It's the usual pro-terror groups, and they absolutely don't have Indigenous permission like they claim

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As of press time, at least two major Canadian universities have become the site of “Students 4 Gaza” protest encampments. These are groupings of activists who pitch tents in public spaces on campus, establish makeshift barricades and then refuse to leave until their demands are unconditionally met by administrators.

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The encampments are not spontaneous. They are coordinated by many of the same radical anti-Israel groups that have been behind the protests, bridge closures, and targeted blockades of Jewish community sites that have hit Canada since October 7. There’s even a centralized website listing the several dozen “Students 4 Gaza” encampments in North America, and linking to their demands.

Below, a cursory review of where the encampments came from, what they want, and how they’re conducting themselves.

They seek a complete freeze on anything even remotely Israeli or “Zionist”

McGill University and the University of British Columbia are the sites of the two major Students 4 Gaza encampments (although there’s purportedly a few tents pitched on the grounds of the University of Alberta as of last week). The core of the UBC and McGill demands are basically identical: Divest from all companies “complicit in genocide” and “cut all academic ties with Israeli institutions.”

McGill protesters also demand that its organizers be granted perpetual legal immunity from anything they may feel is necessary in furtherance of their cause. A statement issued by the Encampment for Divestment from Genocide demands “no repercussions or disciplinary charges for any actions taken by students of McGill and Concordia in support of Palestine.”

A post shared by Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights (SPHR) McGill (@sphrmcgill)

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The UBC demands state they only want the university to cut ties with institutions participating in “the oppression and genocide of the Palestinians.” But anti-Israel organizers affiliated with the encampment movement have previously shown that this category can be expanded to encompass almost anything under any circumstances.

Not too far south of UBC, administrators at Portland State University acceded to their own encampment’s demands to cut ties with Boeing, on the grounds that the aircraft manufacturer does business with Israel and its armed forces. But the only “tie” between PSU and Boeing is that the school has previously accepted donations from the company. The agreement to the activists’ demand consisted entirely of a new policy saying that any future Boeing donations — should they be offered — would be rejected.

The very broad definition of “complicity” can also be seen in how these encampments are conducting themselves. Entry is barred to anyone they deem a “Zionist,” with professionally printed “Zionists f–k off” posters situated around the UBC encampment.

In a Monday X post, UBC lecturer Itai Bavli said he attempted to enter the encampment but was first questioned on whether he supported “Palestinian liberation” and “Palestinian self-determination.” When Bavli replied “of course – coexisting peacefully with Israel,” he was turned away.

I introduced myself as a 🇨🇦🇮🇱peace activist. They didn't let me in @UBC

"Do you believe in Palestinian liberation?"
Me: "of course"
"Do you believe in Palestinian self-determination?"
Me: "of course - coexisting peacefully with Israel"
"Ok then - this is not the space for you" pic.twitter.com/KMmJxYPV9v

Organizers are fundamentally pro-terror, and seek Israel’s annihilation

The demands for both the UBC and the McGill encampment were posted to Instagram in conjunction with Palestinian Youth Movement, a group that has been at the centre of anti-Israel demonstrations in both the United States and Canada since October 7.

It was Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM) that was behind the wave of celebratory “All Out for Palestine” rallies that hit Canadian cities in the immediate hours after the October 7 massacres. In a series of statements and social media posts, PYM has made no secret of its support for Hamas and other Gazan terror groups. “On October 7th, Gaza broke free,” wrote the group in one post praising the “Palestinian resistance” and the “decolonization of Palestinian land.”

The principal organizer at McGill has been the student group Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights. That group has made headlines several times in recent months, including for a March action that sought to blockade access to the Federation CJA building, site of the Montreal Holocaust Museum. The group was similarly unequivocal in its support for the Hamas-led attacks of October 7. “We hold the Israeli regime fully responsible for the escalated violence … a population living under siege and occupation has no option but to resist,” reads an official “solidarity” statement published on Oct. 11.

The UBC encampment has also received the full endorsement of Samidoun, a radical Vancouver-based non-profit affiliated with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine — a Canadian-listed terror group.

Samidoun co-founders Charlotte Kates and Khaled Barakat could even be said to have helped inspire the anti-Israel encampments at New York’s Columbia University that would jumpstart the more than 100 university encampments that have followed. A month ago, Kates and Barakat were featured speakers at a Columbia University Palestinian Resistance 101 seminar. Kates told Columbia student activists that October 7 represented “the potential of a future for Palestine liberated from Zionism,” while Barakat touted airplane hijackings as “one of the most important tactics that the Palestinian resistance have engaged in.”

On Monday, Samidoun Vancouver posted images of a UBC counter-protest featuring a couple dozen people waving Israeli flags at the edges of a barricade. “We need everyone to come NOW to UBC to defend the students, defend the encampment and defend the Peoples University of BC for Gaza and Palestine!! Help resist zionists and cops!!!”

A post shared by Samidoun Vancouver (@samidounvan)

They both claim Indigenous approval (despite no official First Nations body having anything to do with them)

The McGill encampment has students from two other Montreal universities; Concordia University and the University of Montreal. And both make a point of saying they have Indigenous approval to be on McGill lands.

They cite a letter from the Kanienkehaka Traditional Council which was posted on the X account of the group Decolonial Solidarity. The Kanienkehaka Traditional Council is not the Mohawk Council of Kahnawá:ke, the elected First Nations government whose traditional territory does indeed include the Island of Montreal (they’re the group cited in land acknowledgements at Montreal Canadiens games).

The traditional council of Kahnawake has confirmed that students have the right to be on this land. pic.twitter.com/RZHQxhyfJJ

Rather, the name of the Kanienkehaka Traditional Council generally only shows up in relation to seminars and activist causes headed by two people; artist Marie-Claude Lacroix and Stuart Myiow, who signed the “permission” letter. In 2017, for instance, the Kanienkehaka Traditional Council led an unsuccessful push to ban colonization of the moon.

“The same plans of colonization that have brought complete chaos to our Mother Earth is about to land the Moon. The colonization of the Moon must be stopped at all costs,” reads a petition written by Lacroix.

In the case of UBC, organizers simply released a “statement of solidarity with Musqueam.” But while organizers claim they are inspired by the “strength and resilience” of “your people,” Musqueam First Nation has had nothing to do with the encampment — and hasn’t really concerned itself with the Israel-Hamas conflict at all.

Question Period was much yellier than usual yesterday, with several extended sessions of the Liberal and Conservative benches screaming at one another as Speaker Greg Fergus called for calm. The inciting topic was the B.C. NDP’s “urgent” request for the federal government to rescind key parts of a special exemption that decriminalized hard drugs in the province – a request that remains in purgatory as Ottawa “evaluates the data.”

Here’s cursory summary of the highlights:

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FIRST READING: What the Gaza encampments want and who’s organizing them

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01.05.2024

It's the usual pro-terror groups, and they absolutely don't have Indigenous permission like they claim

You can save this article by registering for free here. Or sign-in if you have an account.

First Reading is a daily newsletter keeping you posted on the travails of Canadian politicos, all curated by the National Post’s own Tristin Hopper. To get an early version sent directly to your inbox, sign up here.

As of press time, at least two major Canadian universities have become the site of “Students 4 Gaza” protest encampments. These are groupings of activists who pitch tents in public spaces on campus, establish makeshift barricades and then refuse to leave until their demands are unconditionally met by administrators.

Enjoy the latest local, national and international news.

Enjoy the latest local, national and international news.

Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience.

Don't have an account? Create Account

The encampments are not spontaneous. They are coordinated by many of the same radical anti-Israel groups that have been behind the protests, bridge closures, and targeted blockades of Jewish community sites that have hit Canada since October 7. There’s even a centralized website listing the several dozen “Students 4 Gaza” encampments in North America, and linking to their demands.

Below, a cursory review of where the encampments came from, what they want, and how they’re conducting themselves.

They seek a complete freeze on anything even remotely Israeli or “Zionist”

McGill University and the University of British Columbia are the sites of the two major Students 4 Gaza encampments (although there’s purportedly a few tents pitched on the grounds of the University of Alberta as of last week). The core of the UBC and McGill demands are basically identical: Divest from all companies “complicit in genocide” and “cut all academic ties with Israeli institutions.”

McGill protesters also demand that its organizers be granted perpetual legal immunity from anything they may feel is necessary in furtherance of their cause. A statement issued by the Encampment for Divestment from Genocide demands “no repercussions or disciplinary charges for any actions taken by students of McGill and Concordia in support of Palestine.”

A post shared by Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights (SPHR) McGill (@sphrmcgill)

This newsletter tackles hot topics with boldness, verve and wit. (Subscriber-exclusive edition on Fridays)

By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc.

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