Category: World News

National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women

By , on December 6, 2010

Today is National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women, which also com­mem­o­rates the anniver­sary of the Montréal Massacre in 1989. I am hon­oured to have been asked to read one of my poems at the Toronto Candlelight Vigil to mark the anniver­sary of this tragic event.

The fact is that vio­lence against women is an everyday reality for mil­lions of girls and women around the world. There are many kinds of vio­lence. The word “vio­lence” is related to the word “vio­la­tion” – and each time a woman’s right to be a full, self-determining human being is vio­lated because she is a woman, vio­lence against women is com­mitted. From media and adver­tising depic­tions of women as vapid damsels in dis­tress worthy of little more than objec­ti­fi­ca­tion for men’s plea­sure, to domestic abuse, work­place sexual harass­ment, date rape, mar­ital rape, the misogyny of reli­gious fun­da­men­talisms, and sexual assault and gender-based vio­lence, women, girls and trans people are still much more likely to be at the receiving end of vio­lence and vio­la­tion. These prob­lems are usu­ally worse for women who are not white, not from the upper-middle classes, and those of us who straddle mul­tiple social-cultural iden­ti­ties as immi­grants and chil­dren of immi­grants. Continue reading ‘National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women’»

Tragedy in Pakistan

By , on July 28, 2010


My heart goes out to the fam­i­lies and loved ones of the vic­tims of the Margalla Hills plane crash in Pakistan. It’s always a tragedy when some­thing like this hap­pens, but I’m sure that’s no relief to those who lost someone they love among the 152 who died in this tragic inci­dent. May they rest in peace, and may their loved ones find the strength they need to sur­vive this awful event.

The Burqa/Niqab ban controversy

By , on July 17, 2010

This was written as part of a response to Martha Nussbaum’s opinion piece found here: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/11/veiled-threats

I’d like to share my per­sonal view on the burqa (face mask) con­tro­versy. My views are not based on the black-and-white, binary, false dichotomy pre­sented too often by both sup­porters of the face-mask ban and those who wish to defend the garb.

Continue reading ‘The Burqa/Niqab ban controversy’»

Nazanin — “Someday”

By , on May 3, 2010

Came across this beau­tiful, artic­u­late and tal­ented Iranian-Canadian singer and activist, Nazanin Afshin-Jan:

and a *MUST WATCH* inter­view with her from AlJazeera English:

The best analysis of the Aafia Siddiqui case.

By , on February 12, 2010

If you haven’t seen this yet, here’s your chance :) It’s a well researched crit­ical analysis of this cur­rent hot-button issue.

Aafia Siddiqui VS (Jews, Zarina Mari, Shazia Khalid and others) by Anas Abbas

Scientists think dolphins deserve “non-human person” status

By , on January 4, 2010

Thanks to a Facebook friend, I came across this article in the Times Online which reports on zoo­log­ical find­ings that dol­phins’ brains, cul­tural and emo­tional com­plex­i­ties, and behav­iours are close to those of humans. I think this is sig­nif­i­cant because there are more and more people waking up to the real­i­ties of how we treat non-human ani­mals, and what that implies for us and our humanity, as well as the cor­re­la­tions between cru­elty towards other ani­mals and cru­elty towards humans. If you know me at all, you know this is one of the most impor­tant fields of study, reflec­tion and activism to me. Some excerpts from the Times Online article:

The researchers argue that their work shows it is morally unac­cept­able to keep such intel­li­gent ani­mals in amuse­ment parks or to kill them for food or by acci­dent when fishing. Some 300,000 whales, dol­phins and por­poises die in this way each year.

Many dol­phin brains are larger than our own and second in mass only to the human brain when cor­rected for body size,” said Lori Marino, a zool­o­gist at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, who has used mag­netic res­o­nance imaging scans to map the brains of dol­phin species and com­pare them with those of primates.

<snip>

In one study, Diana Reiss, pro­fessor of psy­chology at Hunter College, City University of New York, showed that bot­tlenose dol­phins could recog­nise them­selves in a mirror and use it to inspect var­ious parts of their bodies, an ability that had been thought lim­ited to humans and great apes.

In another, she found that cap­tive ani­mals also had the ability to learn a rudi­men­tary symbol-based language.

Other research has shown dol­phins can solve dif­fi­cult prob­lems, while those living in the wild co-operate in ways that imply com­plex social struc­tures and a high level of emo­tional sophistication.

<snip>

Researchers have found that brain size varies hugely from around 7oz for smaller cetacean species such as the Ganges River dol­phin to more than 19lb for sperm whales, whose brains are the largest on the planet. Human brains, by con­trast, range from 2lb-4lb, while a chimp’s brain is about 12oz.When it comes to intel­li­gence, how­ever, brain size is less impor­tant than its size rel­a­tive to the body.

What Marino and her col­leagues found was that the cere­bral cortex and neo­cortex of bot­tlenose dol­phins were so large that “the anatom­ical ratios that assess cog­ni­tive capacity place it second only to the human brain”. They also found that the brain cortex of dol­phins such as the bot­tlenose had the same con­vo­luted folds that are strongly linked with human intelligence.

Such folds increase the volume of the cortex and the ability of brain cells to inter­con­nect with each other. “Despite evolving along a dif­ferent neu­roanatom­ical tra­jec­tory to humans, cetacean brains have sev­eral fea­tures that are cor­re­lated with com­plex intel­li­gence,” Marino said.

There was a time when women, black people, men­tally ill people, chil­dren, were all in var­ious ways regarded as “sub human”, as inan­i­mate objects, to be used, abused, and dis­carded. Today, we still have some seg­ments of pop­u­la­tions arguing for the lack of any rights of non-human ani­mals. This will change, in time, and our cur­rent prac­tices of cruel fac­tory farming, animal testing, breeding for enter­tain­ment, etc., will, I can say with a some con­fi­dence and a lot of hope for the sake of humanity, become more obso­lete, and become as illegal and socially unac­cept­able as slavery, child labour, ped­erasty, misogyny and eugenics are now.

Profiling: Pros and Cons?

By , on January 2, 2010

A British MP has caused some con­tro­versy by pub­licly stating that pro­filing of Muslims is to be expected in the light of recent events:

He said: “I think most people would rather be pro­filed than blown up. It wouldn’t be vic­tim­i­sa­tion of an entire community.

What I like is that Muslim orga­ni­za­tions and Muslims with influ­ence are starting to finally speak up in main­stream society, bringing up impor­tant issues like the fact that many of the ter­rorist attacks hap­pening in the world today are being com­mitted by Muslims, and in the name of Islam.

What I don’t like is firstly that things have actu­ally come to this, and sec­ondly that pro­filing based on race or reli­gion could really back­fire. First of all, this opens a whole can of worms in terms of who is Muslim and who isn’t. Is it based on name? On one’s par­ents’ reli­gion? What’s next? Requiring people to put their reli­gion or reli­gious back­ground on their pass­ports? Like what was done to Jews in Soviet Russia? And how hard would it be for someone to bypass such a super­fi­cial system of checks: a change of name, a change of outfit?

I do think that people of cer­tain names, back­grounds, looks and ages will, and it could be easily argued, should, be scru­ti­nized more than the mostly super­fi­cial checks that air­line pas­sen­gers are sub­ject to. However, I think the issue needs to be approached intel­li­gently, to find effi­cient solu­tions (and there have to be many com­ple­men­tary solu­tions, there really is no one simple magic answer), that pre­cisely and suc­cess­fully help iden­tify and quar­an­tine those who intend to use public spaces as per­sonal, fatal soap boxes. We could start by hiring people of higher and more sophis­ti­cated edu­ca­tional back­grounds to screen pas­sen­gers, and we could invest in pro­viding training to air­port per­sonnel to better under­stand things like body sig­nals, psy­chology, etc.

All of which leads me to wonder if per­haps we’re headed for this.

Your thoughts?

It is time…

By , on September 22, 2009

to con­vert man­nequins and bring those dirty little kaf­firs into Dar-ul-Islam.

Using unusual man­nequins exposing body curves and with heads without hijabs [Muslim veils] are pro­hib­ited to be used in the shops,” police said in a state­ment car­ried by Irna.

Correspondents say that in the past such cam­paigns usu­ally only lasted throughout the summer, but last year’s crack­down, including on tight trousers for women, was still con­tin­uing in the winter.

Oh woman, how many more reli­gions have to be made up before you will realize your place: a degree below men?

A true American Hero

By , on September 9, 2009

From Funny Or Die!

Gus Porter gets mauled by a bear, but he won’t let the socialist Canadian health care fix him up, so he’ll hike back to America.


Cultural Relativism = White Man’s Privilege.

By , on April 25, 2009

Terry Eagleton is suf­fering from the racism of otherwise-liberal priv­i­leged, white, west­erners too afraid to speak up against bar­baric reli­gious prac­tices and beliefs.

That state is not too both­ered about what you believe, as long as it does not thwart the right of others to their beliefs.

<snip>

There should be laissez-faire in the realm of belief, just as there should be in the marketplace.

So nice of a person coming from white, western priv­i­lege to allow for such cul­tural rel­a­tivism for us lowly colo­nial sub­jects. It’s a good thing he’s not, say a woman in Swat, or a young girl in Mississauga, who are being flogged and even killed for not fol­lowing the beliefs of their par­ents and their communities.

So nice that he doesn’t have to live in Muslim ghet­toes even in the middle of a Western city and has to follow a script made up for his life by everyone except himself.

So nice of him to allow for the sub­ju­ga­tion of people like me because he’s too afraid of not appearing “lib­eral” enough to his dead, white, male mentors.

Solipsism becomes him.

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