Canada revokes charity status of group linked to Israel
Canada has revoked the charity status of a Jewish organization following a government audit that found it has funded Israeli military projects and settlements in the occupied West Bank.
The Global News website reported on Monday that the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) earlier this month stripped the “Beth Oloth Charitable Organization” of its status for funding activities that are not charitable under Canadian law, including attempts at “increasing the efficiency and effectiveness of the Israeli armed forces.”
Beth Oloth also funded Israeli pre-army seminaries, known in Hebrew as “mechinot.” Under Canadian law, registered charities are prohibited from donating funds to “foreign armed forces.”
“It is our position that these pre-army mechinot exist to provide support” for the Israeli military, the CRA said.
It released 94 pages of documents regarding the case on Friday following the announcement of the organization’s charity status revocation on January 12.
The agency also found that the organization had donated CAD 1.2 million (USD 900,000) to recipients in West Bank settlements, which violated Canada’s official policy on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
“Providing assistance to Israeli settlements in the occupied territories serves to encourage and enhance the permanency of the infrastructure and settlements and therefore is contrary to Canada’s public policy and international law on this issue,” the Canadian agency said.
The Toronto-based “Beth Oloth Charitable Organization” had been a registered charity since 1980 and ranks 62nd on the list of the largest charities in Canada by tax-receipted donations.
The canadahelps.org website now says the group is “currently unable to receive donations.”
The “charity” group “Jewish National Fund of Canada” is also under investigation in Canada for similar reasons.
Canada officially opposes the usurper regime’s settlements in the occupied West Bank and says they are “a serious obstacle to achieving a comprehensive, just and lasting peace.”
About 600,000 Israelis live in over 230 illegal settlements built since the 1967 Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories of the West Bank and East al-Quds.
EA