Everything about The Canadian Heritage Alliance totally explained
The
Canadian Heritage Alliance (CHA) is a
Canadian white supremacist group based in southwestern
Ontario. Detective Terry Murphy of
London, Ontario's Hate Crime Unit alleged that the group had links with the
Heritage Front and the
Kitchener/
Waterloo/
Cambridge-based
Tri-City Skins.
Its leader,
Melissa Guille, denies that the organization is a
hate group, and contends that the group and its website are concerned about "keeping Canada for Canadians" and "removing the anti-
white sentiment in society." A 2001 report from
B'nai Brith Canada says the CHA "seems to be an attempt to fill the void left by the diminishing Heritage Front." Staff Sgt. Gary Askin of the
Ontario Provincial Police argued in the same year that the CHA was "promoting white supremacy under the guise of
white pride."
In 2001, the CHA tried to gain exposure by joining the adopt-a-road program to clean debris along highways near Cambridge, Ontario. The Waterloo Region soon expelled the CHA from the program. In 2004, the CHA achieved notoriety for distributing flyers in
Fredericton,
New Brunswick on
Canada Day. One pamphlet complained about Canadian
immigration policy and another featured a picture of a white woman, with the title "Love Your
Race." The group has adopted the 2004
New Orleans Protocol for promoting
White nationalism.
The CHA and Melissa Guille are co-defendants in a federal human rights complaint for Internet hate filed in 2004 by Ottawa human rights lawyer Richard Warman. The complaint alleges that material on the website would likely expose homosexuals, Muslims, Jews, First Nations, blacks, Arabs, other non-whites, and Roma to hatred or contempt in violation of s. 13 of the Canadian Human Rights Act. Website content engaged in Holocaust denial, and argued that whites who have relationships with black men deserve to die, that Jews are the literal children of Satan, and that non-white immigration into Europe is worse than the Black Plague that struck during the Middle Ages. The hearing began in 2006 and is scheduled to resume in September 2007.
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