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RESEARCH
File · 1947 - 2000
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

"How the Arab Leaders Created the Middle East Refugees" published by Labour Friends of Israel, Informatin Brief " The Arabs Admit: We Called for the Flight from Palestine," invitations, "John Sack's Defective Esquire Article" by Mark Weber, "Canceled" by John Sack, Commons debates, Chapter F-29 An Act respecting Foreign Enlistment, speeches, Senate debates, Chapter 35 An Act to protect Certain Civil Rights, various Ontario Acts, Bill C-16 An Act to amend certain statutes to provide equality of status thereunder for male and female persons, news releases, Final Report of the special representative of the Government of Canada respecting the Middle East and North Africa, "Palestine" from Encyclopedia Brittanica volume 17, Canadian Middle East Digest volume 6, number 3 and 5, Chapter 73 An Act respecting War Crimes, United Kingdom Regulations for the Trial of War Criminals, extracts from War Crimes Project by Kenneth Narvey, and memorandum regarding Arab-Israeli conflicts, refugees in the middle east, and the treatment of Jewish victims of war and war criminals.

RESEARCH
File · 1943 - 1974
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Copies of book chapters, House of Commons debates, United Nations reports, encyclopedia articles, and the Canadian Middle-East Digest regarding women's roles, Arab-Israeli conflicts, Jewish life in the Soviet Union, Palestine, Islam, and the history of Jerusalem.

RESEARCH
File · 1947 - 1999
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

"Funny, You Don't Look Christian" by Robert Herhold, "Learning from History: Re: The Holocaust and National Socialism in Education" by Kiemens, copies of web pages (Holocaust life stories), Jerusalem Press Daily Report from the occupied territories volume VIII, number 8, "Israeli Settlements: Against the Law" brief published by Settlement Watch (District of Columbia), book extracts, "Messiah and Apostle" from Jews, God, and History by Max Dimont, notes, action alerts, speeches, brochures, correspondence, maps, copies of newspaper clippings, Canadian Delegation to the Second Part of the First Session of the General Assembly, extracts from Everyone's United Nations: 1945-1965, United Nations General Assembly, and Canada at the United Nations 1947 regarding territorial boundaries in the Middle East and Arab-Israeli conflict,

RESEARCH
File · 1902 - 1980
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Extracts from The Tenacity of Prejudice: Anti-Semitism in Contemporary America by Gertrude Selznick and Stephen Steinberg, Geography of Israel by Efraim Orni and Elisha Efrat, Canadian Human Rights Commission's Calendar of Religious Holidays 1980, extracts from A Winter Pilgrimage: Being an account of travels through Palestine, Italy, and the Island of Cyprus, accomplished in the Year 1900 by H. Rider Haggard, Crisis and Conscience in the Middle East by Christian Jauer, Jr., and extracts from Peace-keeping by U.N. Forces: From Suez to the Congo by Arthur Burns and Nina Heathcote regarding anti-semitism, and Arab-Israeli conflicts.

RESEARCH BY DORIS EDWARDS
File · 1975 - 1977
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Research materials regarding Arab nationalism, Islamic society, the Armenian genocide, Jewish presence in the near east, the Kurds, the Olympic Massacre, anti-semitism in the Catholic Church, Jews in Arab nations, refugees, British rule of Palestine, women and religion, and Arab-Israeli conflicts.

Research notes and materials regarding Jews in Soviet Russia, the Olympic Massacre, Jews in Arab nations, refugees, British rule of Palestine, women and religion, and Arab-Israeli conflicts. Also includes a timeline of European and middle eastern events in the late 1930s, terrorist attacks in the 1970s, and refugees in the 1940s through 1970s.

CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY

Correspondence and supporting materials regarding ME Ritchie opposing Member of Parliament Svend Robinson from conducting research at Concordia University in Montreal due to his support of Palestine.

DAWN PUBLISHING COMPANY
File · 1994 - 1998
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Newsletters and articles by the Canadian Jewish Herald published by the Dawn Publishing Company regarding the history of Israel-Palestine, Zionism, and the survival of the Jewish people. Also includes "Israel's Mistakes are Never Forgotten: Amidst a sea of hatred and hypocrisy it is a miracle that Israel is still alive" by Dan Nimrod, editor of the Canadian Jewish Herald.

EMBASSY OF ISRAEL
File · 1971 - 1998
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Correspondence with Chen Ivri Counsellor of the Embassy of Israel, memorandum, statements, and policy papers regarding refugees in Israel, the State of Israel, human rights, and women in Israel.

BERT RAPHAEL, Q.C.
File · 2002 - 2003
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Correspondence with Bert Raphael, President of the Jewish Civil Rights Educational Foundation of Canada, and supporting documentation regarding Irving Himel receiving the Order of Ontario.

EVA BEDARD-RESEARCHER

Correspondence, "The PLO's Diplomacy of Terror" by Eva Bedard, notes, memorandum, "Research Project - re Arab-Israeli Conflict," curriculum vitae, "The PLO -- Canada's Dilemma" by Bedard regarding Eva Bedara, a volunteer at the Human Rights Institute of Canada, and her research on Arab-Israeli conflicts and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO).

File · 1974 - 2009
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Correspondence, copies of newspaper clippings, "Antisemitism and the Canadian Government" by Ritchie, "Dividing Women by Race" by Ritchie, news releases, extracts from General Assembly Plenary Meetings 31st and 32nd sessions, "The P.L.O. - Rewriting History to Suit Themselves" by Ritchie, interviews with David Tinnin, Associate Editor of Time Magazine, "Revolutionary Violence and Canadian Policy" by Ritchie, "History versus Arab claims to 'homeland'" by Ritchie (under pseudonym E.M. O'Connor) regarding the Human Rights Institute of Canada's requests for research materials, M.E. Ritchie's opinions on Canada's relationship with Israel and Palestine and media coverage thereof, Arab-Israeli conflicts, and anti-semitism.

PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES
File · 1947 - 1948
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Copies of London Parliamentary debates (Hansard) third to ninth volume of session 1947-48, Fifth series, volumes 445-451, with annotations, regarding Israel, Palestine, war crimes, and Arab-Israeli conflicts.

GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE
File · 1980 - 2003
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Copies of web pages, correspondence, chronologies, Council of the League of Nations' "The Palestine Mandate," copies of newspaper clippings, speeches, news releases, notes, "Time for a new look at the Middle East" by M.E. Ritchie, letters to the editor, "Canada's Two Faces in the Middle East" by Ritchie, "Antisemitism and the Canadian Government" by Ritchie, memorandum, The Law and the Soviet Union volume 4, number 1, telephone conversation transcripts, "The Falashas: History and Analysis of Policy Towards a Beleaguered Community" by Diane Winston, lectures, fact sheets, and Jews in Arab Lands Bulletin December 10, 1979 published by Canadian Jewish Congress (Toronto) regarding civil war in Lebanon, Arab-Israeli conflicts, and anti-semitism in Canada.

GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE
File · 1954 - 1970
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Transcripts of television broadcasts, memorandum, newspaper clippings, correspondence, "Our World" television broadcasts, "The Vicious Circle in the Mid-East Must be Broken" by Arnold Toynbee, letters to the editor, numbered letters, article extracts, notes, fact sheets, "Arab Refugees" interview, "A Time for Truth in the Middle East," "King Hussein and the Question of Peace in the Middle East," "Outside Pressures will not Deter Israel in Quest for Genuine Peace" [all by M.E. Ritchie?], maps, and the "Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel" regarding anti-semitism in Canada, and Arab-Israeli conflicts.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
File · 1964 - 1974
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Newspaper clippings, magazine articles, and encyclopedia articles regarding Arab-Israeli conflicts, anti-semitism, Israel, terrorism, war in Israel in 1973, and oil prices as a result of conflict in the middle east.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
File · 1956 - 1980
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Correspondence, notes, copies of book chapters, newspaper clippings, regarding Arab-Israeli conflicts, the Soviet Union's position on Jews, and the recognition of new countries. Also includes a draft resolution and draft reports from the United Nations Commission on Human Rights' Sub Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities and on the elimination of racism.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
File · 1973 - 1978
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Newspaper clippings, magazine articles, United Nations Economic and Social Council notes, and a timeline regarding Israel withdrawing from the Egyptian Suez Canal, peace talks, Arab-Israeli conflicts, the palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), the Arab boycott, United Nations financial problems, and United Nations attempts at peace.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
File · 1970 - 1974
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Newspaper clippings regarding summaries of Arab-Israeli conflicts and Israel, the death of Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, international relations with Egypt throughtout the 1950s and 1960s, image of Muslims in America, oil, Arab-Israeli conflicts, and proposed peace talks in the middle east.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
File · 1970 - 1972
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Copies of newspaper clippings, magazine articles, and journal articles regarding the middle east, Russian immigration to Israel, conflicts, terrorism, and international politics.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
File · 1969 - 1976
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Law dictionary entries, conventions, copies of newspaper clippings, press releases, and United Nations general Assembly studies regarding international relations, agreements, and declarations, succession of states, release of books in Israel and International Relations, Canada's recognition of Palestine, violence in middle eastern countries, and the partition of Pakistan and India.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
File · 1974 - 2004
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Newspaper clippings regarding anti-Israel sentiments from European governments and international academics, Hezbollah not being listed as a terrorist group, security fences, the United Nations anti-racism conference in Durban,

NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
File · 1973 - 1988
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Newspaper clippings regarding Arab-Israeli conflicts, peace talks, the 1973 Israeli war, Israeli-American relations, Israeli-Russian relations, and the United Nations action with respect to Israel.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
File · 1968 - 1974
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Newspaper clippings regarding Arab-Israeli conflicts, peace talks, the 1973 Israeli war, Israeli-American relations, terrorism, and the succession of Israel Prime Minister Golda Meir.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
File · 1970 - 1974
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Newspaper clippings regarding Arab-Israeli conflicts, terrorism, the Bengladesh Liberation War, the 1973 Israeli war, prisoners of war, Iraq civil war, anti-semitism, and peace talks.

Government of Canada

The Government of Canada series is the largest series of the fonds and contains 26 subseries arranged by subject. Materials were created between 1948 and 2013, and also includes research materials dating from 1867. This series covers all subseries related to the function and role of the federal government, beliefs and actions of politicians, relationships and conflicts between the provinces and the federal government, support from politicians for Senate reform and Persons Case II, the constitution, and the Official Languages Act and bilingualism. Materials in this series are predominately research and communications with public figures. This includes newspaper clippings, speeches, interviews, press releases, memorandum, and correspondence.

This series focuses on Prime Ministers, Senators, Members of Parliament, Governor Generals, and appointed Judges. Government bodies featured in this series include materials on the Senate and Senate reform, the functioning of the House of Commons, and the creation and function of government departments, such as Heritage Canada. The actions of political parties and governments included in this series are conflicts between the federal government and provincial governments, political scandals and government corruptions, political opinions of the federal parties, and the effect of political ideology on representation of historical events. Enacted and proposed legislation discussed in this series are the 1982 constitution, the Charter of Rights and Freedom, the Meech Lake Accord, the Charlottetown Accord, and the Official Languages Act. Marguerite Ritchie was initially against the constitution as she felt it went against the British North America Act of 1867. After the constitution and the Charter came into full force in 1985 her views began to shift. She was also opposed to the Meech Lake and Charlottetown Accords. The Official Languages Act and bilingualism materials deal with the impact of bilingualism policies on all levels of government, education in bilingual communities in northern Ontario, the bilingual cities of Moncton and Ottawa, employment in the federal government, federal government funding for translation and language training, and language laws in Quebec. Marguerite Ritchie was critical of official bilingualism and fought for the rights of Anglophones in Quebec. The Knowledge Project was an HRI effort to gather evidence of Canada becoming increasingly francophone and losing British traditions. Marguerite Ritchie had a shift in opinion during the Meech Lake Accord and felt that Quebec should separate from Canada so that it would not threaten the survival of English Canada. Additionally, this series contains research on other human rights activists and whistleblowers fighting against human right abuses and political corruption.

Current events discussed at length in this series include the expropriation of Nanoose Bay (1999), the Oka Crisis (1990), the October Crisis and the Front de liberation du Quebec (FLQ) (1970), the Meech Lake Accord (1987-1990) and the Charlottetown Accord (1992), the New Brunswick Constitutional Amendment (1993), and the Famous Five from the Persons Case (1927-1929).

Nanoose Bay in British Columbia is a long standing military base that was expropriated to the federal government after BC tried to stop the base from allowing American nuclear powered submarines to run tests in the bay. BC wanted to refuse the continuation of the lease for the base. The federal government claimed the land and bay as federal territory while BC made the case that Nanoose Bay was within provincial jurisdiction. The Supreme Court ruled that jurisdiction depended on land claims agreed upon between Canada and British Columbia when BC joined confederation, as it had already been ruled that waters below the low water mark were federal jurisdiction. After it was determined that Nanoose Bay had been included in BC provincial land at confederation, the federal government initiated expropriation hearings to claim the land. The expropriation of Nanoose Bay marks the first and only time the federal government has expropriated land from a province for a military base. The Human Right Institute of Canada fought against the expropriation and believed it was a misuse of federal expropriation power.

The Oka Crisis began in Oka, Quebec, when the town wanted to extend a golf course from 9 holes to 18. The expansion required use of disputed land that lay between the golf course and neighbouring Kanesatake Mohawk reserve and contained a burial ground and a sacred pine forest. The land dispute had been previously settled in 1986 against the Mohawk band and so when plans for development of the golf course were made the mayor of Oka did not consult the band. As development was about to begin, 60 Mohawk warriors barricaded the road to the disputed land, physically stopping the developers. Provincial police and RCMP officers stood against the warriors who had grown in number to hundreds and a standoff began that lasted from July 11, 1990 until September 26, 1990. During this time one SQ and one Mohawk elder were killed and dozens more were wounded. The source of the bullet that killed the SQ was never determined, while the Mohawk elder was killed during an anti-Mohawk protest by locals. Aboriginal activists in solidarity with the Oka reserve protested in Kahnawake and barricaded the Mercier Bridge in Montreal and various highways where they passed through reserve land. The growing Mohawk barriers were protested by locals. The army was deployed on request of the premier of Quebec after the RCMP aid to the SQ did not end the crisis. After a final confrontation where a Mohawk man setting off flares was responded to by the RCMP turning a water hose on the crowd, the Mohawk laid down their weapons and abandoned the barricade. The golf course was cancelled by the mayor and the disputed land was bought by the federal government to prevent further development. The land remains disputed as land claims have never officially been settled.

The FLQ (Front de liberation du Quebec) was a terrorist group active through the 1960s in Montreal which culminated in the October Crisis of 1970 when British Trade Commissioner James Cross was kidnapped and Quebec Labour Minister Pierre Laporte was murdered. The FLQ were hardline sovereigntists who were known to use violence in their activism, including bombing the Montreal Stock Exchange in 1969. The War Measures Act was enacted for the first and only time during a time of peace by Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau and the Canadian army was called in to find the FLQ and the kidnapped trade commissioner. Popular support for the FLQ faded after the announcement of the murder of Labour Minister Pierre Laporte. The FLQ members and James Cross were found in December 1970. Laporte’s kidnappers and murders were tried and convicted while Cross’ kidnappers were granted passage to Cuba with Castro’s permission.

The Meech Lake Accord and the Charlottetown Accord were attempts made by Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and his Progressive Conservative government to amend the 1982 constitution signed by Liberal Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau. Amendments were proposed to appease Quebec so they would ratify the constitution. Appeasements included recognizing Quebec as a distinct society, having appointments for Supreme Court judges and Senators made from lists submitted by the provinces or regions, a new amendment method for the constitution, compensation for opting out of federal programs, and more immigration control for the provinces. Provincial signatures were not required for the 1982 constitution to be effective, but the symbolic support was desired for French-English relations. The Meech Lake Accord was drafted at Meech Lake outside of Gatineau, Quebec, by Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and the 10 provincial premiers. It was heavily criticized for including the territories only through video conference and not including native band councils. The Meech Lake Accord required the unanimous support of all provincial legislatures to be enacted into law. It failed at the provincial level when Elijah Harper, a first nations Member of Provincial Parliament from Manitoba, voted against it by holding up a feather in protest of native bands having been excluded, which in turn created a domino effect across provincial legislatures. The Charlottetown Accord addressed the concerns from the failed Meech Lake Accord and was set to a popular vote in a referendum where it failed in 7 of 12 provinces and territories with a 54.3% ‘no’ vote nationwide. The Human Rights Institute of Canada fought against both constitutional accords on the grounds that Quebec should not be given ‘special treatment’ with respect to the other provinces and that the Meech Lake Accord was not democratically or fairly drafted.

The New Brunswick Constitutional Amendment was made after the failure of the Charlottetown Accord to make New Brunswick officially bilingual. It required the province of New Brunswick to provide parallel services to Anglophones and francophones. The Human Rights Institute fought against the New Brunswick Constitutional Amendment on the grounds that bilingualism was discriminatory against Anglophones and not worth the financial costs.

The Famous Five: Emily Murphy, Irene Marryat Parlby, Nellie Mooney McClung, Louise Crummy McKinney, and Henrietta Muir Edwards, were women’s activists from Alberta. They submitted a petition to Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King to submit a reference to the Supreme Court of Canada, which became known as the Persons Case. The reference asked if women were considered persons under the qualifications to be appointed to Senate. A ruling in an English court in 1876 had declared that “women are persons in matters of pains and penalties, but are not persons in matters of rights and privileges.” Though this ruling had not set a precedent, the sentiment represented a common interpretation of legislation. In their ruling on the reference, the Supreme Court said that according to tradition, women were not persons for the purpose of Senate appointment. This ruling was appealed to the Privy Council in the House of Lords in England as the highest court of Canada. The Privy Council unanimously deemed women to be full persons under the law and therefore able to be appointed to the Senate. The Human Rights Institute of Canada worked to correct misrepresentations of the Persons Case and to properly contextualize its importance in the history of women’s rights.

File · 1947 - 2011
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Copies of newspaper clippings, encyclopedia entries, House of Commons debates, and statutes regarding Prime Minister John Diefenbaker's term in office, the Canadian Bill of Rights, Diefenbaker's legacy, the Diefenbunker, and the official languages act. Also includes "The Case for a Canadian Bill of Rights" by W. Glen How.

LESTER B. PEARSON-GENERAL
File · 1964 - 2011
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Copies of newspaper clippings, encyclopedia entries, copies of book chapters, press releases, and House of Commons debates regarding bilingualism and biculturalism, biographies of Lester B. Pearson, and the role and functioning of government. Also includes "Federalism and International Relations" by Paul Martin, Secretary of State for External Affairs.

File · 1998 - 2001
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Correspondence, copies of newspaper clippings, and Coporate Services and Economic Development Committee agenda regarding a small claims lawsuit brought by Joe Holden against Ottawa city councillor for a comment about cockroaches during debate on the Ottawa bilingualism by-law.

File · 2009 - 2012
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Correspondence, copies of newspaper clippings, memorandum, newsletters, public meeting agendas, and press releases regarding support from Canadians for Language Fairness (CLF) for the Human Rights Institute of Canada, public meetings of CLF, historical revisionism, bilingualism in Ottawa and in Canada more broadly, and the Official Languages Act.

File · 1995 - 1998
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Correspondence, memorandum, meeting materials, and newsletters regarding the Chateauguay Valley English-Speaking Peoples Association (CVESPA)'s work on Quebec's language laws, CVESPA annual meetings, CVESPA Executive Director Janet Hicks and President Maurice King, foreign affairs, mutual support between CVESPA and the Human Rights Institute of Canada, anti-semitism in CVESPA's Dialogue magazine, and a CVESPA conference called "The Past, Present, and Future of English speaking Community in Monteregie."

GLEN KEALEY INVESTIGATIONS

Copies of newspaper clippings, correspondence, and archival research regarding various political scandals and corruption charges, specifically within the Mulroney government, discussed in the Kealey Papers publication by Glen Kealey.

File · 1980 - 2011
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Copies of newspaper clippings and correspondence regarding politics in British Columbia, relations between BC and Alberta, fishing rights in BC, Nanoose Bay, bilingualism, french language schools in BC, polygamy in the Mormon community in Bountiful, BC, and the Meech Lake Accord.

The Government of Canada - Scandals subseries contains 10 files discussing scandals faced by the federal government. Files are arranged by scandal. This subseries contains a variety of document types including newspaper clippings, correspondence, and research. The specific topics this subseries covers are Canada’s first sex scandal, scandals surrounding the personal lives of politicians in Ottawa, RCMP officers engaging in illegal activities, health and safety scandals, and the Combines Investigation Commission.

File · 2009 - 2010
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Correspondence, articles, House of Commons debates, notes, and supporting documents regarding archival research into the resignation of Combines Investigation Commissioner F.A. McGregor and Ian MacKeigan, as well as the Combines Investigation Act. Includes a 2010 reflection on the significance of the Combines Investigation Commission.

COAL MINES AND WESTRAY
File · 1989 - 2009
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Copies of newspaper clippings, memorandum, magazine articles, correspondence, court documents, and archival research regarding the closure of coal minds in Nova Scotia, deaths of miners in mining accidents, and the Westray coal mine explosion and court case.

WHISTLEBLOWERS

The Whistleblowers subseries contains 2 files discussing whistleblowers exposing government corruption. Files are arranged chronologically. This subseries contains newspaper clippings and correspondence. The specific topics this subseries covers are legislation to protect whistleblowers and the scandals exposed by whistleblowing, including scandals on science research, foreign affairs, and health care.

VARIOUS ARTICLES
File · 2006 - 2012
Part of Human Rights Institute of Canada fonds

Copies of newspaper clippings regarding whistleblowers who exposed government scandals related to health care, science research, and foreign affairs, and legislation meant to protect whistleblowers.

ADDENDUMS-DIALOGUE MAGAZINES

The Dialogue Magazine subseries consists of 2 files of Dialogue Magazines. Files are arranged chronologically for a period of approximately 10 years. The time span shows changing views in Canada and changes in the publishing situation of the magazine. The specific topics covered in Dialogue Magazines in this subseries are the Liberal sponsorship scandal, same-sex marriage, various provincial and federal elections, Ottawa becoming bilingual, Quebec separation politics, and Senate reform.