Pro-Palestinian activists are making a renewed push for the Canadian Museum for Human Rights to install an exhibit highlighting the plight of Arab-Palestinian refugees, while mainstream Jewish organizations see the attempt as public political point-scoring and propaganda. The controversy surrounds what Palestinians refer to as “Nakba” (Arabic for catastrophe)—the displacement of some 700,000 Arab-Palestinians during the 1948 war between Israel and five neighbouring Arab states. The federally funded CMHR in Winnipeg includes exhibits on various modern genocides, including the Holocaust, Ukrainian Holodomor, Armenian genocide, Rwandan genocide, and Srebrenica genocide in Bosnia. According to a March article by Candice Bodnaruk in the Washington Report of Middle East Affairs magazine, pro-Palestinian groups have been lobbying for a Nakba exhibit at the CMHR since 2011. Also in March, advocacy group Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East (CJPME) sent out a fact sheet that addressed the question “why are Palestinian Canadians …