Medicine is never neutral. In this episode of Habibti Please, host Nashwa Lina Khan speaks with Dr. Yipeng Ge, a public health physician and activist who has worked in Gaza during the genocide. They speak about the entanglement of healthcare, colonialism, and liberation struggles.From Six Nations of the Grand River to Gaza, this conversation connects Indigenous resistance, Palestinian liberation, and the responsibilities of healthcare workers who refuse silence in the face of genocide. Dr. Ge shares first-hand experiences working in Rafah, witnessing severe malnutrition and attacks on Gaza’s hospitals, and reflects on the responsibilities of physicians to act politically, not just clinically.They also discuss the Freedom Flotilla Coalition’s largest-ever mission, the Sumud flotilla, which set sail with over 50 boats from 44 countries to break Israel’s illegal blockade — and the increasing risks activists face as Israel escalates attacks and labels them “terrorists.”To practice medicine is to confront colonialism, speak out against genocide, and understand care as inseparable from justice. Yipeng reflects on their education at McMaster, where Indigenous leaders like Dawn Martin Hill fought for the creation of Indigenous Studies, shaping a transformative understanding of privilege, responsibility, and solidarity. Drawing on the words of Dr. Nidal Jabbour, the conversation underscores that liberation and freedom — not aid alone — are essential for health and survival in Palestine and beyond.Solidarity is an act of risk: putting one’s voice and body on the line, following the direction of oppressed communities, and standing in the way of erasure. Propaganda and lobbying in Canada and Western media erases and dehumanizes Palestinians while legitimizing settler state violence. Activism can be a driver of systemic change, from Burnaby declaring itself an apartheid-free city to Italian ports blocking Israeli arms shipments and a recent general strike.Yipeng shares his experience working in Gaza, describing malnourished children, the destruction of hospitals like Nasser Medical Complex, and the resilience of Palestinian healthcare workers who continue to care for their people under siege. The Global Sumud Flotilla, international intervention from Italy and Spain in deploying naval ships to support the flotilla, 1 million Italians striking and shutting down the country for action, are critical escalation of global solidarity, even as the genocide intensifies.The history of Western medicine is one that is complicit in slavery, eugenics, and Indigenous genocide. Yipeng reflects on disrupting these structures from within the profession. Hope is not passive, but a discipline — an active practice of persistence and resistance, embodied by Palestinian steadfastness and echoed in abolitionist struggles.This episode is a call to understand medicine as resistance, solidarity as risk, and hope as a discipline — forged through collective struggle, from Gaza to Turtle Island.Resources & Links* Freedom Flotilla Coalition – Global Sumud Flotilla* Countries part of the global flotilla* Doctors Against Genocide* Independent Media mentioned: The Maple, The Grind, Ricochet* Dr. Ghassan Abu Sitta’s work: https://drghassanabusittah.com/* Follow Yipeng: Twitter | Instagram* Subscribe: Habibti Please SubstackAcademic / reports / analyses/ advocacy / activist/ coalition / grassroots resources* A Health Analysis of the Gaza Genocide (Public Health and Human Rights Initiative, PHRI) This report frames much of the health system collapse in Gaza through the lens of genocide law. (רופאים לזכויות אדם)* Safeguarding healthcare workers in Gaza and throughout conflict zones — Khanji et al., 2025 Focus on legal / ethical imperatives for protecting medical personnel in conflict. (PMC)* Gaza’s healthocide: medical societies must not stay silent — The Lancet (Editorial) A call to medical institutions to break selective silence and act. (The Lancet)* “Healthocide and medical neutrality: a call for action and accountability” — (Abi-Rached et al.) BMJ Global Health* “The Rhetoric of Decolonizing Global Health Fails to Address the Reality of Settler Colonialism: Gaza as a Case in Point” — International Journal of Health Policy and Management* Doctors Against Genocide — Medical Resources A live, updated resource hub including webinars, profiles of Gaza health workers, and advocacy materials. (Doctors Against Genocide)* The Sameer Project A Palestinian-led medical / relief operation in Gaza. Their public pages (e.g. Open Collective) explain their work in shelter, medical care, supplies, etc. (Open Collective)* Librarians & Archivists with Palestine — Readings & Resources A curated and updated reading list and resource guide (nonfiction, fiction, archives, etc.). (Librarians with Palestine)* Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) statements on Gaza / doctors’ calls to action MSF has publicly described that doctors in Gaza “face the devastating reality that they cannot stop genocide.” (MSF UK)* “Gaza’s healthcare system is being destroyed by targeted attacks” (The Guardian)* Doctors who visited Gaza speak of ‘atrocities,’ collapsing healthcare” (Reuters)* Healthcare collapse and disease spread: a qualitative study of challenges in Gaza strip Abuzerr, S., Zinszer, K., & Mahmoud, H. (2025). BMC Public Health (Open Access) — examines how the collapse of healthcare infrastructure is driving infectious disease spread in Gaza. (BioMed Central)* Barriers faced by primary healthcare providers in addressing emergencies in the Northern region of Palestine before and during the Gaza war Hamshari, S., Hamadneh, S., Ghneem, M. et al. (2024). BMC Primary Care (Open Access) — focuses on what primary healthcare providers are experiencing, before & during the genocide. (SpringerLink)* Resilience amid chaos: The role of Gaza medical points — from PMC (Open Access) — looks at “medical points” (mobile / temporary clinics) and how they function under severe shortage, damage, and conflict pressure. (PMC)* Rebuilding the health sector in Gaza: alternative humanitarian voices Blanchet, K., Najem, M., Shadid, L., et al. (2024). Conflict and Health (Open Access) — perspectives from humanitarian actors on how the health system can be rebuilt and what alternative / grassroots voices are calling for. (BioMed Central)* Defending the right to health in Gaza: a call to action by health workers Mohammed, F., Elgailani, U.S.A., Ibrahim Ali, S.Y., et al. (2024). Conflict and Health (Open Access) — health workers’ statement about the destruction of the health system, challenges, and what is urgently needed. (SpringerLink)* The Urgent Struggle for Health Justice in Gaza: A Crisis of Human Rights and Inequity Mansour, W., Theobald, S., Fouad, F.M., et al. (2025). International Journal of Health Planning and Management (Free Access) — an editorial framing Gaza’s situation as part of a broader struggle for health justice. (Wiley Online Library)* Critical care in Gaza amidst military pressure: the struggle of healthcare workers in Gaza’s Warzone — from PMC (Open Access) — detailed account of how critical care (ICUs, surgeries, anesthesia, etc.) is being impacted by conflict, blockades, hospital damage etc. (PMC)* Frontiers | The War on Gaza and Its Impact on Public Health: Challenges and Pathways to Recovery Al Bakri, Khader, Khatib, et al. (2025). Frontiers in Public Health (Open Access) — discusses present public health emergencies in Gaza and what pathways there might be for recovery. (Frontiers)* The cost of conflict: how war is crippling Gaza’s healthcare system Sajid, F. (2025). Egyptian Journal of Neurosurgery (Open Access) — letter-style piece detailing how war is affecting healthcare, capacity, infrastructure, etc. (SpringerOpen)* “Medicine is being strangled”: An MSF doctor on collapse of Gaza’s healthcare system. Médecins Sans Frontières. (2024). Doctors Without Borders.* Famine and disease escalate: Gaza’s humanitarian disaster. (2024). Annals of Medicine & Surgery.* Public Health Crisis in Gaza — The Responsibility of US-Based Academic Medical Journals. Ijaz, N., & Habib, A. R. (2024).JAMA Network.* Doctors for Global Health Statement on Gaza. Social Medicine.* As a Medical Student in Gaza, I Studied Malnutrition. Now It’s All Around Me. by Hend Salama Abo Helow Truthout (First-Person Essay).Stay Connected:* Follow us on Twitter: @habibtiblease and the habibti please instagram* 🌳Our Linktree* 💕Habibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media NetworkSubscribe to Habibti Please on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or Substack to keep up with future episodes, resistance reading lists, and conversations from the frontlines of feminist, abolitionist, and anti-colonial struggles. Habibti Please is a proud member of the Habinger Media Network, get weekly updates from Canada’s politically and socially progressive podcast community at Habingermedianetwork.com. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
In this incisive episode, host Nashwa Lina Khan speaks with Canadian journalist Emma Pailing about how mainstream media in Canada—especially outlets like CBC—shape public understanding of Palestine and Israel.With the Genocide in Gaza currently accelerating with mass starvation now compounding the daily killing it is vital to recognize how the dehumanizing language and double standards appear frequently in mainstream news coverage of Gaza, reflecting biased narratives and systemic narratives. Mainstream outlets often adopt dehumanizing frames when covering Gaza or censor to further the colonial project of empire. PR firms play a significant role in shaping public opinion behind the scenes by engineering consent and influencing media narratives to favor particular perspectives. Emma’s work has extensively covered this and media bias at CBC following October 2023 revealing whose voices are prioritized and whose are erased, highlighting disparities in coverage and representation.If you appreciate the work we do please support groups like the Glia Project and the Palestinian Youth Movement’s weekly protests and listen to the last episode of Habibti Please Bearing Witness in Gaza: A Conversation with Dr. Sarah Lalonde.Emma also broke a story on the surveillance, silencing, and repression of pro-Palestinian anti-genocide voices on Canadian campuses, illustrating the broader challenges faced by activists and educators advocating for justice especially given the settler-colonial existence of what we call Canada. While activists across social justice issues try to get organized, urban development, especially condo projects, are reshaping class dynamics and transforming grassroots organizing within cities, often reinforcing social inequalities. Nashwa and Emma then explore what a decolonial, anti-capitalist Canadian media landscape that would challenge these entrenched narratives, centering marginalized voices and emphasizing justice would look like. Both journalists and readers have a crucial role in demanding more accountability and integrity from our media institutions to foster truth and equity in public discourse.With the genocide in Gaza accelerating—now marked by mass starvation alongside daily bombings—it’s vital to examine how mainstream Canadian media upholds systems of violence through dehumanizing language and double standards. From selective reporting to outright censorship, dominant outlets often reinforce colonial narratives that erase Palestinian life and struggle.Public relations firms play a powerful, behind-the-scenes role in shaping public opinion—engineering consent and directing media narratives to align with state and corporate interests. In this context, journalism often serves empire rather than accountability.A detailed investigation revealed how CTV/Bell Media banned the use of the word “Palestine,” framing it as “non-existent,” while disproportionately amplifying Israeli perspectives and sanitizing Palestinian suffering (Breach Media). Similarly, CBC’s The National showed stark imbalance in its post-October 7 coverage, featuring significantly more Israeli voices compared to Palestinian ones, often leaving Palestinians unnamed (Breach Media). Editorial policies at CBC have also been found to sanitize language around Palestinian deaths, avoiding terms like “murderous” or “brutal,” which are reserved only for Hamas (Breach Media). Adding to these media silencing tactics, Global News reportedly refused to air critical interviews that challenged Israeli policies due to pressure from pro-Israel lobby groups (Read The Maple).Surveillance and repression extend beyond media, reaching into academic spaces. After a meeting between former Minister Selina Robinson and the UBC president, the Anthropology department was ordered to remove a statement condemning “genocidal violence in Gaza,” with warnings that political statements might bring liability, raising serious concerns about academic freedom (Breach Media).While activists across social justice sectors strive to organize, urban development—especially condo-driven gentrification—reshapes class relations and disrupts grassroots networks. New reporting from Read The Maple details how Canada’s “condo class” has fragmented political organizing by displacing communities and weakening local power (Read The Maple).Journalist Emma Paling has extensively covered these intersecting issues, including media bias at CBC following October 2023, and uncovered the surveillance, silencing, and repression of pro-Palestinian activism on Canadian campuses (Breach Media).Together, Nashwa Lina Khan and Emma Paling explore what a decolonial, anti-capitalist Canadian media landscape might look like: one that challenges entrenched empire-aligned narratives, centers Indigenous, Palestinian, and other marginalized voices, and demands justice and accountability. Both journalists and audiences share the responsibility to push for media institutions that foster truth, equity, and meaningful public discourse.Resources and Further Reading: * Follow Emma Pailing on Twitter: @emma_pailingEmma Paling – Selected Work* Emma Paling's portfolio – A full overview of her published journalism and investigations.* CTV’s racist double standards in Palestine coverage – An exposé on Bell Media’s internal censorship and disproportionate framing favoring Israel.* Global News refused to air anchor’s reports on Israel – Reporting on internal silencing of critical voices within Canadian broadcast journalism.* CBC avoids “murderous” language when Palestinians are killed – A critical look at editorial double standards and dehumanizing language at CBC.* How Canada’s condo class disrupted political organizing – On urban gentrification and its impact on grassroots activism.* Canada ramps up immigration enforcement while cooperating with ICE – A cross-border analysis of migration enforcement and its racialized consequences.* Professors backing Palestine motions face alleged hack and legal intimidation – On repression of academic freedom and digital targeting.* Canadian newspapers fail to disclose military experts' ties – Investigating conflicts of interest and lack of transparency in defense reporting.* $95 million in Canadian military goods could flow to Israel by 2025 – A deep dive into arms exports amid ongoing genocide.* Falsehoods about Palestine go unchallenged on Canadian talk radio – How unchecked misinformation fuels anti-Palestinian racism.* Companies ask court to keep Israel export details secret – On legal attempts to block public access to export data.* Emma Paling profile at Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East (CJPME) – Highlights her reporting on Palestine, media, and accountability.When Genocide Wasn’t NewsCheck out When Genocide Wasn’t News — a powerful anthology from The Breach that exposes how Canadian mainstream media actively distorted, downplayed, or erased coverage of Israel’s assault on Gaza. Through essays by journalists and advocates, the book challenges the complicity of institutions like CBC and CTV, and uplifts the stories that were silenced.Visualizing Palestine Is Worth ExploringOne resource that powerfully shifts narrative away from erasure and toward truth-telling is Visualizing Palestine. This organization uses data-driven visual storytelling to document the structural violence of settler colonialism, apartheid, displacement, and resistance in Palestine. Their work is rooted in research, yet rendered in accessible infographics and animations that challenge mainstream distortions—especially those deeply embedded in Western and Canadian media systems, as Emma Paling critiques.At a time when Palestinian voices are either silenced or stripped of political context, Visualizing Palestine offers tools to make complexity legible. Their graphics are used by educators, grassroots organizers, faith groups, and student campaigns worldwide, and have reached over 26 million people in the past year alone. Their recently released book, Visualizing Palestine: A Chronicle of Colonialism and the Struggle for Liberation, is a beautiful and grounding archive that reflects over a decade of visual resistance work. It’s not just a resource—it’s part of a growing movement to reclaim how the story of Palestine is told to the world.If we’re thinking about narrative power—what gets framed, what gets buried—then Visualizing Palestine is essential reading and viewing.About Emma PailingEmma Pailing is a Toronto-based journalist and writer with a focus on geopolitics, media, and social justice issues. Her work explores international conflicts, media narratives, and the influence of corporations and governments in shaping public discourse. Emma has contributed to various outlets, including The Canadian Dimension, Middle East Eye, and others, where she critically examines issues such as Israel-Palestine, media bias, and Canada's role in global conflicts. She is dedicated to uncovering the stories often left out of mainstream conversations and amplifying marginalized voices.Organizations Mentioned:* Palestinian Youth Movement* Labour for Palestine* Health Workers Alliance for PalestineTake Action:* Share this episode with friends, colleagues, and comrades to push back against media bias.* Support independent journalism and media reform efforts in your community.* Stay loud about Palestine, censorship, and the need for truth-telling in Canadian media.Note from Nashwa:While this episode focuses on the role of Canadian media and PR in shaping public perception of Palestine, it's essential to also acknowledge the unprecedented violence faced by Palestinian journalists. Since October 2023, more than 230 journalists and media workers have been killed in Gaza — making it the deadliest war for journalists in modern history (Al Jazeera, Middle East Monitor). Many face starvation and targeted attacks while continuing to report (CBC, ABC).We must also remember Shireen Abu Akleh, a veteran Al Jazeera jour
In this episode of Habibti Please, Nashwa speaks with Dr. Sarah Lalonde in Monreal a Montreal-based emergency and family physician who recently returned from Gaza. Dr. Lalonde shares what she witnessed while working in the emergency department at the European Gaza Hospital amidst ongoing Israeli attacks—including the deliberate targeting of health workers, collapsing infrastructure, and the catastrophic impact on children.Together, we explore what it means to bear witness, the emotional toll of working under siege, and how Canadian healthcare systems are complicit in global injustice. This episode is a continuation of our series on medical solidarity, following our previous conversation with Dr. Tarek Loubani of Glia.We recorded this conversation on July 11th, 2025, in Montreal at Halte 24-7.“Solidarity without cost is not solidarity.” – Dr. Sarah LalondeSarah is a Montreal-based physician who recently returned from Gaza a few months ago where she joined a team of international medics working in the ruins of a healthcare system under siege. What she witnessed, what she lived through, is not just a humanitarian crisis—it is the architecture of genocide, laid bare.There’s something haunting about the way Sarah describes a hospital that no longer functions as a place of healing, but as a site of mass death. About treating children whose bodies are broken not by rare diseases, but by bombs. About watching colleagues—nurses, surgeons, paramedics from afar—targeted and killed. In her words and in her silences, there’s a clarity: this is not a natural disaster or humanitarian crisis. It is a man-made horror.Sarah also speaks to the impossible conditions that define what it means to be a healthcare worker in Gaza. To heal is to resist. But resistance can mean death. In that double-bind, neutrality is a lie—and the idea of “do no harm” becomes a radical, life-threatening commitment. Since October 2023, we've seen Canadian healthcare institutions fail to rise to this moment. Instead of standing up against genocide, they've punished those who do. We've seen students, nurses, residents, and physicians silenced, suspended, blacklisted. Meanwhile, those who justify or ignore the destruction of life go unchallenged. As Sarah reminds us, medicine has never been apolitical. You either uphold life actively—or you make peace with systems that end it.As listeners, as comrades, as people who care, our work isn’t just to hear these stories—it’s to act on them. To connect Gaza to Canada. To understand that the siege abroad is mirrored by silence at home. That every institutional reprimand for speaking up is part of the same machinery.Please consider sharing this episode. Talk to your colleagues. Interrupt the silences. Support groups like the Glia Project and the Palestinian Youth Movement.Habibti Please is a proud member of the Harbinger Media Network. Get weekly updates from Canada’s progressive podcast community at harbingermedianetwork.com.About the GuestDr. Sarah Lalonde (@dr.sarah.lalonde)Dr. Lalonde is an emergency and family physician specializing in rural, remote, and community medicine, particularly within Indigenous communities. She has worked internationally with Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Guinea, Albania, Togo, and Chad, and is recognized as Quebec’s provincial physician expert on human trafficking. In Gaza, she served at the European Gaza Hospital as part of an international medical mission.Resources & LinksPrevious Episode→ Dr. Tarek Loubani on Glia, Open-Source Solidarity, and Gazahttps://habibtiplease.substack.com/p/medicine-under-siege-dr-tarek-loubaniSupport Medical Work in Gaza→ Glia – Global organization for low-cost, open-source medical toolshttps://glia.org→ Donate to support Dr. Lalonde & Dr. Loubani’s ongoing workhttps://glia.org🚢 Track the Flotilla→ Follow the Freedom Flotilla & Dr. Yipeng Ge’s journey aboard the Handala Freedom Flotilla TrackerRelated Reading & Reports* “Gaza’s Health System Under Siege” – New York Times doctor interviews (2024) NYT Interactive* Canadian Complicity in Arms Sales – CJPME CJPME on Canadian Arms to Israel* Gaza’s Nasser Hospital will turn into ‘silent graveyard’ if siege and fuel shortage persist, doctors say* 65 Doctors, Nurses and Paramedics: What We Saw in GazaFollow* Dr. Sarah Lalonde – @dr.sarah.lalonde* Dr. Tarek Loubani – @trklou* Freedom Flotilla Coalition – freedomflotilla.org💌 Call to Action→ Donate if you can to medical missions and grassroots aid efforts like Glia → Share this episode with others who care about justice, healthcare, and solidarity. → Bear witness—listening is not passive. Let it move you to action.Humanitarian & Community Aid:* Islamic Relief Canada – Palestine Emergency Appeal* Humanity Auxilium* Palestinian Youth Movement* Palestinian Youth Movement – Popular Cradle Podcast* Support the Glia Project: Donate or amplify their open-source medical tools: glia.org* Donate to frontline organizations: Support trusted orgs like Islamic Relief Canada, Doctors Without Borders and Humanity Auxilium* Organize within your profession: If you're a healthcare worker, speak out, form collectives, and protect each other from institutional repression. Check out Health workers Alliance for Palestine* Stay loud: Refuse silence in your classrooms, hospitals, unions, and friend groups. Silence is complicity. Check out Labour for Palestine* Educate yourself: Study the roots of this genocide—settler colonialism, white supremacy, and global capitalism. Check out The Anti-Empire ProjectSuggested Readings & ResourcesThis section provides some contextual readings and links to explore.* Glia Project* How Gaza’s doctors endure the impossible* 'Appalled' Trudeau calls for inquiry after Canadian doctor wounded in Gaza - The Guardian* Canadian doctor who works in Gaza makes 3D-printed face shields for COVID-19* From Canada to Gaza, physician uses 3D printing to make medical face shields* Tarek Loubani: 3D Printing High-Quality Low-Cost Free Medical Hardware* ‘Shock and grief’ as senior doctor killed in Israeli airstrike in Gaza* People in Gaza 'starve or risk being shot': NGOs urge end to aid work backed by U.S., Israel as deaths rise* I’m in northern Gaza. I would rather starve than take GHF aid* Marking a year of heartbreak: A letter from MSF USA chief executive officer Avril BenoîtOn the Targeting of Canadian Healthcare Workers:* Doctor suspended from U of O residency after pro-Palestinian social media posts* 'Chilling effect': People expressing pro-Palestinian views censured, suspended from work and school* ‘Abuse of power’: Hospitals, med schools crack down on Palestine advocacy* Protect medical trainees from anti-Palestine bigotry in medical placement process!* A List Of Some People In Canada Fired For Pro-Palestine Views* OPINION: Ontario Nurses’ Association Must Speak Out Against Gaza AtrocitiesProduction Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina KhanArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction and Editing by Andre GouletSocial Media & Support:Follow us on Twitter @habibtipleaseSupport us on PatreonSubscribe to us on SubstackClosing Song: Closing Song: Muhannad Khalaf - Allah M7yeh Falastin (2021) / مهند خلف - الله محيي فلسطين This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
Hi habibtis, and welcome back. In this episode, I sit down with Sean Orr—writer, musician, activist, and newly elected Vancouver City Councillor with COPE—for a conversation about politics, activism, and the urgency of global solidarity.Sean shares his journey from Vancouver’s punk and arts scenes to becoming a sharp political writer and now, a municipal politician. We talk about the challenges of holding radical commitments while working inside political systems, and the complexities of balancing grassroots movements with electoral politics.We also get into the social and political history of Vancouver, including gentrification, policing, and the Downtown Eastside and some reflections on global struggles against apartheid and fascism—from Palestine to local politics including the win of Zohran Mamdani in New York. This episode also highlights the importance of not letting activism become abstract, the role of stories in movement-building, and how bringing humor and heart into political spaces can help engage new people without losing sight of the seriousness of the work.I really loved this conversation—it felt honest, thoughtful, and full of the kind of political clarity we need more of right now. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.Follow Sean Orr:Twitter X: @seanorrBluesky: seanorr.bsky.socialInstagram: @seanorrofficialREADINGSReading group: AUTONOMIA, OCCUPY, COMMUNISM: LEGACIES AND FUTURESSpill the Tea: Gentrification of Vancouver ChinatownVancouver’s Little Saigon Facing Gentrification?Crackdown PodcastFrom dishwasher and punk rocker to city councillor: Sean Orr’s unique path to City HallSean Orr’s WritingSome highlights from Sean’s WritingOn Rampaging White Men, Dummy Mayoral Candidates, and Even More Problems with the PoliceGet to Know: Overdose Prevention SocietyBarge Chilling BeachOn Gas Hoarding, House Hoarding and Finding A New Frequency. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
Medicine Under Siege: Dr. Tarek Loubani on Gaza, Resistance, and Refusing SilenceIn this episode of Habibti Please, Nashwa sits down with Dr. Tarek Loubani—emergency physician, humanitarian, and founder of the Glia Project—to talk about the politics of medicine in Palestine, and what it means to be a healthcare worker under siege.Drawing from his over 15 years of medical work in Gaza, Tarek shares harrowing, deeply personal stories of treating patients in war zones, responding to mass casualty events, and witnessing the deliberate destruction of Palestine’s healthcare infrastructure. From the starvation of children to the maiming of protesters, this conversation offers a sobering look into the conditions Palestinians face daily—and the impossible choices doctors like him must make.We also talk about the origins of the Glia Project, which produces affordable, open-source medical devices like tourniquets and stethoscopes—designed for use in the Global South and under blockade. For Tarek, creating these tools is not only about saving lives, but about resisting the imperial systems that profit from crisis.We turn the mirror toward Canada, discussing the coordinated effort to silence healthcare workers speaking out for Palestine. From healthcare worker suspensions and other efforts to silence anti-genocide healthcare professionals, Nashwa and Tarek unpack the dangers of enforced neutrality, and the urgent need for medical professionals and the general public to reject complicity.This episode is about medicine, yes—but also about ethics, empire, and what it means to stay human in inhumane systems. It is both a grief document and a call to action.Suggested Readings & ResourcesThis section provides some contextual readings and links to explore.* Glia Project* How Gaza’s doctors endure the impossible* 'Appalled' Trudeau calls for inquiry after Canadian doctor wounded in Gaza - The Guardian* Canadian doctor who works in Gaza makes 3D-printed face shields for COVID-19* From Canada to Gaza, physician uses 3D printing to make medical face shields* Tarek Loubani: 3D Printing High-Quality Low-Cost Free Medical Hardware* ‘Shock and grief’ as senior doctor killed in Israeli airstrike in Gaza* People in Gaza 'starve or risk being shot': NGOs urge end to aid work backed by U.S., Israel as deaths rise* I’m in northern Gaza. I would rather starve than take GHF aidOn the Targeting of Canadian Healthcare Workers:* Doctor suspended from U of O residency after pro-Palestinian social media posts* 'Chilling effect': People expressing pro-Palestinian views censured, suspended from work and school* ‘Abuse of power’: Hospitals, med schools crack down on Palestine advocacy* Protect medical trainees from anti-Palestine bigotry in medical placement process!* A List Of Some People In Canada Fired For Pro-Palestine Views* OPINION: Ontario Nurses’ Association Must Speak Out Against Gaza AtrocitiesHumanitarian & Community Aid:* Islamic Relief Canada – Palestine Emergency Appeal* Humanity Auxilium* Palestinian Youth Movement* Palestinian Youth Movement – Popular Cradle Podcast* Support the Glia Project: Donate or amplify their open-source medical tools: glia.org* Donate to frontline organizations: Support trusted orgs like Islamic Relief Canada, Doctors Without Borders and Humanity Auxilium* Organize within your profession: If you're a healthcare worker, speak out, form collectives, and protect each other from institutional repression. Check out Health workers Alliance for Palestine* Stay loud: Refuse silence in your classrooms, hospitals, unions, and friend groups. Silence is complicity. Check out Labour for Palestine* Educate yourself: Study the roots of this genocide—settler colonialism, white supremacy, and global capitalism. Check out The Anti-Empire ProjectYou can follow Tarek here and check out his site here. Subscribe to Habibti Please on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or Substack to keep up with future episodes, resistance reading lists, and conversations from the frontlines of feminist, abolitionist, and anti-colonial struggles.Production Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina KhanArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction by Andre GouletSocial Media & Support:Follow us on Twitter @habibtipleaseSupport us on PatreonSubscribe to us on SubstackEditing Support by Nabeela Jivraj and Kalden DhatsenpaClosing Song: Dana Salah - Ya Tal3een (full version) يا طالعين This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
In this episode, Nashwa speaks with Danaka Katovich, a national co-director at CODEPINK, about global anti-war organizing, challenging U.S. imperialism, and building anti-war movements from the ground up. The conversation explores Danaka’s work supporting campaigns against U.S. military intervention in Yemen, Iran, and Palestine, as well as her reflections on international solidarity, grassroots activism, and the current threats to peace.Together, Nashwa and Danaka reflect on their respective trips to Cuba, what they learned from the Cuban people, the movement to end the war on Yemen, sanctions, and how to get involved even when one might be feeling disengaged or that it’s hard to make a difference.This episode was recorded before the Freedom Flotilla but we feel that it is important to highlight what the flotilla reveals about the risks—and necessity—of global solidarity work. You can find some interesting reads in the shownotes.Guest Bio:Danaka Katovich is the national co-director of CODEPINK. Since 2018, she has been organizing to end U.S. involvement in the war in Yemen and challenging U.S. sanctions and military aggression in the Middle East and beyond. Her writing has appeared in Jacobin, Salon, Truthout, and CommonDreams.Further Reading & Resources:Danaka wittingly points to how media literacy is a muscle, we have to work it out. We really hope you do work it out, with some selected readings you will find below.This Week’s Curated Reading List:Liberation, Resistance & Feminist Critique of EmpireRevolution, Uprising & the Limits of Liberal ReformVincent Bevins – If We Burn: The Mass Protest Decade and the Missing RevolutionA comprehensive and compelling analysis of global mass protests from 2010–2020, examining why many failed to achieve lasting change.* Read the full book on Internet Archive* Listen to an audiobook excerpt on SoundCloud* Vincent's Site With some Articles* Vincent's Substack Frantz Fanon – The Wretched of the EarthA foundational text in anti-colonial thought, exploring the psychological and political impacts of colonization and the necessity of decolonization.* Read the full book on Internet Archive Another link to download the bookFeminism, Islam & Decolonizing the “Rescue” NarrativeLila Abu-Lughod – Do Muslim Women Need Saving?A critical examination of Western narratives that portray Muslim women as needing liberation, challenging simplistic assumptions.* Read more about the book hereSaba Mahmood – Politics of Piety: The Islamic Revival and the Feminist SubjectAn ethnographic study of women's mosque movements in Egypt, challenging liberal feminist notions of agency and secularism.* Read the book hereLila Abu-Lughod (ed.) – Remaking Women: Feminism and Modernity in the Middle EastA collection of essays rethinking modernity and gender in the Middle East, resisting Western feminist frameworks.* Download the PDF hereEmpire, Imperialism, Resistance & Knowledge ProductionLeila Ahmed – Women and Gender in Islam: Historical Roots of a Modern Debate A comprehensive historical analysis of Islamic thought and colonialism's impact on gender discourses.* Yale University PressAngela Davis – Women, Race & Class A classic work analyzing the intersections of gender, race, and class in the U.S., from slavery to the women's liberation movement.* Read the book hereOther Readings * Edward Said – Culture and Imperialism* Helen Yaffe – We Are Cuba!: How a Revolutionary People Have Survived in a Post-Soviet World* Noura Erakat – Justice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine* Isa Blumi – Destroying Yemen: What Chaos in Arabia Tells Us About the World* Che Guevara – Colonialism is Doomed* Joseph Massad – Islam in LiberalismCurrent Events & the Gaza Freedom Flotilla* CODEPINK’s Statement on the Gaza Freedom Flotilla Attack* CODEPINK’s Latest Update on the Gaza Freedom Flotilla* Why Was a Gaza 'Freedom Flotilla' Ship Attacked? | The Take – Al Jazeera* Gaza-Bound Freedom Flotilla Attacked in International Waters – Democracy Now!* Organizers Say Ship Carrying Aid for Gaza Hit by Drones Near Malta – The Washington Post* About the Gaza Freedom Flotilla CoalitionDanaka Katovich’s Work & Writing* Danaka Katovich's Articles on Truthout* “The Drone War You Don’t Hear About” – Truthout* Jacobin: Cancel the F-35 Program and Replace It With Nothing* CommonDreams: “Biden Must End U.S. Support for the Blockade on Yemen”* Congress, Do Your Job, End US Support for the War in Yemen – Common Dreams* Why is the U.S. Bombing Yemen? A Short History – CODEPINK VideoCODEPINK’s Campaigns for Peace & Sanctions Relief* CODEPINK’s Campaign to End the Cuba Embargo* CODEPINK’s Campaign to Lift Sanctions on Cuba* Ontario Code Pink Chapter* Download Code Pink ResourcesSubscribe, rate, and review to support the show—and follow @CODEPINK on Twitter/X for updates. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
In this episode of Habibti Please x Deathnography, we’re asking what voting even means anymore? Canada just had the highest advance voter turnout in history — with over 7.3 million ballots already cast. This new record speaks to something in larger Canadian society but in all honesty, for us, the vibes feel more like collapse than hope.As e-day approaches this Monday, we were compelled to make this episode because of the deep weirdness of the “Elbows Up” Canada energy right now: tariffs, carbon taxes, immigration panic, wild anti-Trudeau/Trump energy, but also the sense that electoralism inside a settler colony doesn’t actually offer a way out.We start with a vibe check: why is turnout up? Fear, anger, dread — not necessarily belief in change. Are we being gaslit into feeling like voting is meaningful, even when everything points to systemic collapse?We get into the real question: does Canada even deserve to be saved? What are we voting for — reform? Harm reduction? And why is voting not harm reduction despite many arguing that it is. Or just legitimizing a settler colonial project? There’s real ethical tension about participating in a system that is actively involved in genocide, imperialism, and ongoing harm.We talk about Jagmeet Singh being the only leader saying things that sound reasonable right now — but is that enough?Is it giving "Obama knew Edward Said" vibes? Did he have the right tools all along and only step up now – or just another case of performance politics where representation masks deeper harms?We witness a longer mapping and analysis of Singh and the party’s stance, we cite Yves Engler’s thread on Singh raising the genocide during the French Federal debate.The NDP question is messy: is voting for them useful, useless, or actively bad? What do we do when our local candidate (like Clare Hacksel) is actually good — pro-Palestine, willing to use words like “genocide”? How do we balance local wins with provincial and national betrayals?We get into the Vote Palestine Pledge and why it’s complicated. Some sus people are on it, but it’s still a political litmus test that's hard to ignore. We unpack critiques of strategic voting, symbolism, and what it means when "voting for Palestine" gets reduced to a checkbox.Finally, we ask: what are the limits of electoralism in a settler colony? Is voting just giving consent to a system that’s already broken? How do we respond to the argument that “it’s privileged not to vote”? And if electoralism isn’t enough (which it isn’t), what are we actually building outside of it?We end on some reflections about how to live your politics daily — not just in a ballot box. How to make space for grief, anger, and clarity. How to move beyond voting into something real, rooted, and lasting.Thanks for joining the show! And happy voting or not voting.Production Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina Khan, Henry Lee, and ShahArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction by Nashwa Lina Khan and Andre GouletShownotes support by Nabeela JivrajSocial Media & Support:🎧 Listen Now: Wherever you get your podcasts! (spotify/apple)📬 Subscribe: Deathnography on Spotify📬 Subscribe: Habibti Please Substack✨ Support Us on Patreon🐦 Follow Habibti Please on Twitter: Habibti Please🐦 Follow Nashwa Lina Khan on Twitter: Nashwa on twitter🌳Our Linktree💕Habibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
This week on Habibti Please, we're joined by Niall Clapham Ricardo — jurist, activist, and New Democratic Party candidate for Papineau. Niall and I first crossed paths on a cold January night outside Parc station, remembering the victims of the Quebec mosque shooting. Since then, I’ve gotten to know him not just as a political voice, but as a deeply thoughtful friend and community member.In this episode, we talk about what it means to show up — on the campaign trail, in the courts, in the streets, and at birthday parties. Niall shares how his personal background shapes his advocacy, the stakes of talking about Palestine as a Jewish voice, and why he's choosing to run in a riding as complex and storied as Papineau — the one once held by Justin Trudeau.This episode is about the messy, meaningful work of showing up — in politics, in movements, in community, and in friendships. Together with Niall, we begin to unpack:* Electoralism, especially in the context of settler colonialism, what do terms like “harm reduction” and “strategic voting” really mean — if they mean anything at all? * Is strategic voting actually strategic — or just another trap? In the context of electoral politics within a settler colonial system, how meaningful — or empty and harmful — are concepts like harm reduction and strategic voting? We conclude there is no value in lacking precise language or being tepid. * How buzzwords from social justice spaces are being absorbed (and often diluted) in the world of electoral politics.* Trade union stories and the future of labour* Legal advocacy and international human rights work* The riding of Papineau and what people are really saying at the doors* Revolutionary love, hope, and being a present friend in the middle of it all* Visions of the “good life” and what it takes to create a world where everyone can thrive.* Friendship, political clarity, and holding onto hope in deeply uncertain times.From Parc Station to Papineau our friendship and origin story of meeting at a protest imbue the episode. As community organizers who do believe that activism starts in our communities and home we know the importance of how friendship is meant to expand and challenge one’s desire for a better world and a good life. With this spirit, this set of shownotes features readings that are from the thinkers Niall references in the episode - they were curated around themes of abolition, revolutionary love, Indigenous Resistance & global struggles for justice.Niall reminds us to always laugh. Something everyone fighting to build a better world should weave into their engagements. Some pictures of the campaign moment, with moments of laughter, joy, and a fight for a good life and better world together.Guest Bio:Niall Clapham Ricardo is a jurist practicing in Tiohtià:ke / Mooniyang / Montréal. He formerly served as the Francophone spokesperson for Independent Jewish Voices (IJV) and is currently the NDP candidate for Papineau. Niall’s work spans labour, legal, and international human rights struggles — and is grounded in deep relational care, solidarity, and a commitment to justice from the ground up.Follow Us:Habibti Please — wherever you get your podcastsHosted by Nashwa Lina KhanProduced by Andre Goulet at Harbinger Media NetworkEditing Support from Nabeela JivrajReading List from talking with Niall:Reading List inspired from my chat with Niall and the thinkers that inspire him.1. Lula - Live a Good Life* Letters to Lula in prison tell story of Brazil’s ‘invisibles’* “Lula Is Right About Israel’s Genocide in Gaza” – Jacobin* “Lula’s Victory Is a Testament to Solidarity” – Jacobin2. Angela Davis* Are Prisons Obsolete? – Full PDF* The Meaning of Freedom: And Other Difficult Dialogues ( A selection)* Angela Davis: 'Palestine is a moral litmus test for the world'* On Transnational Feminist Solidarity: The Case of Angela Davis in Egypt3. Noura Erakat* Justice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine (Stanford University Press)* Nothing Will Ever Be the Same Again* Race, Palestine, and International Law* "A Campaign of Genocide": Noura Erakat Speaks to Ta-Nehisi Coates About Israel's War on Gaza* Can the ICJ Survive Israel's Genocide on Gaza?* Justice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine with Professor Noura Erakat4. Enzo Traverso* The End of Jewish Modernity* Historian Enzo Traverso: Israel Is Using the Memory of the Holocaust to Justify Genocide in Gaza* The End of Jewish Modernity* Enzo Traverso on Fascism, Marxism and Israel* Germany’s Reckoning With the Past Is No Longer a Model An interview with Enzo Traverso* No, Post-Nazi Germany Isn’t a Model of Atoning for the Past5. Che Guevara on Love & Revolution* The Che Reader* Socialism and Man in Cuba * Che Guevara on Love, Injustice, Revolution, and Socialism.6. Ellen Gabriel* Over 30 Years of Indigenous Resistance with Mohawk Land Defender Ellen Gabriel* Ellen Gabriel and the ‘watershed moment’ that was the Siege of Kanehsatà:ke* Ellen Gabriel: to imagine a better world, we must challenge colonialism* Short Documentary: Kanehsatake: 270 Years of Resistance 7. James Baldwin* The Fire Next Time* No Name in the Street* A Talk to Teachers* Jimmy’s Blues and Other PoemsA Niall Clapham Ricardo Reading List (in brief)Niall’s work as a legal thinker and activist is also reflected in his published writings, particularly in Pivot, where he offers critical perspectives on international solidarity and systemic racism in Québec.* De militants à candidats : Papineau, Spinoza et le NPD – Radio Canada/CBC (2025)This week Radio-Canada profiled Niall, they write on his life as a Jewish Montreal activist and member of Independent Jewish Voices, his advocacy for Palestinian rights while challenging the conflation of anti-Zionism with antisemitism. The piece also highlights how activists like Ricardo are turning their community engagement into political candidacies—such as in the Papineau riding—to promote social justice and international solidarity.* De l’Ukraine à Gaza : qui a le droit de se défendre ? – Pivot (2022) A compelling argument on the double standards in international law and media narratives surrounding self-defense and state violence.* « L’islamophobie n’existe pas », mais elle tue – Pivot (2023) A searing critique of how Islamophobia is dismissed in public discourse while continuing to harm communities in Québec and beyond.* See all of Niall’s contributions at Pivot This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
In this exciting comeback episode of Habibti Please, we dive into the intersections of technology, capitalism, and social justice with special guest and friend of the show Paris Marx—a leading tech critic, author, and host of the acclaimed podcast Tech Won’t Save Us.In this episode, Paris shares the story behind Tech Won’t Save Us—what inspired him to start the podcast in 2020 and how the conversations have evolved since. We also explore how gig platforms like Uber and DoorDash are reshaping the labor market. Are stronger labor protections the answer, or is a complete overhaul needed?We dig into the future of work and discuss whether governments are ready to handle the social and economic impact of automation and artificial intelligence. Paris also speaks to which policies could change Big Tech’s growing influence.We also examine how surveillance technology plays a role in occupation, genocide, and other fascist suppression with a focus on Gaza and occupied Palestine, Pegasus spyware, and Israel’s use and export of surveillance tools abroad. We discuss how to push back against the normalization of these practices, and can governments ever truly strike a real balance between privacy and public interest?Throughout, Paris highlights why collective, community-driven solutions are essential to building more equitable futures.Join us for a thought-provoking conversation about the power dynamics in tech and what it will take to build a better future.Readings that accompany this episode:Forensic Architecture tracks surveillance of activists and journalists by Hakim Bishara (2021).The Technology of Occupation Has Become One of Israel’s Main Exports by Antony Loewenstein (2023).Tools to Explore and read about:Understanding Artificial Intelligence: A Guide for CUPE Members (2023) The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) has created this guide to help members understand the implications of artificial intelligence (AI) in the workplace. It highlights both the opportunities and risks associated with AI, including issues like workplace surveillance, discrimination, and the acceleration of work processes. The guide emphasizes the importance of union involvement in shaping AI's role in public services to protect workers' rights and enhance job quality.Information on Shutdown of the Mobile Justice AppThe ACLU has announced that the Mobile Justice app will be discontinued on February 28, 2025, due to evolving privacy laws and concerns over surveillance technology. For a decade, the app has been a critical tool for documenting police encounters. While the app is shutting down, the ACLU continues its work in police accountability, protest rights, and public safety. Find Know Your Rights resources, legal advocacy efforts, and ways to get involved through ACLU’s website.Secure Communication & Encryption* Signal – End-to-end encrypted messaging, voice, and video calls.* Session – Decentralized, anonymous messaging app.* ProtonMail – Encrypted email service based in Switzerland.* Jitsi Meet – Secure, open-source video conferencing.* Element – Secure, federated messaging using the Matrix protocol.Anonymous Browsing & Online Privacy* Tor Browser – Anonymizes web browsing and hides your IP address.* Brave – Privacy-focused browser with built-in ad and tracker blocking.* DuckDuckGo – Search engine that doesn’t track you.* Tails OS – A portable, live operating system that leaves no digital trace.Anti-Surveillance & Digital Security* ObscuraCam – Removes metadata and blurs faces in images.* Haven – Turns your phone into a motion-sensitive security device.* Umbrella – Security guidance for activists, journalists, and human rights defenders.* Calyx VPN – Free VPN from a nonprofit privacy group.* Riseup VPN – VPN for activists, provided by the Riseup collective.Counter-Surveillance & Digital Investigation* ProofMode – Cryptographic timestamps for verifying photos and videos.* Maltego – OSINT tool for network analysis and data mapping.* OSINT Framework – Open-source intelligence tools for digital investigations.Protest Safety & Documentation* Security in a Box – A comprehensive guide to digital security for activists.* Holistic Security Manual – A guide to physical and digital security for activists.Guest Information:Guest of the week: Paris MarxCheck out Paris’ show Tech Won’t Save UsCheck out Paris’ newsletter DisconnectProduction Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina KhanMusic by Johnny Zapras and postXamericaArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction by Nashwa Lina Khan and Andre GouletSocial Media & Support:🎧 Listen Now: Wherever you get your podcasts! (spotify/apple)📬 Subscribe: Habibti Please Substack✨ Support Us on Patreon🐦 Follow Habibti Please on Twitter: Habibti Please🐦 Follow Nashwa Lina Khan on Twitter: Nashwa on twitter🌳Our Linktree💕Habibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
This week Habibiti Please is focused on a favorite topic of the show: disarmament. Nashwa and Geneviève host Jeremy Corbyn and Paul Rogers in advance of Selling Death: Why the International Arms Trade Must be Controlled, an upcoming event hosted by Egypt Watch and Jeremy Corbyn’s Peace and Justice Project. Join Jeremy Corbyn, Paul Rogers, and Geneviève at the event on Saturday, July 17th, 2021, at 11 a.m. Eastern Standard Time and 4 p.m. London time here. We discuss the Peace and Justice Project, an initiative that works to bring people together for social and economic justice, peace, and human rights in Britain and across the world.This episode explores the arms trade and why we must move towards disarmament. The international arms trade fuels forever wars, bloody occupations, and the military-industrial complex. The detritus of war and occupation will linger long after militaries leave the countries they ravage. As this episode highlights, COVID-19 serves as a canary in the coal mine; a warning for how things can only get worse if change does not happen now. A virus cannot be nuked, yet the rush to create and sell arms from the imperial core has continued without challenge even during the pandemic. The Corbyn Peace and Justice Project illustrates why domestic and international problems and injustices cannot be separated. We also explore how we build solidarity beyond borders and across communities. This episode also draws links between the arms trade, the climate crisis, and other ongoing struggles, including the growing number of refugees. Industrialists selling weapons and war promoters are akin to the mythical hydra, where chopping off one head sprouts another. This hydra is a monster, directly supported by Western governments. And blowback is to be expected. Continued death and destruction fuelled by the imperial core through tradecraft will have global consequences,Forward-looking movements are needed now. Join Egypt Watch and Corbyn’s Peace and Justice Project for Selling Death: Why the International Arms Trade Must be Controlled this Saturday on July 17th. We look forward to seeing you there. Now, more than ever, we must stand in solidarity to stop our governments from funding mass death throughout the world. Head over to thecorbynproject.com/armscontrol to sign up for Saturday’s event. Habibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network and we are grateful to partner with Canadian Dimension on this episode.Organizations to check out: Egypt Watch Egypt Watch is a media services company based in London and was founded in 2019 by Osama Gaweesh, a well known Egyptian journalist and TV Presenter.Their mission is to put Egypt under the international spotlight and to raise global awareness about the declining situation in Egypt; to advocate for freedom of press, for human rights, and for upholding democracy. Corbyn Peace and Justice Project An organization founded by longtime activist for social justice and former Labour party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, to bring people together for social and economic justice, peace, and human rights, in Britain and across the world.The EventSelling Death: Why the International Arms Trade Must be ControlledWar is big business. The international arms trade is worth hundreds of billions, and arms deals brokered by the rich and the powerful continue to extend human misery around the world. The UK is the world’s second-largest arms exporter in the world, fuelling conflicts like the war in Yemen which has claimed a quarter of a million lives to date. We must come together across borders and backgrounds to fight back against this economy of war and suffering, and demand real security for all. The Peace and Justice Project is proud to support Egypt Watch’s upcoming event: Selling Death: Why the International Arms Trade Must be Controlled, an international conference that aims to shed light on the horrific abuses of the arms trade, and help build a movement to fight back. Join the event on Saturday July 17th, 2021, at 11 am Eastern Standard Time and 4pm London time, and sign up now.Additional Resources:Some resources that complement this episode: * Boris Johnson is leading the UK into an even greater COVID catastrophe by Paul Rogers* Unions must stand united to end Canada’s arms sales to Saudi Arabia by Simon Black* WESCAM controversy highlights double standards in Canadian arms controls by Lital Khaikin * 100 million Egyptians at risk of going thirsty by Osama GaweeshGuest Information Guests of the Week: Jeremy Corbyn and Paul RogersJeremy Corbyn served as Leader of the Labour Party and Leader of the Opposition from 2015 to 2020, and has represented Islington North since 1983. He is a lifelong campaigner for peace and justice, holding roles in the Anti-Apartheid Movement, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, and Stop the War Coalition.As Labour leader, he oversaw the development of a comprehensive programme to rebuild the UK economy, transfer wealth and power from the few to the many, tackle poverty and division, put Britain at the forefront of confronting the climate emergency, and pursue a peace and rights-based foreign policy.Jeremy received the Gandhi International Peace Award in 2013 and the Seán MacBride Peace Prize in 2017.Paul Rogers is an Emeritus Professor of Peace Studies at Bradford University. He is a biologist by original training, lecturing early on at Imperial College and also working as a senior scientific officer in government service in East Africa. For the past forty years, he has worked on international and environmental security and has written or edited thirty books. He is International Security Advisor to Open Democracy.In the late 1990s, he wrote Losing Control: Global Security in the 21st Century, which was years, if not decades, ahead of its time, anticipating the 9/11 attacks and the twenty-year war on terror that follows. A new edition has just been published updating and expanding the analysis. It looks forward to the 2030s and 2040s as the decades that will see a showdown between a bitter, environmentally wrecked, and deeply insecure world and a possible world order rooted in justice and peace. You can order the updated edition here.Co-hosted by Geneviève NevinOriginally from the West Coast, Geneviève Nevin (she/her) is a white Ashkenazi settler based in Montréal (unceded and unsurrendered Kanien’kehà:ka territory) where she is a community organizer and JD/BCL candidate at McGill University. Geneviève is passionate about politics and social justice and is actively involved in movements for migrant rights and Palestine solidarity, particularly within the Jewish community, as the former Membership & Fundraising Coordinator with Independent Jewish Voices Canada. Geneviève was also one of the organisers behind the successful Palestine resolution at the 2021 NDP Convention which called for a ban on illegal Israeli settlement products as well as an arms embargo against Israel until Palestinians are free. Production Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina Khan Show Music by Johnny Zapras and postXamericaArt for Habibti Please by postXamerica and Canadian DimensionProduction by Canadian DimensionProduction Assistance by Geneviève Nevin, Nashwa Lina Khan and Canadian DimensionSocial Media & Support:Follow us on Twitter @habibtipleaseSupport us on PatreonSubscribe to us on Substack This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
Two weeks ago hundreds of police officers and parapolice descended upon Trinity Bellwoods park in Toronto to violently evict the residents living there, displacing people from their homes and severing communities. Toronto has been cruel and brutal to the people living in this city. The austerity measures put in place using the pandemic as an excuse for imposing cruelty will not suddenly dissipate after the pandemic “ends.” It is important to note how the pandemic continues to ravage other places in the world. Many are under the illusion that it is near the end because of the inequitable global vaccine rollout and apartheid. While companies thrived, many have died. This episode was done in collaboration with the Encampment Support Network (ESN) in Toronto. We worked with Charlotte, an outreach volunteer with ESN. We discussed the evictions at Lamport Stadium that took place in May which involved a bulldozer to forcibly remove residents. Throughout the pandemic Encampment Support Network Toronto has provided help for people in encampment sites. Right now in the city, there is increasing pressure to re-open, and we must reckon with what reopening and “back to normal” means for those most disenfranchised. Public officials informed the “general public” to socially distance, while at the same time pushing unhoused people to live in crowded shelters and shelter hotels where the virus was spreading and killing. There are a number of obscene contradictions like this that reveal how people in power intentionally make others live in deplorable conditions to die.The lives of unhoused people do not matter to Mayor John Tory and downtown City Councillor Joe Cressy. Although many have known this for far too long, it has again become blatantly obvious this week. Who we let live and who we let die speaks volumes about our society and cities. Depredation and violence by capitalists and the governments that back them were fully demonstrated viscerally throughout the pandemic and should not be surprising. The pandemic again brought this out revealing sores in the underbelly of Toronto brought about by austerity measures. Entire populations are subjected to death and disease by choice. Laid bare by the pandemic are the conditions which have always existed for those marginalized by the state. Capitalism is functioning as it should be, and the pandemic has only accelerated its efficiency. The proliferation of narratives by people like high-ranking public servant Brad Ross claiming the park was “dirty” continues to push the selective disposal of human beings. They want you to imagine that people who live in encampments are unclean but also disposable; not worthy of public space or full lives. As Zoë Dodd posted, “people are not garbage.”As Dodd and many others have pointed out these were people’s homes. Dodd also reminds us how violence is a spectacle and more specifically how words like “safety” are weaponized against those who are cash poor. Parks are public spaces and necessary. Parks are a space of life, however, the City appears to only want some to enjoy parks while others must be dispossessed of public space. As Alex V. Green reminds us, parks are a site and space for so much life. The violent clearing events at Trinity Bellwoods serve as a harbinger. Austerity and privatization are in full effect as the means with exterminism as the goal. It is reasonable to expect that the new austerity and security measures are here to stay “post” pandemic. The city attempted media rehabilitation after images of the full force of their violence turned public opinion against their immorality, claiming there were public health issues and that people in the encampment were offered housing. This is false: only one individual was offered housing. It is important that we cut to the truth and do not cast doubt on the City of Toronto’s violence and injustice by their spin and narratives. This episode highlights how encampments are an alternative for so many and the reasons behind that. It also speaks to the work Encampment Support Network Toronto is doing. This episode discusses the tactics deployed by the city, police, and para-police. It also highlights how people can and do care for each other.In these moments, it is also vital to connect our discontents. We will continue to bear witness to evictions and mutations of evictions. It is necessary that we understand the global nature of clearing people. There is creative destruction in so many urban environments, but also an urbanization that has cultivated a specific desire for a specific class of citizen that the nation desires. Here, it is the rich who are desirable. It is impossible for low-income and marginalized populations to live in cities or centers of cities. Pulling from Henri Lefebvre, it is a necessity to think about who has the right to the city, the right to everything urban life offers. We deserve cities that offer life to all residents. These discontents should never neglect this struggle globally. Presently in Silwan village in East Jerusalem, thousands of Palestinians are losing their homes and even being forced to destroy their own homes. Capitalism, white supremacy, and fascism yield a massive graveyard. Criminalizing poverty is a war on people. The war on drugs is a war on people. Only through connecting our oppressions will we move forward. We do all owe each other so much, and so many deserve so much better.This is a free episode, but we hope people who are able to consider donating to groups in the mutual aid section of the shownotes. We also hope people support Idle No More, other Indigenous organizations, movements, and people in their calls to #CancelCanadaDay. You can learn more here. Habibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network, this episode was graciously edited by executive director Andre Goulet. The Harbinger Media Network is working towards building a left media ecosystem in Canada and we urge you to check it out if that’s your thing! We are also grateful to partner with Canadian Dimension.Mutual Aid & Community Support:Although this episode is not paywalled we would deeply appreciate it if people would share or give (if able to do so) to any of the causes or groups listed below. The Encampment Support Network Toronto (ESN) is an ad-hoc, volunteer-run network supporting people living in encampments in 6 locations throughout Toronto. This includes ESN Parkdale, ESN Trinity Bellwoods, ESN Scadding Court, ESN Moss Park, ESN LNP, and ESN Cherry Beach. We advocate for better conditions in encampments, report on city conditions and activity in encampments, and advocate for long-term permanent housing for people in their communities of choice. ESN also collects and compiles feedback from residents to support our advocacy efforts and continues to pressure the city to develop real solutions to the housing crisis. The only way to provide effective support and find solutions is by listening to and centring the needs of people experiencing homelessness.You can support their work here. website:https://www.encampmentsupportnetwork.com/instagram: https://www.instagram.com/esn.to.4real/twitter: https://twitter.com/esn_toyoutube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0ZLEEETJXZtA4kSv6W7qJAThis Way Up Collective is a group of queer and trans BIPOC youth that are on the ground providing mutual aid. Taken from their website: “our goal is to actively engage the communities that we are a part of and fill in the gaps wherever possible. We support encampments, youth in shelters, and anyone in need via care packages, weekly hot meal drops, and community arts programming.” * they are one of the groups that have been helping provide meals to encampment residents and doing amazing work. You can support their work here. website: https://www.thiswayup.ca/instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thiswayupcollective/Toronto Indigenous Harm Reduction (TIHR) emerged in April 2020 during the first wave of the COVID19 pandemic in response to a massive shutdown of frontline services and a lack of basic needs for Indigenous houseless folks in the city of Toronto. Over the past year, we have provided basic needs, access to critical health support & covid 19 testing, harm reduction supplies, sexual, reproductive health and prenatal support, traditional medicines, traditional food, expressive arts, and ceremony to some of our most vulnerable people. TIHR aims to reduce the negative impacts of substance use and other stigmatized behaviours and experiences through culture and unconditional support. TIHR is an entirely queer and Two-Spirit Indigenous collective founded by Nanook Gordon, co-led by Brianna Olson Pitawanakwat and Lua Mondor, and supported by Dashmaawaan Bemadzinjin (They feed the people) and countless volunteers.To date they have served over 3,000 meals to the encampments and Indigenous street folks. You can support their work here.website: https://www.torontoindigenoushr.com/facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TorontoIndigenousHarmReductioninstagram: https://www.instagram.com/torontoindigenousharmreduction/Additional Resources:Some resources that complement this episode: * Take action with the #NoEncampmentEvictions toolkit* ESN Toronto Newsletters* We Are Not the Virus Podcast* Fixing the housing crisis will mean treating shelter as a right—not a commodity by David Moscrop* Eviction at Trinity Bellwoods repeats history by Cathy Crowe* Demolishing Palestinian homes for an Israeli religious theme park by Al JazeeraGuest Information Guests of the Week: Charlotte Smith of Encampment Support Network TorontoCharlotte is an outreach volunteer with the Encampment Support Network in Toronto, Ontario. The Encampment Support Network Toronto (ESN) is an ad-hoc, volunteer-run network supporting people living in encampments in 6 locations throughout Toronto. This includes ESN Parkdale, ESN Trinity Bellwoods, ESN Scadding Court, ESN Moss Park, ESN LNP and ESN Cherry Beach. We advocate for be
In this episode, Nashwa and Ryan sit down with Andrea Horwath, MPP for Hamilton-Centre and the Leader of the Official Opposition New Democrats. ** Please note this episode was recorded in mid-March** Nashwa and Ryan contextualize this episode with an extensive pre-show- if you do not want to listen to the pre-show please forward this episode to the interview that begins at around 26 minutes. In this interview Nashwa and Ryan wanted the audience to learn more about Andrea and the Ontario New Democrats. This episode focused on provincial issues such as the vaccine rollout. The rollout continues to be a disservice to Ontarians as many have witnessed egregious lines at pop-ups and people rely on a community-driven twitter feed for information about the vaccines. Ryan and Nashwa also ask about the Ontario NDP’s launch of the Green New Democratic Deal. Although this was recorded during phase two and we are now in phase three the rollout remains disjointed and inequitable. As a podcast project, we are constantly thinking about a world beyond electoral politics and hope for electoral politics with teeth that go beyond platitudes. This is why we asked about the Ontario NDP’s stance and their policy paper produced in the Summer of 2020. You can find the NDP policy paper referenced here: End Police Violence. Invest In Black, Indigenous And Racialized People’s Lives. An Ontario NDP Commitment To Action. Ryan wraps up by asking an evergreen question about the future of the Ontario NDP, how the base is being built, and how the provincial party plans to retain power. During the pre-show, Ryan and Nashwa discuss the current state of so many political issues throughout Ontario and why we want Ford out. While we vehemently recognize and acknowledge the limitations of electoral politics we hope this episode presents an alternative to the Ford Conservatives. Last week Doug Ford’s Conservatives rammed through Bill 307. For the entirety of the pandemic, there was no urgency for an adequate paid sick days plan, to stop COVID evictions, to roll out an accessible vaccination program, to redress long-standing issues throughout the Long-Term Care system, and so much more. The list of moments throughout this pandemic that were urgent for so many Ontarians and not prioritized by Ford Nation are quite obvious. At the same time, we are witnessing a burgeoning fascist movement in Ontario and throughout Canada. We have been experiencing a rising unchecked white supremacy grow in Canada, overlapping with the anti-mask conspiracy parades. We fear that as Canada “goes back to normal” hate crimes will inevitably increase (terminology that frankly requires its own reckoning and further complexity). This contingent, which was emboldened after Donald Trump’s election as well as the general acceptance of far-right hate speech in Canada's political discourse has been left entirely unaddressed. The Ford government is part of this. With cabinet members like Merrilee Fullerton and friendships with people like Charles McVety it is rather clear that this is a government that is friendly to bigotry. Bill 307 was rammed through last week after courts had deemed it unconstitutional because it unjustifiably violated Ontarians’ right to freedom of expression – in particular affecting this important right during elections. Instead of appealing the decision, the Ford government invoked s. 33 of the Charter: the Notwithstanding Clause. The legal rule is an emergency tool governments can use to override certain Charter rights, even after a court deems a law unconstitutional. This tool has never been used in Ontario because invoking the Notwithstanding Clause means that a policy is going to violate fundamental civil liberties. This shows just how far Ford will go to achieve his political goals.Regardless of where you fall politically, even if you are beyond electoral politics, Ford’s time in office has been devastating for activists and organizers throughout the province fighting like hell to keep people safe and alive. From his austerity cuts and right-wing populism, the racist dog whistles he has used to signal that he's on the side with the white supremacists, Ford needs to go. In Ontario, one could describe the current electoral political arena as something like the Sanders versus Trump showdown that never materialized in the US. With decades of Liberal governments neglecting Long-Term Care, destroying our public services, and so much more, the NDP finally holds a position as the official opposition in a way they previously have not. We have less than one year to get the Ford government out of office, but we can also dream far beyond that. We are very cognizant of the limitations of electoralism, as we've expressed on many occasions on this podcast, but it is also important to recognize multi-method action. We can and should be principled while also knowing that there is flexibility and multiple fronts we must organize on and counter. ** Please note this episode was recorded in mid-March*** This episode was recorded before Nashwa began her role at the Ontario NDP.Mutual Aid & Community Support:Although this episode is not paywalled we would deeply appreciate it if people would share or give (if able to do so) to any of the causes or groups listed below. Last week has been and will continue to be hard for myself (Nashwa) and the team so I will keep this brief. I will try to better address the murder of multiple generations of the Afzaal family in London Ontario at another time but for now, I am trying my best to be there for my community and help organize. I have been asked to share this page for financial support of the 9-year-old son who was left orphaned and injured. I keep this podcast mostly free. I know my listeners are generous people who care about this world and so if you are able to give we urge you to give to the remaining member of the Afzal family, Faez Afzaal. From the team and I, Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji'un to multiple generations of the Afzaal family. We will keep you in our hearts and continue to fight for a world that does not paper over the vile settler colonialism and xenophobia that is the bedrock of what we know as Canada. Guest Information Guests of the Week: Andrea Horwath, MPP for Hamilton-Centre and the Leader of the Official Opposition New Democrats.Andrea HorwathAndrea Horwath is the Leader of the Official Opposition New Democrats. From her early career in community development to today, she’s always believed that government should be about giving people the opportunity to build a good life no matter where in Ontario they live, or when this province became home.Born and raised in Hamilton, Andrea was elected to Hamilton City Council in 1997, then as the MPP for Hamilton-Centre in 2004. In 2018, Andrea led her party to become the Official Opposition – the largest Official Opposition in a generation. Today, half of the members of her MPP team are women, they represent ridings from every region of the province, and together they’re reflective of the diversity of Ontario.She’s a leader who believes in proposing positive solutions, especially when it comes to ending hallway medicine, giving seniors better care and supporting public schools so they can give kids a great start. She’s fighting for good jobs, and a more affordable life.She’s an Ontarian, a mom, a Hamiltonian and she’s running for premier in 2022.You can find Andrea’s online on her website, on twitter, on facebook, and on instagram.Production Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina Khan and Ryan Deshpande Show Music by Johnny Zapras and postXamericaArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction by Canadian Dimension Production Assistance by Ryan Deshpande and Nashwa Lina KhanSocial Media & Support:Follow us on Twitter @habibtipleaseSupport us on PatreonSubscribe to us on Substack This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
On the inaugural Harbinger Society Presents live recording it's an evening of history and hard questions on Canadian exceptionalism as Nashwa Khan and Shaadie Ali of Habibti Please and Deathnography's Henry Lee join host Andre Goulet for a conversation on Vincent Bevins' excellent 2020 book 'The Jakarta Method', Ottawa's Victims of Communism Memorial, how to fight for justice for Palestine and more. Please note this conversation was recorded on May 20th, 2021.Plus: Atlantic correspondent James Brown makes a bold proposal for another kind of monument in our nation's capital.Special thanks to Zaid Siddiqui for research on this episode.You can support Harbinger Media Network here: https://harbingermedianetwork.com/You can check out a premium teaser to Nashwa and Shaadie’s interview with Vincent Bevins here: https://habibtiplease.substack.com/p/jakartamethodYou can hear Henry Lee's conversation with Bevins on a recent episode of Deathnography at https://deathnography.libsyn.com/what-is-possible-realistic-dreams-and-the-myth-of-scarcity-ft-vincent-bevins-and-maya-menezes and support the show at https://www.patreon.com/deathnographySupport Palestinian Youth organizing at https://palestinianyouthmovement.com/donateIslamic Relief is helping to provide immediate medical assistance and vital aid to all those affected by the violence and most in need athttps://www.islamicreliefcanada.org/emergencies/palestine/Eye on Palestine is providing media coverage that mainstream news never will athttps://www.instagram.com/eye.on.palestine/Find out more about the Movement to Safeguard Palestinian Communities and how to become part of the movement for peace athttps://www.globalgiving.org/projects/icareaboutpeace/ This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
This week’s episode features a conversation Nashwa and Ryan had a few months ago with Member of Provincial Parliament Jessica Bell. This episode covers provincial politics. An arena where anti-Muslim sentiments have been stoked with Ford’s Conservatives in power. Although this episode does not address Islamophobia we do believe that we need to vote out the Ford government to fight back around rising white supremacy and fascism in this province. Nashwa and Ryan spoke to Jessica about the slow developments in building transit. Jessica’s previous work as the founding Executive Director of TTCriders fighting to improve Toronto Transit in part inspired her run. Habibti Please has previously spoken to TTCRiders you can find the episode here.This episode also highlights the Green New Democratic Deal (GNDD). The differential impacts of climate change and how the Ontario NDP will address them through just transition and a just transition for people in Northern Ontario whose homes and roads are dramatically impacted by climate change. The group also discusses tenant rights and what the Ontario NDP is doing regarding the egregious Covid eviction blitzes. It is important to note that MPP Bell is NDP critic of housing, tenant rights, and urban planning. Nashwa and Ryan have previously covered evictions and rennovictions in Toronto here and here and the lack of political will to move on these issues.Mutual Aid & Community Support:Although this episode is not paywalled we would deeply appreciate it if people would share or give (if able to do so) to any of the causes or groups listed below. This week has been and will continue to be hard for myself (Nashwa) and the team so I will keep this brief. I will try to better address the murder of multiple generations of the Afzaal family in London Ontario at another time but for now, I am trying my best to be there for my community and help organize. I have been asked to share this page for financial support of the 9-year-old son who was left orphaned and injured. I keep this podcast mostly free. I know my listeners are generous people who care about this world and so if you are able to give we urge you to give to the remaining member of the Afzal family, Faez Afzaal. From the team and I, Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji'un to multiple generations of the Afzaal family. We will keep you in our hearts and continue to fight for a world that does not paper over the vile settler colonialism and xenophobia that is the bedrock of what we know as Canada. Guest Information Guests of the Week: Member of Provincial Parliament Jessica Bell Jessica Bell, MPP for University-Rosedale, serves as the Ontario NDP critic of housing, tenant rights, and urban planning. Prior to being elected in June 2018 she served as the founding Executive Director of TTCriders fighting to improve Toronto Transit.She’s been a lecturer at Ryerson University, director of the California Food & Justice Coalition and an advocate for environmental justice. She’s received several leadership awards, including Toronto Community Foundation’s Vital People Award.Jessica lives in University-Rosedale with her husband and two children.Find Jessica online on her website,twitter, and facebook.Production Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina Khan Show Music by Johnny Zapras and postXamericaArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction by Andre GouletProduction Assistance by Ryan Deshpande and Nashwa Lina KhanSocial Media & Support:Follow us on Twitter @habibtipleaseSupport us on PatreonSubscribe to us on Substack This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
The austerity measures that were first implemented during the pandemic will not ease post-pandemic. Global vaccine apartheid continues to exist and it seems that only those in North America with relations outside of North America or to communities. It feels eerily familiar for people who straddle worlds to be aware that “back to normal” means back to normal for people completely detached from the global reality of how COVID continues to ravage people outside of the imperial core. This episode takes a look at how the world we all now came to be. One where vaccine apartheid is normalized for so many. One where extermination programs and coups are staples. In this episode Shaadie and Nashwa interview Vincent Bevins, author of the Jakarta Method. Nashwa and Shaadie approached this episode with the thought and care they approach other work with. They wanted to honor those who died and survived the mass extermination in Indonesia while also weaving our own understanding as young Muslims of the world into this episode. Bevins book Jakarta Method is an accessible must-read about the United State's role in constructing a global anti-communist network. In 1965 and 1966, the Indonesian military killed one million civilians and with praise and enthusiasm from the American government. It was an apocalyptic slaughter of leftists and accused leftists. As Bevins writes, this series of events was instrumental in shaping our global economic system as it exists today. As beneficiaries of US hegemony, it is important to recognize this gap in collective memory and the responsibilities we have. A selection of propaganda leaflets blaming the Indonesian Communist Party for the 30 September (1965) movement that appeared in late 1965. Photo from Wikimedia Commons.The Jakarta Method maps out and tracks the violent anti-communism campaign, subsequent mass arrests, executions, and American sponsored disinformation campaign that rendered deadly results we will always benefit from. For example, the mass murder of Indonesians is why the tourism industry in Bali possible. As Bevins illustrates, this massacre was one of the biggest turning points of the Cold War and it inspired other regions to carry out similar programs. It is egregious and the replication of what happened in Indonesia should never be forgotten because it remains a blueprint for extermination programs globally. This episode features a number of resources that complement the conversation—please check them out below. From Vincent Bevins’ The Jakarta Method.Habibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network. For episodes focused on different struggles in Canada and around the world, we are grateful to partner with Canadian Dimension for this episode. Until Liberation, Canadian Dimension, Shaadie, and NashwaTo Read and Watch:The Jakarta Method: How to destabilize and control the Third World by Clement Nocos How ‘Jakarta’ Became the Codeword for US-Backed Mass Killing by Vincent Bevins The Cold War’s unfinished legacy by Noah TsikaThe Act of Killing Joshua Oppenheimer on "The Act of Killing": The VICE Podcast 034Tribunal 1965Organizations we like this week: Anakbayan Toronto ANAKBAYAN is the largest and most comprehensive organization of Filipino youth and students for National Democracy, with 20,000 members worldwide. We strive for genuine freedom, peace, and democracy in the Philippines.Migrant Workers Alliance for ChangeMigrant Workers Alliance for Change is building a democratic member-led organization of migrant farmworkers, care workers, students and more to win worker and immigration justice.Guest Information Vincent Bevins is an American journalist and writer. He previously worked as a foreign correspondent based in Brazil for the Los Angeles Times, after working previously in London for the Financial Times. He then moved to Jakarta and began covering Southeast Asia for the Washington Post, and in 2018 began writing a book about Cold War violence in Indonesia and Latin America, that book being The Jakarta Method. You can buy Jakarta Method here.Production Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina Khan and Shaadie AliShow Music by Johnny Zapras and postXamericaArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction by Candian DimensionProduction Assistance by Canadian Dimension, Andy Assaf, and Ali McKnight Social Media & Support:Follow us on Twitter @habibtipleaseSupport us on PatreonSubscribe to us on SubstackHabibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
This week Nashwa spent time with the guys at The Insurgents. In this special crossover episode, Nashwa joins Jordan and Rob of The Insurgents. We discussed the escalating aggression toward Palestinians and the attacks on Gaza that have left over 250 dead. We are disgusted by the Biden administration’s continued support of Netanyahu’s further annexation of Gaza and the West Bank.This is a crossover episode that was generously produced by Jordan and Rob of The Insurgents. You can also listen to the Insurgents on iTunes here, on Spotify here, and on Google Podcasts here. Find them elsewhere here. Please support the Palestinian Youth Movement here.Last Friday MP Jack Harris the NDP has called for an emergency debate, thousands of Canadians have written elected officials also voicing our disagreement with our tax money and our government’s involvement in the occupation and violent dispossession of Palestinian people and Palestine. You can participate in a number of Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East’s campaigns here. Please also consider signing this House of Commons petition to stop foreign military recruitment on campus. We hope this episode pushes people to go beyond posting. Throughout Canada and the world, many actions are taking place. You can find a list of Canadian actions here. The Nakba never ended. Our solidarity with Palestinians and Palestine must also always continue. This is a free episode, if you want to support the creation of more content like this and unlock Habibti Please exclusives please consider becoming a patron on Patreon or a paid Substack subscriber. We are a small team and it costs a bit to make this happen. We are happy to contribute to this passion project but we are also *so* grateful to anyone who is able to support us in continuing to build content like this. Habibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network. We also collaborate with Canadian Dimension for episodes focused on different struggles in Canada and around the world. Production Credits:Hosted by Rob Rousseau and Jordan Uhl featuring Nashwa Lina Khan Music by Johnny Zapras and postXamericaArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction by Nashwa Lina Khan and Johnny ZaprasProduction Assistance by Raymond KhananoSocial Media & Support:Follow us on Twitter @habibtipleaseSupport us on Patreon This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
Today marks the 73rd anniversary of the Nakba. At the same time, the Israeli occupation has once again increased their assault on Palestinian civilians in east Jerusalem and Gaza. We were honoured to be joined by guests from Palestinian youth Movement Toronto and some of the core organizers behind Palestine Resolution 2021 at the NDP Convention. As of Friday MP Jack Harris the NDP has called for an emergency debate, thousands of Canadians have written elected officials also voicing our disagreement with our tax money and our government’s involvement in the occupation and violent dispossession of Palestinian people and Palestine. You can participate in a number of Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East’s campaigns here. Please also consider signing this House of Commons petition to stop foreign military recruitment on campus. We hope this episode pushes people to go beyond posting. Throughout Canada and the world, many actions are taking place. You can find a list of Canadian actions here. The Nakba never ended. Our solidarity with Palestinians and Palestine must also always continue. This is a free episode, if you want to support the creation of more content like this and unlock Habibti Please exclusives please consider becoming a patron on Patreon or a paid Substack subscriber. We are a small team and it costs a bit to make this happen. We are happy to contribute to this passion project but we are also *so* grateful to anyone who is able to support us in continuing to build content like this. Habibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network. For episodes focused on different struggles in Canada and around the world, we are grateful to partner with Canadian Dimension.Mutual Aid & Community Support:Although this episode is not paywalled we would deeply appreciate it if people would share or give (if able to do so) to any of the causes or groups listed below. Support Palestinian Youth Organizing by donating to Palestinian Youth Movement.Islamic Relief is helping to provide immediate medical assistance and vital aid to all those affected by the violence and most in need.Eye on Palestine is providing media coverage that mainstream news never will, follow them but also support their work.Movement to Safeguard Palestinian Communities, while homes and land continue to be stolen this group works on actionable advocacy.Additional Resources:Some resources that complement this episode: Joint Statement by Palestinians in North America on Nakba DayPalestine Resolution 2021Deadly ExchangeResources from Palestinian Youth Movement of Sheikh Jarrah BDS MovementThe Nakba Demands Justice by Kaleem Hawa This Is Not Fine: Why Video of an Ultranationalist Frenzy in Jerusalem Is So Unsettling by Robert MackeyTeshuvah: A Jewish Case for Palestinian Refugee Return by Peter BeinartGuest Information From Palestinian youth Movement Toronto, we were joined by Rawan N. and Mohammed W. From Palestine Resolution 2021 at the NDP Convention, we were joined by Amy Kishek, Sam Hersh, Geneviève Joëlle, and Omar Burgan.Production Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina Khan Show Music by Johnny Zapras and postXamericaArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction by Candian DimensionProduction Assistance by Canadian Dimension and Ryan DeshpandeSocial Media & Support:Follow us on Twitter @habibtipleaseSupport us on PatreonSubscribe to us on SubstackHabibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
This week’s Eid episode is a double feature! In the first half of this episode, Nashwa sits down with Priya Prabhakar to discuss the ongoing Farmers’ protests in India that began in November 2020. In June of 2020, three ordinances were introduced and eventually passed as acts by Modi and his right-wing government. These bills translate into the mass deregulation and neo-liberalization of the agricultural market. Farmers continue to protest these three farm acts that were subsequently passed by the Indian government in September 2020. The protests are largely set in Delhi. We hope this episode helps people understand the larger context and the righteousness of farmer anger right now. The farmers’ protests are critical and we hope this episode provides a nuanced and accessible explainer on why these protests matter and what is happening in India. In India, neither farmer protests nor farmer suicides are uncommon and have been occurring for decades.The first half of this episode was recorded shortly before India became the epicenter of the COVID pandemic. The second half of this episode highlights how the devastating pandemic has also interacted with the strikes. In the second half of this episode, Priya and Nashwa sit down with Vijay Prashad to discuss how COVID is ravaging India, as well as how the Modi government has been failing the Indian people. Some highlights of this episode include Vijay’s insights on vaccine apartheid and America allegedly withdrawing troops from Afghanistan. This is a free episode, if you want to support the creation of more content like this and unlock Habibti Please exclusives please consider becoming a patron on Patreon or a paid Substack subscriber. We are a small team and it costs a bit to make this happen. We are happy to contribute to this passion project but we are also *so* grateful to anyone who is able to support us in continuing to build content like this. Habibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network. For episodes focused on different struggles in Canada and around the world, we are grateful to partner with Canadian Dimension.Mutual Aid & Community Support:Although this episode is not paywalled we would deeply appreciate it if people would share or give (if able to do so) to any of the causes or groups listed below. * Mutual Aid India - this is a curated list of Covid response efforts in India. * Khalsa Aid - Khalsa Aid is an international NGO with the aim to provide humanitarian aid in disaster areas and civil conflict zones around the world.* Internet Freedom Foundation - The Internet Freedom Foundation defends online freedom, privacy, and innovation in India.* NewsClick - An independent media organization dedicated to covering news from India and elsewhere with a focus on progressive movements.* The People’s Forum - Syringes for Cuba CampaignAdditional Resources:Some resources that complement this episode: * Harvest of Dissent by Sharanya Deepak* Long Live Farmer-Laborer Unity by Veena Dubal and Navyug Gill * Leading from the front: The role of women in Farmers’ movement* In Kerala, the Present Is Dominated by the Future: The Eighteenth Newsletter (2021) from Vijay Prashad* Waiting for Catastrophes by Vijay Prashad* ‘We are witnessing a crime against humanity’: Arundhati Roy on India’s Covid catastrophe by Arundhati Roy* Here’s Why Farmers Are Protesting the 3 New Agriculture Ordinances by Aibhav Palnitkar* Punjabi Dalit Women Fight Multiple Battles Rolled into One at Farmers Protest by Shreya Sharma* People’s Leader: A Dalit Woman Becomes The Voice of Farmers In India by Sania Farooqui* Burdened by debt and unable to eke out a living, many farmers in India turn to suicide by Salimah Shivji * Elite Despair About “Farmers’ Lack of Discipline” is Comical, Though Not Innocent by Subin Dennis* Government Should Fight Corona, not Farmers and Labourers: SKM by Sabrang India * All India Kissan Sabha* NewsClickGuest Information Guests of the Week: Priya Prabhakar and Vijay PrashadPriya Prabhakar is an organizer, filmmaker, and researcher currently based out of Oakland, California, and hails from Chennai, India. You can find her online on instagram and twitter.Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian and journalist. Prashad is a Marxist commentator and the author of thirty books, including Washington Bullets, Red Star Over the Third World, The Darker Nations: A People's History of the Third World, and The Poorer Nations: A Possible History of the Global South. He is the Chief Correspondent for Globetrotter and a Columnist for Frontline (India). He is the Chief Editor of LeftWord Books (New Delhi). He has appeared in two films – Shadow World (2016) and Two Meetings (2017). He is currently the director of Tricontinental. You can buy his newest book here.Production Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina Khan Show Music by Johnny Zapras and postXamericaArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction by Canadian DimensionProduction Assistance by Canadian Dimension and Priya Prabhakar Social Media & Support:Follow us on Twitter @habibtipleaseSupport us on PatreonSubscribe to us on SubstackHabibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
In this May Day double feature, Nashwa and Ryan sit down with Patricio Dávila and Phil Zigman of RenovtictionsTO and Cole Webber of Parkdale Organize. In this May Day double feature, we discuss the state of renovictions in Ontario as well as how people are resisting. Tenant organizers have been working together to resist and fight back. One example is West Lodge Tenants organizing a food bank and winning space from their massive corporate landlord to host it out of. We also have witnessed rent strikes in the city.We recommend people also check out and support Keep Your Rent and People’s Defence Toronto, both groups are mentioned on the show and doing amazing work. We also suggest people use and share the Toronto Covid Evictions Tracker if they or their comrades are facing evictions. Anti-eviction action and organizing has an important history. In the second year of the Great Depression, it was so intense that evictions effectively stopped in New York, Detroit, and Chicago. Solidarity to those fighting evictions, upcoming episodes looking at the Farmer’s protests, and COVID-19 in India.If you want to support the creation of more content like this and and unlock Habibti Please exclusives please consider becoming a patron on Patreon or a paid Substack subscriber. We are a small team and it costs a bit to make this happen. We are happy to contribute to this passion project but we are also *so* grateful to anyone who is able to support us in continuing to build content like this. Mutual Aid & Community Support:Although this episode is not paywalled we would deeply appreciate it if people would share or give (if able to do so) to the fundraiser for The East York 50: this fundraiser was set up to help support a group of 50 immigrant families slated to be evicted.Additionally, here are further resources for communities from Toronto and the Greater Toronto Area facing the results of increased austerity:* Encampment Support Network (ESN) is an ad-hoc, volunteer-run network supporting people living in encampments in 6 locations throughout Toronto. This includes ESN Parkdale, ESN Trinity Bellwoods, ESN Scadding Court, ESN Moss Park, ESN LNP and ESN Cherry Beach.* RenovictionsTO is a volunteer-run organization that gives tenants the tools they need to organize and fight back against their landlords who are partaking in a renoviction. * Keep Your Rent is another vital organization that offers Toronto residents a litany of resources to combat rent evictions.* Evictions Ontario is yet another great resource for evictions—it also specifically offers a tracker to see where evictions are taking place across the province.* Disability Justice Network of Ontario is a collective that aims to build a just and accessible Ontario through the dissemination of knowledge regarding issues that people with disabilities face—they promote change through legislative action; also, they support community members through a community caremongering program.Additional Resources:Some resources that complement this episode : * Doug Ford is Using the Pandemic to Criminalize Tenant Organizing by Cole Webber * Ontario is Mass Evicting Tenants, In as Little as 60 Seconds by Cole Webber * Above Guideline Rent Increases in the Age of Financialization by Philip Zigman and Martine August* Anti-eviction mapping project * Tenants Rise Up! Fighting for Housing Justice in the Bay Area (short documentary) * Online Activism During COVID-19: A Case Study in Rent Strikes by Cierra Bettens * Doug Ford is Consolidating the Power of Landlords During a Time of Crisis by Shehnoor Khurram and Ryan Kelpin* Toronto Tenants Seek Leverage on COVID Relief with Rent Strike by Morgan Sharp* Parkdale Tenants Rally Against Goliath Corporate Landlords by Shannon Carranco* Toronto Residents Get Their Massive Landlord to Donate An Apartment to Help Feed Tenants by Olivia Little * Why Fighting ‘Renoviction’ is so HardGuest Information Guests of the Week: Patricio Dávila and Phil Zigman of RenovtictionsTO and Cole Webber of Parkdale OrganizeRenovictionsTORenovictionsTO is a project seeking to document renovictions and above guideline rent increases in Toronto, provide resources and information for tenants, and support tenant organizing. Check out renovictionsto.com to learn more about where in the city renovictions and above guideline rent increases are happening and who are the landlords engaging in these practices. If you're facing a renoviction or above guideline rent increase, reach out to report your landlord and learn more about how you can fight back. In the future they will also start collecting data on the use (N12) evictions and making this information public on their website. You can check out their recent AGI report written by Phil Zigman and Martine August here. You can also find them on twitter @renovictions.Phil Zigman is the co-creator of RenovictionsTO. Patricio Dávila is a designer, artist, researcher and educator. He is Associate Professor in the Department of Cinema and Media Arts in the School of the Arts, Media, Performance and Design, at York University. He is the co-creator of RenovictionsTO. Parkdale Organize Parkdale Organize is a group of working class people who organize to build neighbourhood power in Parkdale. The organization aims to build working class organizations independent of politicians and social service providers.Cole Webber is a legal clinic worker in the Parkdale neighbourhood of Toronto, who is on Twitter @colefwebberCheckout Parkdale Organize and learn more about them through their facebook page, twitter page, and website.Production Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina Khan Show Music by Johnny Zapras and postXamericaArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction by Candian DimensionProduction Assistance by Canadian Dimension and Johnny ZaprasSocial Media & Support:Follow us on Twitter @habibtipleaseSupport us on PatreonSubscribe to us on SubstackHabibti Please is proud to be part of the Harbinger Media Network This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe
In this episode, Nashwa, Liv Agar, and Will Menaker talk through the third world cinema excellence of Gillo Pontecorvo's The Battle of Algiers. Enclosed is a preview; if you want to unlock the full episode, you can do so by subscribing on Patreon or Substack.Through its depiction of some of the most pivotal events in the Algerian War of Independence, The Battle of Algiers is an unsparing portrayal of what revolution actually is. The film specifically covers the events of 1954 to 1962, with French occupiers failing to stop an impending uprising. Although over half a century old, the movie shows little sign of aging and remains relevant today—it has been shown to members of the Black Panthers, the IRA, and had a featured screening at the Pentagon. The film remains unique and a must see for anyone interested in the Algerian people’s fight for liberation from 132 years of French colonialism. During their chat, the trio reflect on the movie, its most important scenes, and some of the historical context around it; they also close the episode by rating the film on a very special scale. Guest Information:Guests of the week: Liv Agar and Will MenakerLiv Agar is the host of a philosophical podcast under her own name whose topics address current political events. Additionally, she is a frequent co-host of QAnon Anonymous, an anti-QAnon podcast that analyzes the group’s conspiracy theories, and an occasional streamer. You can find her on Twitter and Twitch.Will Menaker is one of the cohosts of the leftist podcast Chapo Trap House. You can find him on Twitter.Production Credits:Hosted by Nashwa Lina KhanMusic by Johnny Zapras and postXamericaArt for Habibti Please by postXamericaProduction by Nashwa Lina Khan and Johnny ZaprasProduction Assistance by Andy Assaf and Raymond Khanano Social Media & Support:Follow us on Twitter @habibtipleaseFollow us on Instagram @habibtibleaseSupport us on PatreonSubscribe to us on Substack This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit habibtiplease.substack.com/subscribe