereignty, to return to their homeland and to their homes from which they were evicted.
Despite these crimes against humanity, the Legault government carries on with its plan to open an office in Tel Aviv to promote commercial relations between Quebec and Israel, including arms trafficking. "If you want to affirm Quebec's autonomy in the international sphere, why not open an office in Havana or Ramallah instead," he asked. He reminded Quebec's Premier that by persisting in this project, he is opening up his government and himself to charges of complicity with genocide.
He reminded everyone that on Nakba Day, McGill University's request for an injunction to dismantle the student encampment made up of "peaceful protesters denouncing genocide" and "McGill's complicity with genocide," was rejected by a Quebec Superior court judge. This was a victory not of lawyers but "of the people who are there putting themselves on the line, showing the courts that they are serious and are going to keep fighting until justice is served," he said.
"We are on the side of justice ... of history. So let's keep on fighting for justice, ... for the liberation of Palestine," he concluded.
After the speeches, people took to the streets, marching
through busy downtown Montreal, past restaurants and terraces.
For over two hours, they chanted slogans while people cheered
them on and took photos.
May 15
At noon on May 16, a hundred students from De Maisonneuve College in Montreal, the vast majority of them young women, held a rally in support of the Palestinian people. Many cars and trucks honked when they saw their Palestinian flag.
One of the speakers said that we must save our brothers and sisters in Palestine, the genocide must stop. "Israel assassin, Canada accomplice," she shouted. She explained that she and her colleagues were greatly inspired by the student encampments at McGill and UQAM and all the others, and decided to organize this first action, which won't be their last. The students chanted: Long Live Palestine! and From the River to the Sea, Palestine Will Live, Palestine Will Win!" and marched through the streets of the neighbourhood inviting people to join them.
Students from Cegep de Maisonneuve demonstrate, May 16
At the weekly city-wide demonstration on May 18, participants reaffirmed the right of the Palestinian people to resist the ongoing massacres committed by the U.S.-Israeli campaign against the people of Rafah and Palestine.
A representative of Concordia and McGill professors in support of Palestine spoke to the growing crowd. "We stand here, with professors from Concordia and McGill in support of its students, of the liberation of Palestine and the end of genocide in Gaza," she said.
She said that their students "have demanded the end of complicity with Zionist colonialism, which by now has killed 40,000 Palestinians and maimed and injured over 100,000 more, and caused starvation and mass destruction of homes and hospitals, the obliteration of all universities, and the displacement of 1.7 million Palestinians.
"We say to McGill and Concordia [that] it is not too late for you to learn," "to sit in an open air classroom next to the encampment and learn from the students who are our moral anchors: Boycott, Disclose and Divest," she said.
A representative from the Palestinian Youth Movement also intervened, saying: "On day 224 of the ongoing genocide, we do not simply gather. We rise up to proclaim that the genocide, this onslaught against the Palestinian people, is not merely a series of atrocities, but a calculated and malevolent war on hope itself. This is a war designed to extinguish the very soul of a nation, to plunge an entire people into the depths of despair."
"Yet the Palestinian resistance remains unbroken and more resilient than ever. They can continue to kill and destroy, but every drop of blood they spill will drown them in their own moral bankruptcy for the world to see," she said. "Through 76 years of occupation, through countless bombings, 17 years of full blockade, through the loss of homes and loved ones, the resolve has only grown stronger....
"This week alone, we have seen that through the relentless work of the students and the over 150 encampments worldwide, an immense amount of pressure has been put on school administrations, government officials and complicit businesses."
The crowd then marched through Montreal's busy downtown core. As it made its way to the McGill University student encampment, cars honked and people took pictures, with some joining in the slogans: End the Siege on Rafah Now!, Disclose, Divest, We will Not Stop, We Will Not Rest! People were invited to visit the encampment and invited back on May 20 for public activities, including a teach-in on 100 years of Palestinian resistance, a calligraphy class and a film screening.
May 18
May 19
Ontario
Toronto
On May 10, leading up to Nakba Day, the Toronto Palestine Film
Festival hosted a program with well-known legal scholar, writer
and lecturer Dr. Ardi Imseis. Dr. Imseis, himself a descendant
of Palestinians forcibly displaced by the Nakba of 1948, is an
internationally known legal scholar on Palestine and currently a
professor in the Faculty of Law at Queen's University. In 2023
he published "The United Nations and the Question of Palestine,"
a critical examination of the gulf between international law and
UN action on Palestine. He is a member of the legal team that
represented Palestine in February before the International Court
of Justice (ICJ) hearings into the impact of the ongoing Israeli
occupation of Palestine on the Palestinian people.
In his presentation, Dr. Imseis pointed out that the current
Israeli genocide against the Palestinians is an extension of the
Nakba of 1948 when the Zionist founders of the state of Israel
carried out a planned premeditated military campaign of armed
terror, ethnic cleansing and expulsion of the Palestinians under
"Plan Dalet" or Plan D, militarily occupying Palestine and
creating the state of Israel. He underscored that the speeches
and statements of the Israeli Prime Minister and others
following the Al-Aqsa Flood military operation by the
Palestinian resistance on October 7, 2023 show they are clearly
aimed at completing the displacement and expulsion of the
Palestinian people from Gaza and the occupied territories.
Dr. Imseis also made it clear that ICJ decisions in favour of
Palestine or the UN General Assembly’s May 10 vote to upgrade
Palestine’s Observer Status will not in themselves achieve the
aims of the Palestinian people to exercise their right of return
or other national rights, but will assist them in their struggle
for justice. For example, increased rights in the UN will allow
Palestine to take advantage of certain rights such as putting
forward proposals and amendments directly to the General
Assembly without having to go through another state.
He also said that international law is a tool that the
Palestinian resistance can use to press its case at the UN, the
ICJ, national governments and other rights bodies but that
Israel continues to openly flout international law (with support
from the U.S., Canada and other western countries), for instance
by refusing to recognize the Palestinian right of return. The
key factor in the face of the Zionist impunity is the political
organizing taking place to support the Palestinian resistance in
Canada and across the globe which, he said, has created a
"tipping point" for humanity to press forward with its
aspirations to create a more just and equitable world.
In the lively question and answer session that followed his presentation, Dr. Imseis stated with confidence that the Palestinian people will achieve their one Palestinian state based on equality and justice for all in due course. He emphasized that the critical matter now is for the peoples of the world to step up support for the Palestinians, who are facing the most barbaric onslaught and crimes of Israel with courage, making the greatest sacrifices to affirm their right to be.
Dr. Imseis speaks, May 10
Some 2,000 people, including scores of members of the Indigenous Community in Toronto held a rally and march on May 18 under the theme From Turtle Island to Palestine, Occupation Is a Crime! to highlight the political unity of the Palestinian people and the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island who are both fighting colonial oppression and genocide. The action was sponsored by Toronto Indigenous Harm Reduction, Palestine Youth Movement, Toronto4Palestine and others.
The rally began at the Native Family and Child Services (NFCS) on College Street where Indigenous speakers denounced the ongoing genocide against Indigenous Peoples and in particular highlighted the abduction of Indigenous youth and children by state agencies like NFCS which lead to the destruction of families, communities and contribute to the impoverishment and marginalization of Indigenous Peoples. One speaker pointed out that the Canadian state that has shown no interest in recovering and bringing closure to the families of children who died in the residential schools, similarly has not expressed any shock at the discovery of mass graves of Palestinians killed by the Israeli military. The speakers demanded an end to the genocide against the Palestinians and for reparations for the harm caused as well as justice for the Indigenous Peoples of Turtle Island.
Following the rally participants marched to Dundas Square.
May 18
Haudenasaune solidarity with Palestine at University of Toronto
encampment, May 18
Oshawa
On May 20 an agreement was
reached between the Administration of Ontario Tech University in
Oshawa and students who had set up an encampment on May 6 to
support the Palestinian people. The university administration
agreed to "disclose an annual report of all investments and
holdings in the public session of the university's Board of
Governors' Audit and Finance meeting, to be adopted beginning
Fall 2024. The report will be available on the Ontario Tech
website." The university also agreed to establish a "responsible
investment working group" to review best practices and make
recommendations to the Audit and Finance Committee with respect
to how the university approaches environmental, social and
governance (ESG) factors in its investments, "with particular
attention to companies involved in arms manufacturing and
delivery and/or benefitting from military action in Palestine or
elsewhere."
The responsible investment working group will include primarily
student representatives and two alumni and will make
recommendations to the President. The university committed to
divestment "for companies that are determined to be in breach of
established policy and process," support for displaced students
from Palestine, and protection for those involved in the
encampment from academic or employment-related retaliation. A
timeline was set out for establishment of the working group and
its work.
The Ontario Tech students achieved this agreement by sticking to
their principles and demands despite threats of retaliation and
even criminalization. By holding their ground, refusing to
cower in the face of the threats, and insisting that the
university administration meet with them to have serious
discussion of their demands they were able to achieve an
agreement acceptable to the students.
Sudbury
May 15
May 18
Windsor
Nakba Day was commemorated in Windsor on May 15 with a solemn evening vigil at the riverfront honouring all the martyrs of today and those whose lives were sacrificed over the past 76 years by the Zionist project of illegally occupying Palestinian lands and denying those it displaced the right to return -- blatant, ongoing violations of the very conditions for Israel's creation as a state and memberhip in the United Nations. The vigil was followed by a vigorous march through downtown streets that had not been scheduled, but that participants affirmed through a massive show of hands that they considered a fitting way to end the night's program.
May 15
Four days later, the weekly Sunday march, also commemorating the Nakba, was one of the largest the city has seen since Israel launched its genocidal assault in October. The efforts of activists to mobilize as many people as possible by engaging directly with community members and organizations in different ways, including by distributing and posting up flyers, and calling on everyone to bring others out as well, yielded results. People of all ages, including families with small children, and particularly large numbers of youth made up the crowd that filled the streets, led the chants and contributed to the vigour and militancy of the march.
As the multitude made its way through downtown neighbourhoods in what seemed to be an endless line of people several abreast, undeterred by the rain and threat of an impending thunderstorm that just skirted the area of the march route, the streets resounded with non-stop chants and drum beats. Demands were raised for an immediate ceasefire to put an end to the U.S./Israeli genocide, and for Canada to stop supporting it. Slogans supporting the Palestinian people's right to resist, to return, and to liberate themselves from apartheid rule and occupation were also shouted. Many passing motorists honked their horns, waved and gave the V for victory sign, some also waving their own Palestinian flags. People in restaurants or houses and apartments along the route came out to show their support in different ways, some by joining in the chants.
At the rally preceding Sunday’s march, Dr. Maher El-Masri, one of two speakers who spoke about the effects of 76 years of the Nakba on their families and themselves personally, remarked on the diversity of the large crowd in attendance and the importance of this. He expressed appreciation to the community for coming out in force this year to mark the Nakba. He told them that no matter how dire the situation in Gaza, with families suffering great personal losses as Israel continues waging a genocidal war of annihilation -- so far with impunity because a world order controlled by Western powers has allowed it -- they should never underestimate the importance of the work they are doing on behalf of the Palestinian people. As someone born and raised in Gaza, and in regular contact with family and friends still living there, he assured them their words and actions are being heard and seen in Gaza, giving the besieged people there hope as they courageously hold their ground, determined not to be driven off their lands ever again.
At both of the week’s actions calls were given for everyone to visit and actively support the encampment at the University of Windsor which students have vowed to maintain until the University agrees to disclose and divest from whatever investments it has that contribute to and profit from Israel’s genocide in Palestine.
May 19
Thunder Bay
May 15
Alberta
Edmonton
The Canada-Palestine Cultural Association held Palestine Solidarity Day in Churchill Square on May 18, from noon to 7:00 pm. The program included a march, speakers, booths, food, and amazing cultural performances, the events of the day affirming the fight for liberation and the right to be.
May 18
British Columbia
Vancouver
May 15
May 18
Victoria
May 15
UNITED STATES
New York City
After Columbia University cancels graduation ceremony students
organize alternate graduation, May 16
Cambridge, MA
Harvard University, Gaza encampment,banner drop, May 15
Philadelphia, PA
Students at Drexel University confront police, May 17
May 18
Washington, DC
Students at Georgetown University walk out of their graduation
ceremony, May 19
Chicago, IL
Protest against raising of the Israeli flag, May 14
DePaul University Gaza encampment, May 17
EUROPE
London, England
National march marking the Nakba, May 18
Scotland
Glasgow
May 18
Edinburgh
Nakba marked at student encampment, University of
Edinburgh, May 15
Ireland
Dublin
Palestinian football team plays against Irish team, May 16
May 18
Derry
May 18
Norway
Oslo
May 18
Lofoten
May
Belgium
Brussels
Rally in support of Palestine outside
headquarters of the European Union, May 18
Ghent
Ghent Univeristy student encampment, May 16
Berlin, Germany
May 18
Maastricht, Netherlands
University of Maastricht student protest, May 21
Granada, Spain
University of Granada students action, May 17
Bucharest, Romania
University of Bucharest student encampment, May 20
ASIA
Sana'a, Yemen
May 17
Peshawar, Pakistan
May 20
Seoul, Korea
May 19
AFRICA
Tunis, Tunisia
Fans express solidarity with Palestine, during CAF championship
, May 18
Morocco
Rabat
May 18
Casablanca
May 14
LATIN AMERICA & CARIBBEAN
Havana, Cuba
May 17
Mexico
Mexico City
May 16
Guadalajara
May 15
University of Guadalajara student encampment, May 16
San José, Costa Rica
University of Costa Rica, student encampment, May 20
Bogotá, Colombia
May 14
São Paulo, Brazil
May 15
Lima, Peru
Students at Pontifical Catholic University of Peru, May 13
Students at San Marcos University, May 15
General Artigas, Paraguay
May 14
Santiago, Chile
May 13
University of Chile student encampment, May 15
Buenos Aires, Argentina
May 14
OCEANIA
Melbourne, Australia
May 14
Hall at University of Melbourne renamed May 15 for a Palestinian
student killed in genocide in Gaza
University of Melbourne student encampment Emergency rally as
University threatens to dismantle encampment, May 16
(Photos: TML, Quds, Shehab, Ottawa4Palestine, Fulcrum,
Etudiants Maisonneuve, haudenoshouty, toronto4palestine, S.
Malik, Ezzelddine Photography, BDS Vancouver, MC Tseng,
Rulesbreakers, Harvard psc, Daily Penn, Nat SJP, Anti-War Ctte
Chicago, PSC Updates, S. Howell, Glasgow Stop the War, N.
Perugini, sahouraxo, C. Daly, Gurbani Photo, Montecruz Foto,
M. Salah, Palestine Info Centre, Observatorio DHP, BDS Mexico,
Zona Docs, Red Solidaridad con Palestine, Palestina Hoy,
Frente Palestina São Paulo, Estudiantes por Palestina,
Palestina en Paraguay, Cordinadora por Palestina, PD Educacion
Superior, Solidaridad con el Pueblo Palestino, S. McNeill,
MattH093.)
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