Surprise Attack! Revolution carried through by small conscious minorities

Surprise Attack! Revolution carried through by small conscious minorities
Kabul in the Republican Revolution of 1973

Tuesday, August 10, 2021

The uglier side of living in Niagara (The Fort Erie Post)

(https://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/local-fort-erie/news/2021/08/10/the-uglier-side-of-living-in-niagara.html)

The uglier side of living in Niagara

Harassment of Fort Erie woman not an uncommon event, anti-racism group says



Is Niagara — and Fort Erie in particular — a racist community?

The issue of race came to a head in town recently after one family was threatened via a letter left in their mailbox. In an anonymous letter, the writer threatened the life of Natalee Cole, who is Black, and her daughter. It was the culmination of a months-long campaign targeting Cole.

“I will burn your house down with you inside,” the letter stated.

Cole had finally had enough and went public.

“I’ve been suffering in silence for eight months,” she said. “I just couldn’t bear it anymore.”

It’s not something she experienced in an ethnically diverse community in Brampton, where she lived prior to moving to Fort Erie in December 2018.

“It would happen more in the workplace,” she said.

As horrendous as the incident may seem, it’s not something that is uncommon, according to Saleh Waziruddin of the Niagara Region Anti-Racism Association.

“People are being harassed by neighbours using bylaw enforcement and police to get at them,” Waziruddin said. “It’s almost always been Black residents. Fortunately, with one exception, bylaw and police have not taken the bait.”

It’s difficult to gauge how big a problem racism is in Niagara. Information, Waziruddin said, is sparse.

“We know racism is there,” he said. “We hear from people who move here from the (Greater Toronto Area), that they are experiencing it more than they were back in Peel or the GTA, but it’s anecdotal.”

He said that the Niagara Regional Police have begun reporting incidents of hate crimes as a part of the service’s annual report.

“So we’re getting some information,” Waziruddin said.

The NRP, meanwhile, are continuing their investigation into the incident, said Stephanie Sabourin, manager of corporate communications for the police service.

“Due to the active nature of this investigation, we are unable to provide further information so as not to jeopardize the investigation nor, would we be able to speak to conversations with persons involved in investigation,” she said in an email response to the Fort Erie Post.

She added that the Fort Erie incident, for the moment, is not being classified as a hate crime.

“At this time, charges have not been laid and while being actively investigated, there is no evidence to suggest race-based motivation at this time,” Sabourin wrote. “Detectives take numerous aspects into consideration in the course of the investigation, ultimately they need to be able to prove a nexus between a crime and their bias towards an identifiable group.”

She also said that Niagara as a whole is not seeing an increase in reported crimes that reach the threshold of a hate crime, which are investigated by District Detective Offices with assistance of a designated member of the Intelligence Unit trained in hate-motived occurrences.

“In 2020, there were 10 reported hate-motivated incidents with one criminal charge laid,” Sabourin said.

The NRP has an Equity Diversity and Inclusion Unit that is active in the community, Sabourin said.

“On a daily basis, they are developing relationships with community members and providing education and support to equity seeking groups within our community and addressing any concerns.”

Cole, meanwhile, is managing as best she can given the situation.

“I have an impeccable attitude,” she said. “I’ve done 20 years of door-to-door sales. I’ve learned to suck it up.”

That being said, it doesn’t mean the experience hasn’t affected her or her daughter, Miracle.

“It should have not taken place in this day and age,” she said. “We have to be able to identify that person.”

THE STORY BEHIND THE STORY: The Fort Erie Post wanted to look deeper into the issue of racism in Niagara after documenting the experience of a local Black woman who was sent a threatening letter where the anonymous writer threatened to burn down the woman’s home with her and her daughter inside.


Sunday, August 1, 2021

'I will burn your house down with you inside’: Fort Erie woman who is Black receives threatening letter (Toronto Star and Niagara This Week)

(https://www.thestar.com/local-fort-erie/news/2021/08/01/i-will-burn-your-house-down-with-you-inside-fort-erie-woman-who-is-black-receives-threatening-letter.html)

'I will burn your house down with you inside’: Fort Erie woman who is Black receives threatening letter

Community rallies to show support for Natalee Cole, who is terrified by anonymous letter threatening her family






Warning: This article contains content that may be disturbing to some readers. 

Natalee Cole can’t help but wonder if it’s her skin colour — and not her taste in music — that prompted a hateful, anonymous letter in which a stranger threatened to burn her Fort Erie home down with Cole and her seven-year-old daughter, Miracle, inside.

Cole, a Black woman in a predominantly white neighbourhood, says she has been living in terror since she received the handwritten letter in her mailbox a week ago, the third such letter from someone demanding that she turn her music down.

The latest letter ramped up the vitriol, demanding she turn her music down “or the neighbours and I will burn your house down with you inside … stop the noise or burn in hell.”

Cole said a number of other letters have also been sent anonymously to Niagara Regional Police and town hall, demanding action be taken against her.

NRP media officer Const. Phil Gavin said police began an investigation into the threatening letter on July 23 and the investigation continues.

For Cole, who moved to the border town two years ago from Brampton, the harassment seems motivated by something other than the karaoke machine in her home that she likes to play.

“I was shocked beyond belief and I was really scared, overwhelmed and wondering why,” she said in an interview. “I feel I’m being targeted. I am a Black woman and I feel this has something to do with it.”

“(But) I can’t afford for them to break my spirit and my happiness,” she said.

Cole said she feels vulnerable, fearful for the safety of Miracle. “Who knows if they’re watching me?” she said. “It’s really creepy.”

But on Saturday, her community showed her that she’s not alone: upwards of 100 people, including many of her neighbours, turned up in front of her home to show her support.

“I love your music,” one woman said, hugging Cole.

“We’re there for you,” said another neighbour, a man who lives behind Cole.

“We want you to know you’re not alone and we’re here for you,” said resident O’Brien Martinez.

Two teen girls brought Cole a package of fresh cookies. “God bless you,” she told the girls.

Cole told some of the visitors that the stress of the threat has taken a huge toll on her and Miracle.

“Emotionally I’m broken,” she said. “It’s traumatizing for a seven-year-old.”

Aidan Barron, who lives a few doors down, said — after telling Cole the community is behind her — that he only found out about the letter the night before. “I was devastated,” he said.

As a white man, he acknowledged he can’t fully understand what people who are Black, Indigenous or people of colour experience in terms of intolerance or racism. “All I can do is say ‘I love you and I support you,’” he said.

Niagara Region Anti-Racism Association (NRARA)’s Saleh Waziruddin said the type of intimidation Cole is experiencing won’t work and will not be tolerated.

“We have seen many Black residents in Niagara targeted by racist neighbours who try to use the police and bylaw enforcement to harass Black people to leave,” he said in a statement.

The NRARA’s Vicki Lynn Smith told the crowd the community needs to collectively stand up against hatred.

“We must fight, fight, fight,” she said.

Martinez, a man of Mexican descent who grew up in Texas, said he knows the sting of racism all too well.

“I’ve been pulled over by the cops and I was scared for my life,” he said. “You get that kind of ugly look when you walk in a restaurant.

“There are too many people who pretend it doesn’t happen.”

Cole told the large gathering, including Mayor Wayne Redekop and Niagara Falls MPP Wayne Gates, that as rattled as she is, their support is making a difference.

“Just your presence allows me to feel we’re in this together,” she said.

“This stops today,” she said. “I’m taking my power back today.”