Charitable Status: Financial Support to State Military Versus Terror Groups
"Our position is that it is unjust for the Canada Revenue Agency [CRA] to revoke a charity because a charitable object[ive] that it accepted almost 60 years ago is now no longer considered to be a valid charitable object[ive].""It is simply unjust to close a charity supported by over 100,000 Canadians based on reversing a decision the CRA made in 1967."Nathan Disenhouse, national president, JNF Canada"In keeping with our mission of improving the quality of lives of Israelis, we have in the past funded projects of a charitable nature that indirectly involved the IDF. These projects were built on land owned by the IDF primarily for the benefit of children and youth. When it came to our attention several years ago that supporting these types of projects may not be in keeping with CRA policies, we stopped funding them.""The last project we funded was in June 2016 and it was directed to the Hatzerim Airforce Base for a playground/soccer field for the children living on the base.""To be clear, we no longer fund projects located on IDF land and JNF Canada operates in accordance with CRA regulations governing its status as a charitable organization."JNF CEO Lance Davis
Israeli air force cadets toss their caps into the air during a graduation ceremony at the Hatzerim air force base in southern Israel in 2014. A Canadian charity that funds projects in Israel has faced claims that some of its charitable donations have gone to support projects on Israeli military bases in violation of Canadian tax rules. (Tsafrir Abayov/Associated Press) |
The
century-old Jewish National Fund has been advised by the Canada Revenue
Agency that its charitable status in Canada is set to be revoked in
view of the charity's financial support for Israel's military structure.
In response, the Jewish National Fund has made it clear that its
intention is to challenge that decision in a court of law. Its
contention is that the rules of charitable donations have been altered
by the CRA, and that after the organization's work had been approved for
charitable status under those same rules 60 years earlier.
It
is more than slightly likely that this move by the CRA was developed in
the wake of Jewish groups bringing to the attention of the Canada
Revenue Agency, and to Canadian media, that there are Canadian Muslim
charities in good charitable status with the CRA known to financially
support terrorist groups abroad. There is an obvious difference between a
state's military apparatus and that of a terrorist militia. The
latter's purpose is objectively offensive, while the former's is, by
necessity, defensive.
A
state that has been forced by regional circumstances throughout its
history, to build an army for the specific purpose of self-defense is
certainly not to be conflated with scores of militias formed for the
single purpose of destroying an internationally recognized, legitimate,
sovereign state. Differentiating between the two; state
military/non-state militias, legitimate fighting force and purposefully
terrorist entities shouldn't be too difficult to determine even by
third-state functionaries.
"The
CRA assesses all concerns about registered charities against a clear
regulatory and risk framework designed to prevent bias in our
decision-making process", responded the agency
spokesperson Nina Ioussoupova. Which has led the Jewish National Fund to
embark on a legal journey with the intention of proving that the tax
agency erred in making its decision; that not only is there an evident
bias in its decision-making, but it has upended its own prior agreement
with the charitable status and purpose of the Jewish National Fund.
And
nor is the JNF the only Jewish organization that has come afoul of the
CRA's shift to de-registering charitable status for other Jewish groups
focused on financial aid used for the building of military
infrastructure for the Israel Defense Forces. Simply put, their case is
that "Canadian charities are not allowed to fund foreign militaries", explained Mark Blumberg, a Canadian lawyer whose specialty is Canadian charity law.
In
any event, although the CRA decision means a loss of status as a
registered charity for the Jewish National Fund, its supporters and
donors comprised for the most part of members of the Canadian Jewish
community, should be able to overlook the loss of charitable receipts
used for income tax purposes, since as a taxable relief they don't
amount to very much. The principle of supporting a dedicated military
tasked to protect civilian life in Israel should represent sufficient
philanthropic motivation.
On
the other hand, since the Jewish National Fund has attested that since
2016 it no longer funded IDF infrastructure, something is definitely
awry with Canada Revenue Agency's audit and the decision that arose out
of it. Not revealed was whether Islamic groups in Canada appealed to the
CRA to rescind the charitable status of the JNF on the basis of its
having funded said IDF infrastructure, but it is not entirely
unreasonable to assume that this kind of incitement did have a desired
effect in retaliation for the spotlight on Muslim charitable groups
sponsoring terrorism.
A JNF Israel webpage describes Canadian-sponsored projects on Bat Galim Naval Base and Palmachim Airbase in Israel. (KKL-JNF) |
"Unfortunately, our overtures to have a dialogue in order to negotiate an agreement were rejected --- CRA officials refused to meet in person with JNF Canada officials throughout this ordeal -- and the CRA confirmed its intention to revoke on June 25th.""[Our appeal intends to illustrate that the Canada Revenue Agency's findings are flawed; the federal agency's taxation arm's processes are unfair, that there] is a reasonable apprehension of bias in the audit."Jewish National Fund letter: Nathan Disenhouse and JNF CEO Lance Davis
Labels: Canada Revenue Agency, Charitable Status Revoked, Jewish National Fund of Canada, Something Fishy in the State Apparatus
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