Guest Bloggers

Mingling Our Tears Together

The National Day of Vigils to Remember Murdered and Missing Aboriginal Women on October 4th, began with the research that was conducted by Amnesty International. The researcher was an LLM, Bevery Jacobs, a Faithkeeper in the Seneca Longhouse on the Six Nations Reserve, in 2001. She travelled across the country to gather stories of missing and murdered Aboriginal women. She worked with Elders to compile the Stolen Sisters Report which ended up as two Reports for Amnesty International in 2002.

My sister, Debbie Sloss-Clarke was one of those women who was murdered in Cabbagetown, Toronto, in the summer of 1997. She was living there and was overcoming her addictions, dependency and Post Traumatic Stress she suffered from a car accident. She was cultivating her identity and her culture and we would take her to Elders Gatherings, ceremonial events and such. So, when she was murdered, the Police did not notify the next of kin because she was (1) Aboriginal; (2) she was a woman; (3) she was known on the 'street;' (4) she was a known drinker and druggie to the Police. So, the police never really investigated her death and continued to dehumanize her, when my sister, Kathy, who lives in Toronto, went to the morgue to identify Debbie's decomposing body. She asked the Toronto Police what happened to her, and the reply was a curt, "She liked to party." This response was an objectification of her life and this "blame the victim mentality" was a further degradation of her representation. So, my husband contacted Bev Jacobs in 2000 to let her know that Debbie's death was a traumatic event in our family, as we weren't able to feel, we were not able to hear, we were emotionally upset at the mention of her memory and name, and we could not talk about her. So, Bev came to see us, she interviewed us, and she helped bring our family together for a healing weekend retreat to be able to grieve her journey home to the SPIRIT world. We released her SPIRIT and we feasted her, and we did a proper condolence and ceremony to help her go home. We thank Bev Jacobs for her tutelage. 

When Bev became the new President of the Native Women's Association of Canada, she knew that the Sisters in SPIRIT campaign had to be initiated by the NWAC, which it was, in 2004, on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Bev was elected President in 2003. My niece, Laurie Clarke-LaCrosse and I began to attend the SIS initiatives across the country to bring attention to Debbie's life and humanity. Laurie was Debbie's daughter. There is a brother, Len, as well in Debbie's family. We went to Vancouver, and all the way to New Richmond, a Mi'kmaq community on the Gaspe Peninsula in Quebec. My husband and I were at several family gatherings where we helped the families by conducting a traditional "Condolence" Ceremony for the families of these Sisters who were taken from us. We began to help with gatherings on the December 6th Montreal Massacre Anniversary, the February 14 V-Day anti-violence day across the country and International Women's Day on March 8th.

Our family is healing and we want to thank the Native Women's Association of Canada, the Amnesty International, KAIROS, and other agencies who have helped bring us together to "mingle our tears together." In our family, we have five girls and two boys. We have been pre-deceased by the deaths of two of our sisters, Debbie being one of them, and a brother. Our surviving siblings are our oldest brother John Sloss, myself - Mary Lou Smoke, my sisters Kathy Angus; Roxanne Gibbs, and Sue Contant. We still get together for family occasions to celebrate each other’s lives. Recently our niece, Debbie's daughter, Laurie Clarke-LaCrosse was married on September l9th, in Sault Ste Marie, Ontario. Debbie's SPIRIT was with our family on this happy occasion. We sang her favourite song to her. "The Cherokee Morning Song"  

Dan and Mary Lou Smoke 

My trip on the Canadian water convoy to Detroit

Detroit’s water crisis has drawn international attention in recent weeks putting a spotlight on the water cut-off program being pursued by the city. Organizations on the ground have been calling for an end to the cut-offs since March when the city announced it would begin shutting off water services to 1,500 to 3,000 households every week. Following a report  to the UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Right to Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation submitted by the Blue Planet Project/Council of Canadians and Detroit groups, Special Rapporteur Catarina de Albuquerque warned that the mass water shut-offs were a violation of human rights.

After mounting pressure the city announced a 15-day suspension on new shut-offs yet groups continue to call for the shut offs to end permanently.

Canadian water convoy
It was within this context that Council of Canadians national chairperson Maude Barlow and I joined Windsor chapter members Randy Emerson, Doug Hayes and others to set out on a water convoy to deliver fifty 5-gallon jugs of water to our friends in Detroit. Canadian Union of Public Employees national president Paul Moist and Dennis Burke also joined to show their solidarity.

The purpose of the convoy was to draw attention to the human rights violations happening in Detroit, call on President Obama to declare a public health crisis and express solidarity to those in Detroit whose taps had run dry.

On Thursday afternoon, we met chapter members, other groups, media and people simply interested in the issue wanting to lend a hand. Teacher Mary-Ellen Kavanaugh brought along her three children. There was a filmmaker and photographer wanting to document the cross-border action.

Under sunny skies, we loaded nearly a dozen cars, most marked with a blue and Canadian flag, and proceeded towards the Windsor-Detroit tunnel.

The day before our action, Ken Hammond, chief officer with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, told the Detroit Free Press, “Any water carried across the border that exceeds what is needed for personal use requires approval from the U.S. government to help ensure it is safe, and a number of laws, such as those in the U.S. Bioterrorism Act of 2002, would apply.” After hearing differing information, we were asked to fill out a U.S. Food and Drug Administration form but wouldn’t know whether we received approval until we reached the border.

Doug and I were the first vehicle to go through the border and we did so without a hitch. We met at a church down the street and were welcomed by cheers from Lila Cabbil from the Rosa Parks Institute, Alice Jennings, one of the lawyers from the class action suit filed last Monday, and others who were awaiting us to take us to the rally. We then received a call from Randy and Maude saying that they had been held back with others. So we waited and began devising a plan in case two of the speakers for the rally – Maude and Paul Moist – weren’t allowed through. Finally, we saw the blue flags approaching us and we all let out big cheers as the rest of the convoy joined us. 

Weaving through rush hour traffic, we arrived at the rally at the Spirit of Detroit to a crowd who’d been awaiting our arrival. I met up with Priscilla Dziubek, one of the lead organizers of the rally and a spokesperson for the Detroit People's Water Board. Paul jumped right into his speech and as quoted in USA Today  said “America is better than this. If the richest country in the world can bail out banks and bail out Wall Street with public money, then public money from the state level and national level can be used to help the people of Detroit who are in harm’s way health-wise without water.” (Photo above: Paul Moist shakes Lila Cabbil's hand with Maude Barlow in the middle)

Next the excited crowd listened to Maude who expressed solidarity to the people of Detroit, warned of the global water crisis and stressed the importance of upholding the human right to water and sanitation.  

Special delivery to St. Peter’s Episcopal Church
After the rally, the water convoy and people from the rally headed to St. Peter’s Episcopal Church at Michigan Avenue and Trumbull, a designated emergency water station, where we dropped the water jugs off.

Thursday was 313 day in Detroit marking its 313th birthday which is celebrated because the city’s area code is 313. So on our way to the church we passed people celebrating downtown.

Reverend Bill Wylie-Kellermann welcomed the convoy and thanked us for the water and our spiritual solidarity. He reminded us water everywhere is a gift and belongs to everyone. Maude spoke again and said, “Your struggle is our struggle.” She talked about the water war in Cochabamba where companies tried to privatize water -  even the rain – which prompted people to shut the city down for four days in protest. Maude told the cheering crowd: we are going to win this fight. Lila Cabbil spoke next about bottled water and the broader issue of water privatization. Like the privatization of water services, bottled water is the commodification of water. Bottled water companies take water from local communities in order to transport and sell it to communities outside of the watershed. She spoke of Charity Hicks’ Wage Love campaign and stressed the importance of it. Lila said, ‘Love is an action word.’ She urged people to help their neighbours whose water has been cut off and to refrain from buying bottled water.

Inside the church, Monica Lewis-Patrick of We the People brought tears to many people’s eyes by singing a beautiful song to the circle of people.

People at the rally and church were so grateful for the gesture of their neighbours bringing jugs of water. It was an incredibly powerful and moving day. Four days later, I’m inspired, humbled and eager to continue working with our Detroit friends to ensure water services are restored.

In the spirit of Charity Hicks
Charity Hicks, a strong and inspiring Detroit activist and a leader in the fight against the water shutoffs, was mentioned by many speakers and on the mind of many on Thursday.

The movement galvanized when her water was cut off and she was arrested for warning her neighbours to fill their tubs in May. She was hit by a car in New York at the end of May and remained in a coma until July 8 when she passed away. It was a huge loss to all the organizations and movements she worked with. But her spirit lives on in the work we do.

Her husband of 10 years, Louis Houngbo, attended the rally.

Charity is known for her ‘wage love’ campaign. She once said at a rally: “We love ourselves. We love our children. We love the earth. We love all of life. This is not a protest this is an act of waging love.” To learn more about the Wage Love campaign and to make a donation, click here.

Background on Detroit’s water crisis
Detroit began cutting water services to households in the spring despite being situated on the Great Lakes, the world’s largest body of freshwater, and the U.S. being one of the wealthiest countries in the world.

The city cut off water to thousands of residents in recent months, part of a program launched last fall to go after unpaid bills after years of lax enforcement, leaky pipes and deteriorating infrastructure.  The city plans to turn off water in all households that owe money by the end of the summer.

Even though 40% of the population is unemployed, water rates are twice the national average in the bankrupt city. Water rates have increased 119% in the last decade. An increase of 8.7% was approved in June. The bankruptcy plan proposed recently would increase water rates another 34%.

A exploding movement
Opposition has been mounting through the summer. Residents organized direct actions outside of Homrich, the company contracted to shut households’ water off. Hollywood stars like Mark Ruffalo and Rage Against the Machine’s Tom Morella have added their voices to the chorus of calls for an end to the shutoffs. On July 18, the National Nurses United along with the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions organized a mass rally that drew thousands of people including actor Ruffalo to the city. (Photo above: Maude Barlow with former Detroit Public Schools teacher Baxter Jones who was arrested July 18 for blocking the Homrich shutoff trucks from leaving the East Grand Blvd.)

The city buckled to the pressure and suspended new cut offs until August 5. However, this does not include the shut-offs that occurred before the suspension was announced. The Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) also said it was going to inform “shutoff crews to more aggressively turn off illegal use” during the temporary suspension. The DWSD said it would fine people $250 the first time, $500 the second time and $650 the third time. It is important to remember that UN Special Rapporteur Catarina De Albuquerque said, “When there is genuine inability to pay, human rights simply forbids disconnections.”

Privatization of water services
The water shut-offs put a spotlight on the larger dynamics at play in Detroit: the deep racial and economic divides, globalization and the hollowing out of a once almighty industry and the push to privatize one of our most basic resources.

The Detroit People’s Water Board, a local coalition promoting the human right to water, warn that officials see the unpaid accounts as a “bad debt” and want to entice private companies to bid on the city’s water system. In June, Detroit News reported that Emergency Manager Kevin Orr was reviewing several bids for the water system. Privatization cases around the world have resulted in rate increases, job losses and deterioration in water. The privatization of Detroit’s water system will exacerbate human rights violations we are only beginning to see.

What next?
President Obama has remained shockingly silent on Detroit’s water war and the human rights violation in the largest city along the US-Canada border.

Detroit is a cross roads and the choice it makes will have grave impacts on the ability of all to have water and whether it drives a larger wedge into existing racial and economic divides. It can go down the path of looking to the market for solutions to its water troubles which see water as a commodity, people as consumers, and health issues as externalities. Private companies are not accountable to the public. Or Obama can hold true to his word when he endorsed the UN’s resolution recognizing the human right to water and sanitation and ensure that people in Detroit have water to live. Community groups in Detroit are calling for the shutoffs to end permanently and for the city to go back to the table with community groups to implement the original water affordability program.

If this summer’s protests show anything, it’s that Obama and Governor Snyder will continue to have quite a fight on their hands if they don’t restore water to Detroiters.

To tell President Obama and Governor Snyder to stop the shutoffs, click here.

To see photos from the water convoy, click here.

Guest Blogger:
Emma Lui
Water campaigner
for the Council of Canadians.

 

Feast of the Precious Blood

On June 5th in London, Ontario, about 200 blood donors were honoured. It was a real privilege to witness women and men, young and not so young step forward to receive their certificate to commemorate various milestones. I was the guest of the amazing Sr. Loretta Hagen, csj, who was honoured for having donated plasma 600 times. How awesome is that! Also honoured was a gentleman who has reached the incredible milestone of 1000 units donated over a period of 58 years.  Such inspiring donors. Let us follow their example and get out there, as well, and donate ‘Blood, the Stuff of Life’ which is also the title of Lawrence Hill’s latest book all about the life giving blood that courses through our veins. ured for having donated plasma 600 times. How awesome is that! Also honoured was a gentleman who has reach the incredible milestone of 1000 units donated over a period of 52 years. Such inspiring folks. Let's get out there, as well, and donate blood 'The Stuff of Life' which is the title of Lawrence Hill's book all about the life giving blood that courses through our veins.

Close on the heels of this memorable occasion followed International Blood Donor Day on June 14th which prompted me to ponder some more about how I am invited not only to donate blood, but also about my call as a Missionary Sister of the Precious Blood to share the Precious Blood with all whose paths crosses mine each day. I remember thinking about my community, all those sisters ministering in so many places, saying to myself ‘together let us save lives by generously sharing our blood and the Precious Blood.’

And then came Trinity Sunday - June 15 the red-letter day if ever there was one, the day indelibly inscribed on the heart of all who knew and loved our dear Sister Mary Paule Tacke who that day was kidnapped and found dead the following day.  I had been thinking about how we are invited to ‘share our blood’ and the Precious Blood.  THIS is NOT what I had in mind.  However, what I had in mind is irrelevant.  On Trinity Sunday In Mthatha, South Africa, where our sister had lived our Precious Blood charism to the fullest, had poured out her life for God’s most vulnerable little ones, she shed her blood. As Sr. Christa Mary, cps, so eloquently reminds us: save lives by generously sharing our blood and the Precious Blood.

The focus of this year's World Blood Donor Day campaign is "Safe blood for saving mothers". Every day, about 800 women die from pregnancy or childbirth-related complications. Severe bleeding during delivery and after childbirth is a major cause of mortality, morbidity and long-term disability. The goal of the campaign is to increase awareness about why timely access to safe blood and blood products is essential for all countries as part of a comprehensive approach to prevent maternal deaths.

This story needs to form part of our congregational history. This woman needs to be part of the pride of our heritage. Out of Cottonwood USA came a CPS with an American spirit of justice and fairness for all people that was tested in the fire of her life history – and it was found to be gold!  This daughter of America and woman of Africa really lived her service to those in need. 

Not all of us are called to ‘shed our blood,’ however we all share the same life-blood of Jesus Christ, the Precious Blood that has been and is being transfused—poured out in loving service all over the world. In order for us to have life, it is essential that we gather around the altar of God to hear Jesus say to us…”Take, eat, this is my body.  Take, drink, this is my blood.”  In a sense, we receive a transfusion from God. On the lintels and doorposts of our hearts let us sprinkle the Precious Blood of Jesus so that everyone knows that our lives belong to God.  

May the Precious Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ ever bless and protect us.

Guest Blogger: Sr. Magdalena Vogt, cps

 

 

Torture Can and Must be Stopped

Talking about torture inevitably makes people feel uncomfortable. The tactics, the cruelty, the imagined pain and suffering are terrible to think about. But we need to start discussing torture much more than we do.  Because we have to stop it. And to stop it we need to talk about it. Otherwise it remains hidden, in the shadows. And if left in the shadows torture will never end.

Consider Claudia Medina’s case. Claudia was taken from her home in Veracruz, Mexico in the middle of the night. She was beaten, kicked, sexually assaulted, given electric shocks, and tied to a chair and left in the scorching afternoon sun on a navy base. Accused of being part of a criminal gang, she signed a statement she was not allowed to read and was paraded in front of the media. She later told the court she had been tortured. All but one of the charges were dropped and she was released. Almost two years later, there has been no investigation into her torture.

The global ban on torture is unambiguous. But torture is commonplace; in fact epidemic in many countries.  And sadly, instead of consistently rejecting torture in other countries, too often Canadian policy gives it a nudge and a wink. That complacency must give way to resolute leadership.

It is universally banned; and it is never excused. Yet the new campaign to Stop Torture launched by Amnesty International last month points to torture in 141 countries, on every continent, over the past five years. That extends beyond those countries most readily associated with torture, such as Syria, Iran or China. For instance, during the campaign Amnesty International activists across Canada will push to end high levels of torture in Mexico and the Philippines. Recently Amnesty International has initiated urgent action on torture in Colombia, Angola and Barbados. The wrenching reality is that torture rears its head in so many parts of our world; and not just where it would be most readily expected.

Few human rights protections are stated so unequivocally: in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, numerous other UN treaties, declarations and resolutions, and countless national constitutions and laws. No one shall be subjected to torture. No exceptional circumstances whatsoever may be invoked as a justification for torture. And not just internationally, there are countless national laws and constitutions which firmly reject torture, including Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Governments had good reason for that unconditional ban. Torture strikes at the essence of human dignity that is at the very heart of human rights. Excusing it for any reason – combatting terrorism, fighting crime or waging a war – only deepens the divisions and marginalization, and furthers the cycles of revenge and repression, that fuel human rights abuses and insecurity.

Governments also knew the ban made sense because torture doesn’t work; people will say anything to bring it to an end. And they realized that creating any exceptions was a dangerous slippery slope. There is no such thing as a little torture. Once it is allowed in one situation it’s use only grows.

The reasons it continues are many. People are tortured as punishment. They are tortured to force a confession, implicate someone else or obtain information. Torture is used to spread fear, keep people silent, and terrorize entire communities. It is often an extension of discrimination and misogyny. Torture frequently stems from misunderstanding and hate.

The techniques are multitude. The imagination of cruelty knows no bounds. From brutal physical mistreatment to agonizing psychological methods; torture leaves emotional scars, debilitating injuries and often leads to death. No one is spared: men and women, the young and the elderly.

In all of this, torturers are greatly aided by the secrecy that keeps their crimes hidden and the impunity that shields them from punishment. 

Safeguards are needed to pierce the secrecy, such as by making sure lawyers and doctors can play their role, standing between torturers and their victims. Political will is needed to shatter the impunity that denies justice to Claudia.

To make that happen, we need global champions. Surprisingly, no state truly leads the effort to eradicate torture. Why isn’t Canada playing that role?

Canada should be that champion simply because it is such a vital human rights concern. We should do so also because torture increasingly strikes frighteningly close to home.  It is no longer a faraway issue happening in faraway lands.  A growing number of Canadians have experienced torture around the world, including in Syria, Bahrain, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iran, China and Sri Lanka.  On any given day a Canadian is held somewhere in the world where the risk of torture is very real.

And it goes further than that. We also face the disturbing recognition that Canadian actions have contributed to torture in many countries. Numerous judicial inquiries and court rulings have made that very clear, including the cases of Maher Arar, Abdullah Almalki, Muayyed Nureddin, Ahmad Abou-Elmaati, Omar Khadr and Abousfian Abdelrazik. It was the central concern with Afghan prisoner transfers. And it remains a glaring human rights loophole in Canadian immigration law, which allows deportations to torture in exceptional cases. Canadians suffer the consequences of torture; but also Canadians are sometimes part of the problem of torture.

The Canadian connection to overseas torture is back in the news this year with further revelations about Ministerial Directions on torture and intelligence information. The directives authorize the use in Canada, in exceptional circumstances, of intelligence that was likely obtained through torture in other countries. And intelligence can be shared with foreign agencies, even when that will likely cause torture. That goes against one of the key recommendations to come out of the judicial inquiry into Maher Arar’s case. The UN’s expert Committee against Torture has called on Canada to bring the Ministerial Directions into line with the international ban on torture. But Canada hasn’t budged and shows no signs of planning to make any changes.

Meanwhile Canada rebuffs a groundbreaking UN treaty that is meant to prevent torture through a system of national and international prison inspections. The treaty, an Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture, has been around since 2002. Over 70 countries are on board, including France, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and other close Canadian allies. But despite promises at the UN in 2006 and 2009 to consider ratification, Canada has not done so. Last year Canada told the UN that there are no current plans to ratify the Optional Protocol. That makes it difficult to persuade other countries – where torture is rampant – to sign on. Why should they do what we are not prepared to do ourselves?

We must press for the laws and safeguards that will prevent torture. We must refuse to give a nod to torture anywhere, anytime. We must sign on to all relevant international treaties. As long as torture continues, anywhere – we all remain diminished by it; and we all remain vulnerable to it. We must stop torture; now.

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

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email:    aneve@amnesty.ca

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Full of Gratitude

I was pleased to have the opportunity to take a two-hour ride home with my daughter, Mary Elizabeth. On the way, she remarked that she had seen one of the shows of the current series on the Tudors. It’s fascinating to watch King Henry and his court, the wealthiest persons on the planet at that time. She was struck by the fact that she, simply by being alive in Canada, in this time of history, had much more wealth than anyone alive at that time. She mentioned flicking on a switch for electricity, safe drinking water from a tap right in our homes, flush toilets, heat and air-conditioning at will, music at the push of a button, all knowledge and entertainment available on the Internet, and Google Earth as a way to voyage from the safety of your armchair, Skype and Face Time to see and talk with loved ones across the world, and nearby hospitals with the miracles of modern medicines and methods free for all in need. She was full of gratitude, and this from a young lady who has wrestled all her life with depression. What lovely moments in time form, her mother.

Donna Crowell (Guest Blogger)