How is our work continuing in a pandemic? Find out in Quaker Concern!

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Jennifer Preston, Romeo Saganash, and Steve Heinrichs. Romeo is a former MP and proponent of Bill C-262. Steve heads up the Indigenous-settler relations for Mennonite Church Canada. Photo: Jane Orion Smith.

Advocating for Indigenous Rights During a Pandemic

by Jennifer Preston

Usually at this time of year,CFSC’s Indigenous Rights Committee writes about our ongoing work with partners advocating for Indigenous peoples’ human rights at the United Nations. We had planned to be in New York in April for the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (PFII) and Geneva in... June for the UN Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (EMRIP). PFII was cancelled for this year and EMRIP is still listed as postponed until the late fall, but what that means remains uncertain...

Keep reading ››

Quaker Concern

Community members take a knee in front of Toronto City Hall, June 2020. Photo: Matt Legge.

The Only Way Forward: Shifting Punitive Perspectives

by Keira Mann

Defund the police! It’s a demand that is all over the streets, the news, and in our minds right now. It’s a demand brought on by centuries of inequality and injustice. Although public attention was reignited in May following the killing of George Floyd by a police officer in the United States, Canada is certainly not immune to systemic racism. The experiences of Rodney Levi and Chantel Moore, two recent victims of deadly police violence towards Indigenous peoples in Canada, made it clear that this is not an issue that Canadians can ignore... Keep reading ››

Quaker Concern

Militarized Policing: North America to Israel/Palestine

by Sara avMaat

The recent and historical deaths at the hands of, or in the presence of, the police in Canada and the US are profoundly troubling. First and foremost, the racism that pervades our society is laid bare and we are challenged to deal with it... Keep reading ››

Quaker Concern

To Spread Peace, We Need Each Other

by Matt Legge

As many of us continue to struggle with the impacts of increased loneliness, an economic downturn, and other effects of the pandemic, there is much that we can still do together. Indeed, our support for each other toward a world that promotes justice and health for all may be more important now than ever... Keep reading ››

And more...

In addition to these full articles, we share brief highlights from CFSC’s recent work and virtual gatherings in support of justice and peace.

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