What Starts With the Jews Never Ends With the Jews
"The multiplication of prayers in the street is a serious and sensitive issue in Quebec.""Last December our government expressed its malaise in the face of this phenomenon, which is more and more present in Montreal.""The premier of Quebec gave me a mandate to reinforce laicity and I have the firm intention of fulfilling this mandate with diligence."This fall we will table legislation to reinforce laicity in Quebec including the banning of prayers in the streets."Quebec Minister Responsible for Laicity Jean-Francois Roberge
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| Screenshot of an Instagram post taken July 29, 2025 |
In
his statements firmly rejecting mass prayers in the streets of
Montreal, Minister Roberge, while stating unequivocally that such
prayers must stop, fails to mention that it is Muslims who have taken to
these mass public prayers, highly unusual and certainly controversial
in Canada. Street prayers may be common in Islamic countries or
Muslim-majority countries, but not in Western democratic countries to
which Muslims have gravitated. And it is the more recent Muslims that
have entered the West with their assertiveness of entitlements bolstered
by the sheer numbers of their presence that agitate for Sharia law, and
in its lack offensively take on the mantle of 'free expression' to
assemble for mass public prayers.
Minister Roberge's statement while omitting 'Muslims' spoke only of a "proliferation of street prayers",
offensive in their public display to Quebec's secular public persona in
its government and institutions. These group prayer sessions are
deliberate moves to demonstrate the power of their numbers in Canada.
Imposing upon the non-Muslim population a forced theatrical display
insensitive to others while delivering their message of superior numbers
within the country in comparison to Canadian Jews.
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| Protesters gather in front of Notre-Dame Basilica in Old Montreal on July 20, 2025 in response to Muslim prayer gatherings that happened outside the basilica on Sundays. Photo by Dave Sidaway/Postmedia/File |
The
prayers are a feature of the ongoing anti-Israel demonstrations
ubiquitous in the streets of Canada since the October 7 Palestinian
terrorist Hamas attack in southern Israel. A 278-page report by a
committee tasked to recommend strategies in the continuing entrenchment
of Quebec's laicity commitment (defined as protecting public institutions from religious influence) which produced recommendations to be followed precipitated Quebec's decision to ban public prayers.
New
rules on wearing religious symbols in daycares, bans on face coverings
in publicly funded junior colleges and proposed new protections to
protect universities from being compelled to install prayer rooms were
among the 50 recommendations produced by the report. While mentioning
street prayers, the report recommends that sanctions should be left to
municipal governments.
A
regular gathering of public prayers outside Montreal's Notre-Dame
Catholic Basilica has been of especial irritation in its conspicuous
aura of contempt for Christianity. When such gatherings take place
outside synagogues in Quebec they don't gain quite the same notice by
the public. But there is that old Jewish comment, pithy in its
observation that 'what begins with the Jews never ends with the Jews'.
While Jews may be the initial target, persecution often extends to
others within the orbit of the persecutors.
The anti-Israel group Montreal4Palestine has organized Sunday protests
outside the Basilica, complete with an open-air demonstration of the
Islamic afternoon prayer.
| Quebec RCMP are looking into whether Imam Adil Charkaoui committed a hate crime when he called for the extermination of 'Zionist aggressors' |
One protest in December outside the cathedral had been advertised with the title: "One solution. Intifada revolution". Since the summer, counter-demonstrations of Quebec nationalists have met the Muslim protests at the Notre Dame cathedral. "Enough, it's enough. For the respect of our heritage and our coexistence; we will peacefully rally",
a poster circulated by counter-protest organizers read. One of the
anti-public worship organizers is an Iranian-born Quebec laicity
activist, Mandana Javan.
"The streets of Montreal are not open-air mosques", Javan declared outside the basilica at a July counter-protest, calling on the provincial government to adopt a law banning "organized Islamist prayers in public spaces". Quebec Premier Francois Legault singled out public prayers as a particular target: "To
see people praying in the street, in public parks, this not something
we want in Quebec. When you want to pray, you go in a church or a
mosque, not in a public place".
The
Montreal-area borough of Ahuntsic-Cartierville pledged last summer to
ban outdoor religious events when locals expressed their outrage at
Muslims kneeling in prayer at a public park. Now, the surge in
anti-Israel demonstrations has increased public prayer frequency and
placed them squarely in the public's sight. The prayer performances
represent arrogant Muslim defiance of Quebec's secularism, in
aggressively acting out disdain for laws that are man-made as opposed to
the divinely-inspired laws of Sharia.
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| Imam Adil Charkaoui Section 318 of Canada’s Criminal Code says “every person who advocates or promotes genocide is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of not more than five years.” |
In
November of 2023, a month after the savage atrocities wrought by Hamas
in Israel, Montreal Imam Adil Charkaoui angered Quebec politicians for
leading hundreds of demonstrators in prayers in Arabic to destroy "Zionist aggressors". "Allah, count every one of them, and kill them all, and do not exempt even one of them", he incited a crowd massed on a blockaded Montreal street.
While the Canadian Muslim Forum defended street prayers as "a manifestation of freedom of expression that has been exercised for so long by various communities",
they have an ally in Quebec's Catholic leaders, where Bishop Martin
Laliberte, president of the Assembly of Catholic Bishops of Quebec
condemned the proposed street prayer ban, stating they were "deeply concerned about the erasure of people and believing communities from Quebec's public space".
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| Screenshot of an X post taken July 29, 2025 |
Labels: Banning Street Prayers, Montreal4Palestine, Notre Dame Basilica, October 7 Hamas Atrocities in Israel, Quebec Government





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