Israel welcomes Senate antisemitism report, but groups point out gaps

· Toronto Sun

OTTAWA — Israel’s ambassador to Canada says his country welcomes this week’s release of a Senate report on Canada’s antisemitism crisis , but some groups say the report doesn’t go deep enough.

Visit rouesnews.click for more information.

Ambassador Iddo Moed said Israel praised the Senate Standing Committee on Human Rights’ report, Heightened Antisemitism in Canada and How to Confront It, saying it presents effective solutions to Canada’s ongoing problem with anti-Jewish hatred.

“ Jewish communities in Canada have been repeatedly subject to fear and intimidation on the basis of their Jewish identity and connection to Israel,” Moed said.

“As this blatant hatred has turned violent, with shootings and vandalism at Jewish schools and places of worship, Israel has acknowledged the urgent need for proactive and actionable responses to this issue and will continue to advocate to relevant authorities.”

Report comes as Canada’s Jewish community under siege

The report comes amidst a troubling few years for Canada’s Jewish community, which has faced intimidation, shootings, and vandalism of Jewish community centres, schools and places of worship.

Anti-Israel and anti-Jewish activists used the Oct. 7 2023 Hamas attacks as an excuse to commence campaigns here in Canada against the Jewish community, resulting in hundreds of anti-Israel demonstrations, encampments on university campuses and marches through Jewish neighbourhoods.

Jesse Primerano, executive director of StandWithUs Canada, told the Toronto Sun that while the report was a step in the right direction, more work needs to be done.

“There needs to be real accountability measures, measures that are laid out if institutions fail to act — what that looks like in terms of enforcement on campuses, consequences for these institutions if they don’t follow what they need to be doing,” he said.

Report fails to correlate rise and influence of anti-Zionism

Primerano said there’s a large misunderstanding by officials of what exactly antisemitism is.

“It is often mischaracterized as legitimate criticism of Israel, which of course exists in it’s own right, but can’t be used as a shield to pretend antisemitism doesn’t exist,” he said.

“It’s critical that there is someone who is aware of, and can properly articulate the nature of modern antisemitism responsible for addressing the impact it is having on Jewish-Canadians.”

Amir Epstein, CEO of Jewish advocacy group Tafsik, said that while the report properly acknowledges the rise in antisemitism, it shows a dangerous disconnect by ignoring the key factors driving Canada’s surge of anti-Jewish hatred.

“By ignoring the rise of antisemitism and anti-Zionism alongside the rise in immigration from countries that breed religious and cultural hate towards Jews, the government is refusing to acknowledge a problem obvious to anyone with a scintilla of intellectual honesty,” he said.

Epstein also said the report doesn’t address the problem of anti-Zionism — an issue pointed out by other Jewish groups like the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA,) who questioned why Independent Jewish Voices, a self-professed anti-Zionist organization considered to be a fringe group, were referenced several times in the report.

“Antizionism is the ‘new era’ of Jew hatred and the primary vehicle through which Jews are now demonized and excluded from Canadian society,” Epstein said.

“When combined with the weaponization of fabricated narratives like anti-Palestinian racism … it is clear that if the government continues to reject these primary sources of anti-Jewish hate, it is simply wasting time and should expect the hate to continue to rise.”

[email protected]

Read full story at source