EZRA LEVANT (EL) Indian genocide: That’s what former CJC boss Bernie Farber says Canada is guilty of — a bizarre and embarrassing (for him) allegation

BY EZRA LEVANT ,QMI AGENCY
FIRST POSTED: SATURDAY, AUGUST 03, 2013 06:00 PM EDT
EL: Did you know Canada has committed genocide?
EL: Seriously — like the Holocaust. Canada did that. We’re like Nazis.
EL: According to Bernie Farber, that is.
JC: please read:
http://jimcraven10.wordpress.com/2013/07/28/indians-jews-palestinians-and-zionists/
JIM CRAVEN:
“Sir Jeffrey Amherst noted for his deliberate use of smallpox-infected blankets as a weapon against Indians. Amherst and his British lieutenants were a marked change from the French commanders at the forts throughout the Old Northwest and Canada. He made no effort to build goodwill with Indian peoples. He had no respect for Indian leaders, treated them contemptuously, and frequently described them as ‘wretched people’. He put an immediate end to the traditional French practice of giving Indians ball and powder when they ran short; he also prohibited emergency provisions if game was scarce, and clothing or gifts of goodwill. Lord Amherst (for whom Amherst College is named) initiated a genocidal new policy: ‘Could it not be contrived’ he wrote to one of his officers, ‘to send the smallpox among the disaffected tribes of Indians? We must on this occasion use every strategem in our power to reduce them’. Blankets were taken from the crest of the Appalachian Mountains. It delineated Indian country as west of the line; colonists lands as east of the line.” [Judith Nies “Native American History: A Chronology of a Culture’s Vast Achievements and Their Links to World Events”, Ballantine Books, N.Y., 1996, pp. 190-192]
and:
“The Seneca invaded forts in Pennsylvania. Delaware Indians attacking Fort Pitt (formerly Fort Duquesne, now Pittsburg) were presented with ‘gifts’ of blankets taken from the smallpox ward of the fort’s hospital. It started an epidemic that would rage through the Delaware villages and Shawnee towns of Ohio, decimating their populations. Still, by the end of 1763, eight out of 12 British posts had been captured and their garrisons ‘massacred’… Pontiac’s War became a major topic of debate in Britain. The English enlarged Sir Jeffrey Amherst’s powers to subdue the rebellion. (The smallpox blankets of Fort Pitt had been Lord Amherst’s inspiration).” [Judith Nies, Ibid, p. 195]
SEE ALSO: http://www.nativeweb.org/pages/legal/amherst/lord_jeff.html
EL: Farber used to be the boss of the now-defunct Canadian Jewish Congress.

















