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・ Canadian Handicrafts Guild
・ Canadian hardcore punk
・ Canadian Harvard Aircraft Association
・ Canadian Headache Society
・ Canadian Headstones
・ Canadian health claims
・ Canadian Health Coalition
・ Canadian Health Libraries Association
・ Canadian Health Network
・ Canadian Hearing Society
・ Canadian heavy metal
・ Canadian Helicopters
・ Canadian Hemophilia Society
・ Canadian Heraldic Authority
・ Canadian heraldry
Canadian Heritage Alliance
・ Canadian Heritage Information Network
・ Canadian Heritage Rivers System
・ Canadian High Arctic Ionospheric Network
・ Canadian High Commission, Bridgetown
・ Canadian High Commission, Canberra
・ Canadian High Commissions
・ Canadian hip hop
・ Canadian Historical Aircraft Association
・ Canadian Historical Association
・ Canadian Historical Dinner Service
・ Canadian Historical Review
・ Canadian Hit 30 Countdown
・ Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network
・ Canadian Hockey Association


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Canadian Heritage Alliance : ウィキペディア英語版
Canadian Heritage Alliance
The Canadian Heritage Alliance (CHA) was a Canadian white supremacist group founded in Kitchener-Waterloo, Ontario.〔"Kitchener: White supremacist group's sign yanked", Liz Monteiro, Torstar News Service, ''The Cambridge Reporter'', page A3, 19 April 2001〕〔"White supremacist group's road adoption raises ire of Waterloo resident", Canadian Press, 17 April 2001〕 Detective Terry Murphy of London's Hate Crime Unit alleged that the group had links with the Heritage Front and the Kitchener/Waterloo/Cambridge-based Tri-City Skins.〔"Down into the darkness: Matt Lauder's inside look at Canada's racist groups wasn't pretty" by Eric Volmers, ''Guelph Mercury'', 19 March 2005〕
Its former leader, Melissa Guille, denied that the organization was 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 said the CHA "seems to be an attempt to fill the void left by the diminishing Heritage Front." Staff Sgt. Gary Askin of the Waterloo Regional Police Service argued that the CHA was "promoting white supremacy under the guise of white pride."〔Brian Caldwell, "White supremacists active in K-W", ''Kitchener-Waterloo Record'', 24 February 2001, A1.〕
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 New Brunswick Multicultural Council is speaking out against some controversial flyers which were circulated" Canadian Press, Broadcast News, 7 July 2004, 10:11〕 The group has adopted the 2004 New Orleans Protocol for promoting White nationalism.
==See also==

* List of white nationalist organizations

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Canadian Heritage Alliance」の詳細全文を読む



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