
Jewish leaders concerned after Chilliwack trustee wears a keffiyeh to school board meeting
CHILLIWACK — Roughly two months after an incident at Imagine High prompted an apology from the SD33 superintendent over biased content around the Israel-Palestine conflict, a human rights organization that combats antisemitism in Canada has expressed concern after a Chilliwack trustee wore a green keffiyeh to the most recent meeting of the Chilliwack Board of Education.
Aron Csaplaros, regional manager in British Columbia for B’nai Brith, one of Canada’s leading human rights organizations, says the decision by Chilliwack trustee Margaret Reid to wear a green keffiyeh at the June 11th meeting of the Chilliwack Board of Education is worrisome.
According to National Public Radio in the United States, the keffiyeh can be defined as a traditional Arab headdress. It is often made from cotton and decorated with distinctive woven patterns. While it comes in many different colours, NPR noted, over the past 100 years, the black and white keffiyeh has become synonymous with Palestinians.
Csaplaros says wearing a keffiyeh, or any political symbol, to a school board meeting is highly inappropriate given that the keffiyeh has become a striking political symbol regarding the current war between Israel and Hamas.