logo
Lack of action on Gaza erodes Muslims' sense of belonging in Canada: envoy

Lack of action on Gaza erodes Muslims' sense of belonging in Canada: envoy

OTTAWA – Ottawa's approach to the war in Gaza is eroding many Muslim-Canadians' 'sense of belonging' in this country, says the federal special representative on combating Islamophobia.
'This ongoing, horrifying situation is deeply, deeply damaging the sense of belonging that people feel,' Amira Elghawaby said in an wide-ranging interview with The Canadian Press.
'This relates to dehumanization … of Palestinian life, of Muslim life.'
Elghawaby's job since February 2023 has been to advise Ottawa on how federal policies, including foreign policy, affect Muslim Canadians.
She said Muslims have been horrified by the Israeli military offensive and aid restrictions in Gaza that followed the October 2023 attack by Hamas militants which killed 1,200 in Israel.
The Hamas-run health ministry reports that Israel has killed nearly 60,000 Palestinians in its military offensive in the Gaza Strip, which has included airstrikes on ambulances and hospitals.
Israel has set up aid-distribution sites where hundreds have been shot dead while trying to access food.
The UN World Food Program said last week that Israel's restrictions on food reaching Gaza have resulted in 'new and astonishing levels of desperation,' with 100,000 women and children suffering from severe acute malnutrition and a third of the territory's population going days without eating.
Israel disputes the United Nations' account and says it restricted aid because large amounts of food were being stolen by Hamas. Aid groups have said there is no proof for that claim.
Elghawaby said the grief felt by Muslim-Canadian families over the suffering of loved ones in Gaza is being compounded by a sense that Ottawa isn't doing enough to prevent the suffering, despite issuing 'very clear statements' on the situation.
''Devastated' is not even strong enough a word to describe how people are feeling,' she said.
'(These are) their loved ones, their family members, who are starving, who are continuing to face bombing and displacement, and who are just desperate — desperate for this to end.'
On social media, Elghawaby wrote that the fear felt by Canadians with family in the region grows 'with each day that passes without meaningful action towards upholding international humanitarian law.'
In the interview, Elghawaby said she doesn't have the mandate or enough detailed information to say whether Canada is doing enough. She said she can only convey the feeling widespread in Muslim and Arab communities that Ottawa is dropping the ball.
'How can it be — is what people are asking me — that international humanitarian law is violated in this way, and nothing is actually happening, or not enough is happening?' she said.
'They wonder, are our lives expendable? How many people have to die for there to be action, concrete action, to end this?'
Elghawaby said Muslim communities want 'every tool' proposed by international organizations put to use 'to ensure compliance (with) international humanitarian law.' She said those tools could include more sanctions or a full arms embargo on Israel.
She said her job is not to dictate Canada's foreign policy. 'I am here really to provide the insight into how our communities perceive policies that the government (is) putting forward,' she said.
Elghawaby also said Canada needs to fix problems in a program it launched to allow Canadians to resettle their Gaza relatives here. Fewer than 1,200 visas have been issued through the program, even though Ottawa has accepted 5,000 applications.
Elghawaby also said those advocating for Palestinians continue to be unfairly branded as anti-Jewish or pro-terrorism.
In January 2024, she said anyone spewing hate speech should face consequences, but noted that people have been fired and stigmatized for taking part in peaceful protests and petitions.
The problem has only gotten worse, she said.
'They continue to face all sorts of branding as being terrorist sympathizers, as being somehow out of step with democracy and human rights,' she said.
'In fact, that's all they're calling for — for democratic norms, around ensuring that international humanitarian law is respected around the world, including for Palestinians.'
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 28, 2025.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Statehood remains a distant dream for Palestinians as nightmare unfolds in Gaza
Statehood remains a distant dream for Palestinians as nightmare unfolds in Gaza

Winnipeg Free Press

timean hour ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Statehood remains a distant dream for Palestinians as nightmare unfolds in Gaza

OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — Plans announced by France, the United Kingdom and Canada to recognize a Palestinian state won't bring one about anytime soon, though they could further isolate Israel and strengthen the Palestinians' negotiating position over the long term. The problem for the Palestinians is that there may not be a long term. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejects Palestinian statehood and has vowed to maintain open-ended control over annexed east Jerusalem, the occupied West Bank and the war-ravaged Gaza Strip — territories Israel seized in the 1967 war that the Palestinians want for their state. Israeli leaders favor the outright annexation of much of the West Bank, where Israel has already built well over 100 settlements housing over 500,000 Jewish settlers. Israel's offensive in Gaza has reduced most of it to a smoldering wasteland and is pushing it toward famine, and Israel says it is pressing ahead with plans to relocate much of its population of some 2 million to other countries. The United States, the only country with any real leverage over Israel, has taken its side. Critics say these countries could do much more Palestinians have welcomed international support for their decades-long quest for statehood but say there are more urgent measures Western countries could take if they wanted to pressure Israel. 'It's a bit odd that the response to daily atrocities in Gaza, including what is by all accounts deliberate starvation, is to recognize a theoretical Palestinian state that may never actually come into being,' said Khaled Elgindy, a visiting scholar at Georgetown University's Center for Contemporary Arab Studies. 'It looks more like a way for these countries to appear to be doing something,' he said. Fathi Nimer, a policy fellow at Al-Shabaka, a Palestinian think tank, says they could have suspended trade agreements with Israel, imposed arms embargoes or other sanctions. 'There is a wide tool set at the disposal of these countries, but there is no political will to use it,' he said. It's not a completely empty gesture Most countries in the world recognized Palestinian statehood decades ago, but Britain and France would be the third and fourth permanent members of the U.N. Security Council to do so, leaving the U.S. as the only holdout. 'We're talking about major countries and major Israeli allies,' said Alon Pinkas, an Israeli political analyst and former consul general in New York. 'They're isolating the U.S. and they're leaving Israel dependent — not on the U.S., but on the whims and erratic behavior of one person, Trump.' Recognition could also strengthen moves to prevent annexation, said Hugh Lovatt, an expert on the conflict at the European Council on Foreign Relations. The challenge, he said, 'is for those recognizing countries to match their recognition with other steps, practical steps.' It could also prove significant if Israel and the Palestinians ever resume the long-dormant peace process, which ground to a halt after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returned to office in 2009. 'If and when some kind of negotiations do resume, probably not in the immediate future, but at some point, it puts Palestine on much more equal footing,' said Julie Norman, a professor of Middle East politics at University College London. 'It has statehood as a starting point for those negotiations, rather than a certainly-not-assured endpoint.' Israel calls it a reward for violence Israel's government and most of its political class were opposed to Palestinian statehood long before Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack triggered the war. Netanyahu says creating a Palestinian state would reward Hamas and eventually lead to an even larger Hamas-run state on Israel's borders. Hamas leaders have at times suggested they would accept a state on the 1967 borders but the group remains formally committed to Israel's destruction. Western countries envision a future Palestinian state that would be democratic but also led by political rivals of Hamas who accept Israel and help it suppress the militant group, which won parliamentary elections in 2006 and seized power in Gaza the following year. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, whose authority administers parts of the occupied West Bank, supports a two-state solution and cooperates with Israel on security matters. He has made a series of concessions in recent months, including announcing the end to the Palestinian Authority's practice of providing stipends to the families of prisoners held by Israel and slain militants. Such measures, along with the security coordination, have made it deeply unpopular with Palestinians, and have yet to earn it any favors from Israel or the Trump administration. Israel says Abbas is not sincerely committed to peace and accuses him of tolerating incitement and militancy. Lovatt says there is much to criticize about the PA, but that 'often the failings of the Palestinian leadership are exaggerated in a way to relieve Israel of its own obligations.' The tide may be turning, but not fast enough Sundays Kevin Rollason's Sunday newsletter honouring and remembering lives well-lived in Manitoba. If you had told Palestinians in September 2023 that major countries were on the verge of recognizing a state, that the U.N.'s highest court had ordered Israel to end the occupation, that the International Criminal Court had ordered Netanyahu's arrest, and that prominent voices from across the U.S. political spectrum were furious with Israel, they might have thought their dream of statehood was at hand. But those developments pale in comparison to the ongoing war in Gaza and smaller but similarly destructive military offensives in the West Bank. Israel's military victories over Iran and its allies have left it the dominant and nearly unchallenged military power in the region, and Trump is the strongest supporter it has ever had in the White House. 'This (Israeli) government is not going to change policy,' Pinkas said. 'The recognition issue, the ending of the war, humanitarian aid — that's all going to have to wait for another government.' ___ Associated Press writer Jill Lawless in London contributed.

U.S. bans Palestinians as Israeli settlers eye West Bank, Gaza
U.S. bans Palestinians as Israeli settlers eye West Bank, Gaza

Canada News.Net

timean hour ago

  • Canada News.Net

U.S. bans Palestinians as Israeli settlers eye West Bank, Gaza

The Trump administration moved Thursday to deny visas to Palestinian officials, accusing them of sabotaging peace efforts, a stark show of support for Israel as its military escalates attacks in Gaza, settler violence explodes in the occupied West Bank, and senior Israeli ministers openly call for the expulsion of Palestinians from Gaza and permanent annexation of the West Bank. The State Department's sweeping restrictions target members of the Palestinian Authority (PA), and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), claiming they "undermine peace" by pursuing Israel at international courts and supporting "terrorism." While no individuals were named, the decision reinforces Washington's alignment with Israel's hardline policies, even as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's far-right coalition advances plans to reshape the region by military force. The surprise U.S. move comes days after close allies France, Canada, and the UK, announced they were planning to recognize Palestinian statehood, as early as next month. Gaza Escalation, West Bank Annexation and Settler Violence Surge The visa ban coincides with an ever-widening military offensive by the IDF in Gaza, which has already killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, and resulted in the displacement of more than two million more, almost all of whom are now facing starvation due to Israel's blocking of humanitarian aid, and an air, land and sea blockade which has been in place since 2007. It also comes amid a documented surge in settler attacks across the West Bank, where armed colonists—often backed by Israeli soldiers—have torched Palestinian homes, olive groves, and vehicles with near-total impunity. In the past week alone, nine Palestinians, including 5 children, were killed in the West Bank. Seven were killed by Israeli forces, 1 by a settlement security guard and one by an armed settler, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). Israel's Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who controls West Bank civil administration, declared in March 2023, seven months before the Hamas-led October 2023 attacks in Israel, that "there's no such thing as Palestinian people" and vowed to legalize dozens of wildcat settlements. He was speaking at a podium which displayed the state of Israel with expanded boundaries that included the West Bank, East Jerusalem, Gaza and Jordan. National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, a convicted racist, said in early July: "We must not stop for even a moment. We need to achieve a full victory, occupy all of Gaza, stop humanitarian aid, and encourage migration, not partial deals." U.S. Shields Israel at the UN Amid Gaza Carnage The Trump administration simultaneously boycotted a UN conference this week promoting a two-state solution, dismissing it as a "publicity stunt"—a move that underscores America's role in blocking diplomatic pressure on Israel. Despite global outcry over Gaza's humanitarian catastrophe (which has resulted in the death of more than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed when seeking aid ), the U.S. has repeatedly vetoed UN ceasefire resolutions and armed Israel's offensive with billions in military aid. Meanwhile, European nations—including France, together with Canada, and Britain—are considering recognizing Palestinian statehood at the UN, a move the White House called "counterproductive." Secretary of State Marco Rubio downplayed the moves, describing them as 'irrelevant.' He told Fox News on Thursday: "First of all, none of these countries has the ability to create a Palestinian state. There can be no Palestinian state unless Israel agrees to it." Israeli Ministers' Blueprint: Empty Gaza, Annex the West Bank The visa crackdown comes as senior Israeli officials escalate rhetoric endorsing permanent occupation: Agriculture Minister Avi Dichter (Likud) stated in November 2023 that Israel is executing "Gaza's Nakba 2023", referencing the 1948 ethnic cleansing of Palestinians. Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi in February this year called for the "forceful expulsion" of the Palestinian people from Gaza. Eleven cabinet Ministers and 15 Knesset members attended a conference calling for 'voluntary migration' and Israeli settlement of the Gaza Strip. Why the Visa Bans Matter While largely symbolic (the PLO's D.C. office was shuttered in 2018), the move signals unwavering U.S. support for Israel's territorial ambitions. The State Department's accusations—targeting PA payments to families of prisoners and ICC cases against Israel—mirror Netanyahu's longtime talking points. Notably, the statement ignored Hamas, which the U.S. already blacklists, to instead punish the moderate PA, whose security forces coordinate with Israel in the West Bank. The Bigger Picture With Gaza in ruins and the West Bank under escalating settler violence, the U.S. visa restrictions reinforce a one-sided approach: isolating Palestinian leadership while Israeli officials map a future of dispossession and apartheid. As the UN warns of "genocidal acts" in Gaza, the Trump administration's actions suggest a green light for Israel's most extreme ambitions—depopulation, annexation, and permanent statelessness for Palestinians. U.S. Presidential envoy Steve Witkoff meantime was in Israel Thursday, meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Mr Witkoff , together with U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee was expected to inspect the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Fund (GHF) distribution centers in Gaza on Friday. Reports say more than 1,000 Palestinians seeking aid at the centers have been killed by Israeli forces. "Special Envoy Witkoff and Ambassador Huckabee will be traveling into Gaza on Friday to inspect the current distribution sites and secure a plan to deliver more food and meet with local Gazans to hear firsthand about this dire situation on the ground," White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters Thursday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store