ceasefire

Montrealers take to the streets for Lebanon

Hundreds of Montreal residents gathered in Dorchester Square to march towards the Israeli Consulate on Sept. 25, in protest of Israel’s escalated attacks on Lebanon. Photo Hannah-Scott Talib

Gabe Elliott,
Local Journalism Initiative

Protesters demanded an end to attacks on Lebanon and a ceasefire in Palestine

On Sept. 25, hundreds of Montrealers gathered downtown at Dorchester Square to protest Israel’s escalation of violence against Lebanon.

The protest, organized by the Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM) Montreal, began at 6 p.m. Protesters banged drums, played Lebanese music and led chants such as, “Say it clear and say it loud, resistance, you make us proud” and, “Up, up with liberation, down, down with the occupation.”. 

PYM speakers addressed those gathered at the square, before the march began along René-Lévesque Blvd., turning onto Stanley St. and then heading along St.-Catherine St. towards the Israeli Consulate.

“For 365 days, we have taken to the streets to demand an end to the genocide and an end to the criminal Canadian complicity,” one PYM speaker said. “From Lebanon to Palestine, we will continue fight[ing] until the end of the genocide in Gaza, until every prisoner is liberated, until every refugee returns home, and until every single inch of Palestine is free, from the river to the sea.”

Since Sept. 23, Israel has escalated its attacks on Lebanon, killing at least 620 people, including at least 50 children, and injuring over 1,800 others. More people died on Sept. 23 than on any other day since the end of the country’s civil war 34 years ago. 

Community members handed out plums to the crowd gathered in front of the Consulate, as more speeches began. Speakers directly connected the escalation of attacks on Lebanon to Israel’s occupation of Palestine and the ongoing genocide in Gaza, stressing that to oppose one is to oppose all.

One protester, who was granted anonymity for safety reasons, spoke about their personal connection to recent events. 

“I’m Lebanese and from the south, my village has [already] been getting bombed for the past 11 months,” they said. “[The current situation] means a lot to me because now it’s getting intensely bombed.”

Another attendee, who left Lebanon in 2020 after the explosion in Beirut and was also granted anonymity for safety reasons, said that it’s important to attend protests demanding that Israel be held accountable for actions committed since the country was founded in 1948. 

“Israel has been committing injustices since it was created. Its creation is an injustice,” they said. “[Israel] has committed massacre after massacre, they’re committing ethnic cleansing, genocide, they occupied the south of [Lebanon] as well, and they just get away with impunity because they’re an extension of the American imperial core.”

The protest dispersed at 8:40 p.m., with Muslim community members joining in collective prayer. Organizers made a final address to the crowd, urging those in attendance to stay engaged and continue their protest and advocacy as the one-year anniversary of the genocide in Gaza approaches.
 

Montrealers take to the streets for Lebanon Read More »

The cedar and olive tree are forever interlinked

Lebanese and Palestinian protesters unite at a protest to denounce Israel’s attacks on both countries. Photo Andraé Lerone Lewis

Yasmine Chouman,
Local Journalism Initiative

In January 2024, Salima Telal, 48, was sitting on her couch with her shisha in hand. The TV was playing while her dog ran around the house. One of her sons was cooking in the kitchen, while the other sat across, listening as she spoke about their 2006 trip to Lebanon. 

“We went all the way to Syria, afraid [our car] would get bombed,” Telal said, “with my 8-month-old with 40-degree fever on one side and my 5-year-old on the other.”

The day was July 12, 2006, when Israeli forces invaded Lebanon with air strikes after Hezbollah succeeded at a cross-border raid during an ongoing conflict over land. This resulted in what is called the Second Lebanon War. 

Telal and her family drove from Lebanon towards the Syrian border, avoiding impact holes left in the ground by airstrikes. Cars were being bombed left and right. Beirut’s Rafic Hariri International Airport had been bombed. Civilians had few chances to escape. 

Telal was one of the few who managed to flee the war in its early stages, returning to Montreal. 

“Everybody was scared. It was hell and back,” she said, exhaling the smoke from her shisha.

Telal lived in Beirut, Lebanon for most of her life. She grew up there before coming to Montreal around 25 years ago where she raised her kids. During her visit to Lebanon in 2006, she recalled buildings being destroyed, civilians being bombed and people trying to flee. Water and electricity were restricted and there was no cell service. 

“They emptied the city so they could take it over,” Telal said, “like they’ve been [trying to do] to Palestine for years.”

The conflict ended with a ceasefire that was brokered by the United Nations, which came into effect on Aug. 14, 2006, after a month of bombings. 
Since 1948, after hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were forced out of their homeland, they have continued fighting for their lives in response to Israel occupying their land and turning cities like Gaza into open-air prisons. As for Lebanon, it has had a strained relationship with Israel since 1982, when it invaded southern Lebanon during the Lebanese Civil War, and with the 2006 Second Lebanon War.

This is why many people in the Lebanese community in Montreal have stood in solidarity with Palestine and continue to do so. This was the case when The Link spoke with Telal in January, and has become especially true now. 

On Sept. 23, Israel fired airstrikes across Lebanon. At the time of publication, Israel has killed over 1,000 and wounded at least 6,000 Lebanese people in the attacks, according to Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health. These are the heaviest tolls since 2006.

In response, Hezbollah fired missiles targeting Israeli military air bases. 

From the south of Beqaa to Beirut, hundreds of thousands of residents have been forced to flee, leaving behind their beloved homes, with seemingly nowhere to go. At least 58 towns have been hit with over 1,300 Israeli airstrikes. Before the escalation, Israel had detonated pagers used by Hezbollah, killing 37 and injuring about 3,000 people.

In an interview with CBS, former CIA Director Leon Panetta called the targeted pager attacks on Lebanon a “form of terrorism.”

Reina Sinno, a Lebanese LaSalle College student, said the media does everything in its power to dehumanize Arabs.

“Western media is good at manipulating,” Sinno said. The 20-year-old student sat on the school floor during her break between classes to talk about how she thinks the media views Arabs. Sinno was born in Montreal but lived in Lebanon for the first few years of her life until her family moved back to Quebec.

She keeps in contact with her father, who lives in Lebanon. Over the past 11 months, border skirmishes between Hezbollah and Israel have been happening almost daily, with little to no coverage in the media, Sinno said. Her father said he received daily alerts on his phone about incoming missile strikes.

Sinno said the media only portrays Israel bombing Lebanon as a two-time occurrence, referring to the civil war and the 2006 war, when in reality, it has been happening on and off for the last 37 years

“They’re portraying it in a lie,” Sinno said.

On Jan. 3, Israeli forces attacked the Lebanese capital with drone strikes, killing seven people, including Hamas deputy leader Saleh al-Arouri. While this made some noise in the media for a few days, Israel has not officially accepted responsibility for the attack. Israel has been known to censor information in the media regarding their actions.

Jean Balka, 61, was not surprised at the avoidance of accountability. In a phone interview, he alleged, “Habibti, the media is controlled by Israel. How could you put stuff out against yourself?” 

Balka is a former fighter in the Lebanese Civil War and fought for the Christian side. They were called the Lebanese Front and consisted of national Maronites who were against Palestinian militancy in Lebanon. Despite disagreeing with the politics, Balka was forced to fight for the Lebanese Front rather than the Lebanese National Movement.

After the war, he went to New York and has been living both there and in Montreal since.

He spoke on his recent experience of being an Arab man in the Western World after the current war broke out. Sometime in early January, Balka was on his way to New York, a drive he has routinely done for the last 33 years, when he was stopped at the border. 

“I’m going to ask you some questions,” the man in the uniform said. “Are you Muslim or Christian?”

He had never been asked this question before.

“Since 9/11, us Arabs are viewed as terrorists and murderers,” Rayane Sakr said as she sipped her coffee at the local Second Cup Cafe in the cold December weather.  

Sakr is the child of Lebanese immigrant parents and has felt the struggle of being an Arab-Muslim woman in today’s society. Over the sound of coffee beans getting ground, the 19-year-old said, “We aren’t viewed as humans.” 

“They have lives, they go to school, they have hopes, they do birthday parties, they get married, they do their makeup, they dance,” she added, her voice trembling. “They are human!”

In January, there were over 250,000 Palestinian refugees in Lebanese refugee camps. Now, with many camps being destroyed, the stateless refugees have the possibility of living in poverty and facing harsh legal discrimination in Lebanon. 

Despite the daily fear, many individuals in the Lebanese community are confident in their nation’s ability to defend itself if the occasion arises. 

“Our people, being depressed and struggling for so many years, are ready to die for the cause of Palestine,” Balka said.

The Arab community in Montreal has mobilized for Palestine with protests drawing hundreds to thousands, raising awareness of the situation.

“At the protests, you see so many Lebanese flags because we know we can expect it too,” Sinno said.

Balka believes going to protests in support of the Arab community won’t make a difference. 

“Free Palestine! Free Palestine!” Balka shouted, “Free Palestine, but no one listens!”

“The more awareness you spread, the more people will try to help and put pressure on foreign governments to go for a ceasefire,” Telal said. 

However, spreading awareness both online or in person brings hope to those worried about their communities. Telal said the media is finally giving a voice to the Palestinian people and the Arab community.

“You don’t have to carry a gun to be a fighter for a cause,” Telal said. “A fighter can be a musician, a writer, a politician, a protester, a donator. Could be anything.”

For privacy and security reasons, the name ‘Salima Telal’ is a pseudonym.

The cedar and olive tree are forever interlinked Read More »

Pro-Palestinian protesters continue demanding for a ceasefire

Speakers commence the demonstration at Dorchester Square on March 24, 2024. Photo by Ellie Wand

Ellie Wand & Finn Tennyson Lean
Local Journalism Initiative

On March 23, hundreds of protesters gathered in Dorchester Square to protest in support of Palestinians in Gaza.

The demonstration was the first protest organized by la Coalition du Québec URGENCE Palestine, a newly formed coalition of pro-Palestinian organizations from Quebec. The coalition was supported by 228 organizations, including The Confédération des syndicats nationaux and the FTQ, as well as political parties such as Québec Solidaire and the Communist Party of Québec.

“We thought that it was important that we do something to express our ideas, to express our solidarity with the Palestinian people, and to protest against the action or inaction of our government,” said Diane Lamoureux, an administration committee member of the Ligue des droits et libertés, one of the member organizations of the coalition.

According to Gaza’s health ministry, over 32,000 Palestinians have been killed since Oct. 7, 2023. Humanitarian aid is still facing blockades and is unable to reach many Palestinians, despite funding from countries around the world, including Turkey, the U.A.E, and Egypt. Canada pledged $40 million in aid for Gaza in January 2024, shortly after pausing funding for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, known as UNRWA. In February, the United Nations (UN) warned that a quarter of Gaza’s population is at risk of imminent famine.

The coalition’s focus at the protest was to call for an immediate ceasefire and the safe passage of humanitarian aid into Gaza.

Ellen Gabriel, a Mohawk activist, spoke at the demonstration to urge Quebecers to stand for Palestine in the same way they should stand for Indigenous people. 

“As Indigenous people, we have always known there exists double standards,” said Gabriel. “We see the cracks that Gaza has revealed. When we see something as horrific as is happening in Gaza—the murder, the psychopaths with weapons killing innocent people and children and maiming them—to me, there are no more words to describe the evil that they have been unleashing against the Palestinians.”

Gabriel also spoke about the illegality of the situation in Gaza. “It’s really important for people to show up and call out the hypocrisy of Western states,” she Gabriel. “What they’re doing is not only against the Geneva Convention, but international human rights law, and I think they should be held to account not just by the people who are here.”

On March 23, the secretary-general of the United Nations, Antonio Guterres, visited Cairo, Egypt, where he restated the UN’s support for a ceasefire in Palestine. Despite international pressure, Israel rejected ceasefire terms proposed by Hamas in February.

On March 25, the UN Security Council voted in favour of a ceasefire in Gaza during Ramadan. 14 votes were cast in support, including Canada. The United States abstained. 

According to The Associated Press, around 80 per cent of people in Gaza have had to leave their homes since Oct. 7, 2023. Following military operations in the northern part of Gaza, people have fled south towards Egypt. 

Ghida, a spokesperson for the Palestinian Youth Movement, who did not wish to reveal her last name for safety reasons, has been organizing weekly protests in Montreal since October. She said that sustained pressure—in any form—is essential for change. “We should always be demanding more,” she said. “I would never underestimate any form of action. Everything is important because a movement needs different action to be a movement.”

Just two weeks ago, on March 9, protestors gathered on Parliament Hill in Ottawa for the National March for Gaza, which was said to have been one of the largest pro-Palestinian demonstrations in the city.

“You shouldn’t be an activist by yourself,” said Ghida. “Join a movement, join your local neighbourhood organization, because we can only put pressure as a collective.”

Hélène Denoncourt, who has been active in different forms of protests since she was a teenager, attended the demonstration with her friend, Johanne Laplante. While they both believe protests help to show solidarity and build community, they think politicians have the real power to affect change. 

“It’s to be together,” said Denocourt when asked why she was attending the protest. “It’s to feel that you’re not alone.”

Pro-Palestinian protesters continue demanding for a ceasefire Read More »

Scroll to Top