Category Archives: Bulletin Board

 

SANSAD is proud to co-sponsor this important event.

 
STOLEN LAND:

First Nations • Palestinians at the Frontline of Resistance
With: ROBERT LOVELACE, Dima Alansari and Glen Coulthard 

Friday, November 27 @ 7pm
SFU Downtown, Room 1700
515 West Hastings, Unceded Coast Salish Territories
For more information: info@seriouslyfreespeech.caSTOLEN LAND : STOLEN VOICES

Canada and Israel are both built on land and resources stolen by European settlers; both are still sustained by the ongoing repression of indigenous peoples. The indigenous peoples of Canada and Palestine are on the front lines resisting the destruction of the land by militarism and industrial extraction. In the mainstream media and the halls of power, indigenous activists’ voices and stories have been silenced – they are treated as terrorists or historical curiosities. This evening will explore the commonalities of indigenous struggles for land and freedom in Canada and in Palestine as well as connections to the global fight for a decolonized world.
ROBERT LOVELACE is a lecturer at Queen’s University’s Dept. of Global Development Studies.  An activist in anti-colonial struggles, he spent 3 ½ months in jail as a political prisoner for defending the Ardoch homeland from uranium exploration.  A former chief of the Anoch Algonquin First Nation, Robert sailed twice on the Freedom Flotilla attempting to break the blockade of Gaza.
DIMA ALANSARI is a Palestinian-Kuwaiti filmmaker and performer based in Vancouver. She co-wrote and performed in “Return Home,” a play about the intersecting journeys of an Anishinaabe woman from Quebec living under the legacy of colonization, and a Palestinian woman born in exile, living in diaspora. She is currently the creative director of Salish Sea Productions, a media and production collective creating socially relevant works on themes of social justice, Immigrant, Indigenous and intercultural issues, women, youth & environment.

GLEN COULTHARD (Yellowknives Dene) is an assistant professor in the First Nations Studies Program and Political Science Department at UBC. His recent book “Red Skin, White Masks” exposes the politics of Canada’s ongoing colonialism.
Organised by the Seriously Free Speech Committee •seriouslyfreespeech.ca
Sponsored by Canada Palestine Association/BDS Vancouver, Canadian Boat to Gaza, Independent Jewish Voices – Vancouver, South Asian Network for Secularism and Democracy, UBC Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights
Endorsed by North West Indigenous Council, Streams of Justice, United Network for a Just Peace in Palestine and Israel.

Nepal crisis over constitution

SANSAD News-Release November 2, 2015

Respect the Sovereignty of Nepal

South Asian Network for Secularism and Democracy (SANSAD), an organization of South Asian diaspora in British Columbia, Canada, is anguished by the enormous hardship of the Nepali people as a result of the agitation over the recently adopted constitution. We deplore the intervention of India in the internal affairs of Nepal that has significantly aggravated this distress.

The new constitution of Nepal establishing it as a secular federal republic was adopted on September 20 after seven years of wrangling when the process was made urgent by the devastating earthquakes in April and May. Yet the process left many in Nepal unhappy at the continuation of their marginalization, when they had every expectation of an end to their traditional subordination and oppression.The people of the Madhesh region, who make up half of Nepal’s population, comprising Madhesis, Tharus, Janjatis, dalits, adivasis and other social groups demanded adequate representation, and many of them began an agitation in August that blocked all goods coming from India across its extensive border. More than 40 people have died in the agitation and many more have been injured. The agitation has also brought economic and daily life to a standstill with severe shortages, producing what a month ago the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce (FNCCI) called an “Impact worse than the earthquake” (quoted in theguardian.com, Oct. 5).

This agitation has been supported by the Government of India, which made its intervention open when it sent its Foreign Secretary, S. Jaishankar to Kathmandu to attempt to delay the adoption of the constitution two days before its adoption. Despite its official denials India has continued to maintain an unofficial blockade, creating acute shortages of fuel and other essential goods. On November 2, according to bbc.com, an Indian national engaged in the blockade was shot dead by the Nepali police, while several others were injured. More than 200 Indian owned/operated empty trucks that had been stranded in Birgunj were allowed to cross from Nepal to India but thousands of trucks bringing fuel and other goods from India to Nepal that had been waiting for the past two months were still blocked by Indian customs officials.

SANSAD deplores India’s intervention in the internal affairs of Nepal and the unofficial blockade imposed by the Government of India on the transportation of essential goods into Nepal that violates several international laws and conventions, including the Transit Treaty and the Bilateral TradeTreaty that India has signed with Nepal. We demand that the Government of India immediately lift the blockade and desist from all attempts to intervene in the internal affairs of Nepal. We implore the Government of Nepal to engage in dialogue with the agitating minorities, to heed their grievances, and to amend the constitution to accommodate them. We stand in sympathy with the suffering people of Nepal and the minorities who are agitating for a constitution that gives them the rights and dignity of full citizenship.

—Thirty—

Lecture on Adivasi Struggles

Hari Sharma Memorial Lecture 2015

ADIVASI (ABORIGINAL) STRUGGLES IN COLONIAL AND POST-COLONIAL INDIA

Shashank Kela

Friday October 16, 2015

6.30 PM – 7.30 PM

Room 1700

SFU Harbour Centre Campus

515 West Hastings Street, Vancouver

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Over the past two hundred years aboriginal people of India (Adivasis) have struggled in various ways against the violence of colonialism and the modernizing state of post-colonial India to maintain their rights in their lands, forests, and hills, and their way of life.  Systematically dispossessed and displaced by the colonizers and the elite of colonial and independent India, they continue to resist and fight back.

Shashank Kela is a writer and historian based in Chennai, India. He worked as an activist in a trade union of adivasi (aboriginal) peasants in western India and has written a wide ranging study of adivasi history and politics, A Rogue and Peasant Slave: Adivasi Resistance 1800-2000 (2012).

Information: Chin Banerjee: cbanerjee@telus.net

Organized by Hari Sharma Foundation for South Asian Advancement                        http://www.harisharma.org