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| 2025 Audit of Antisemitic Incidents |
"Antisemitic
conspiracy theories were disseminated with such frequency in 2025 that
it is easier to summarize the totality of the accusations made against
Jewish Canadians by simply stating that they were made the scapegoats
for all the world's problems."
Antisemitism
has become so ubiquitous in our society that the word Jew is now
commonly used as a slur to disparage and malign non-Jews. In
contemporary Canada, Jewishness itself has become derogatory."
Richard Robertson, Director of Research and Advocacy, B'nai Brith Canada
The
annual audit produced by B'nai Brith Canada through its League for
Human Rights documents 6,800 antisemitism incidents across Canada. That
would be the equivalent of 18.6 documented incidents occurring each and
every day. Needless to say that number would report only those incidents
brought to the attention of authorities, or in this instance, B'nai
Brith. Not everyone experiencing the scourge of an antisemitic attack
will report a verbal assault in person or online. It has become too
commonplace, and Jewish resilience shrugs and carries on.
The
number that was recorded and released in the audit represents the
highest volume since the League began its audit production in 1982.
Before October 7, 2023's Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern Israel,
antisemitism was confined to the underground, when civil society would
not countenance it. By 2025, however the incidence of antisemitic slurs
had increased by 145.6 percent since 2022. Antisemitism, noted the
report, had become so widespread that it appears to grow on its own
momentum, no longer linked to events such as the war in Iran.
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| Members of Montreal's Jewish
community gathered on April 22, 2026, to celebrate the 76th anniversary
of the Israeli state's founding. (Olivia O'Malley/CTV News) |
"We
need to protect Canadians from the dangers that are rapidly increasing
and emerging from digital spaces. Whether they are being fuelled by
foreign-based entities or by foreign corporations, that shouldn't
matter."
"Canada must regulate its online realm and must protect Canadians from the dangers presently existing within it."
Richard Robertson, B'nai Brith Canada
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| Pro-Palestinian supporters set up
across the street from the Israel Independence Day celebration on April
22, 2026. (Olivia O'Malley/CTV News) |
The
level of documented antisemitic incidents declined somewhat in both
Quebec and Alberta in 2025. However, Ontario. the Prairies, Atlantic
Canada and British Columbia saw significant increases in the number of
antisemitic incidents. Most incidents occurred online, representing 92
percent of those reported, and appears to be part of a continuing trend.
Year over year, the prevalence of online incidents of antisemitism have
crept ever upward.
Listing
recommendations for each level of government, the report called for a
federal Royal Commission to be struck on antisemitism. Government at the
federal level should establish a national antisemitism emergency task
force -- should view violent antisemitic attacks as domestic terrorism
and -- deploy added national security resources in the protection of
Jewish institutions.
As
for the provinces and territories, the report recommends the immediate
funding of security protection for Jewish institutions and the
establishment of a special prosecution unit tasked specifically to
address hate crimes The report recommended that municipalities ban
events that incite hate and intimidation, exercise zero tolerance for
intimidation expressed in public spaces, and for the prioritization of
protecting Jewish neighbourhoods and institutions.
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| More than fifty Toronto police officers receive a morning briefing
Sunday April 5 at Sheppard Plaza in North York before ensuring any
anti-Israel or pro-Israel protesters remain out of residential
neighbourhood streets. (Photo by Ellin Bessner/The CJN) |
"What we need in Canada is a multi-level approach to fighting antisemitism. This is a national crisis. We need task forces."
"We
need consolidated efforts to provide ... the immediate relief that is
required, such as security infrastructure, funding and policing."
"But we also need legislative change. And this is something that no government in this country can do alone."
Richard Robertson, B'nai Brith
The report contains a section on "the demonization of Zionism".
What the report does not do is make a record of the apparent lack of
interest expressed by various levels of government throughout the
country at the viral and all-too-obvious 'protests' against Israel's
actions in taking military steps to defend itself from the never-ending
perniciously violent actions of Palestinians -- organized terror groups,
and ordinary Palestinian civilians as well who have been incited by
their governments in the West Bank and Gaza to value martyrdom in the
cause of obliterating the Jewish State from the Middle East.
A
lack of interest in the face of threats against Canadian Jews, the
constant vilification of Jewish Canadian institutions by Muslim groups
for their support of Israel, the clear civil disruptions that offend
Canadian law, a tolerance for hate manifested by repeated statements of
globalizing the Intifada, of a 'Final Solution' as coded, but not
too-subtle messages of violence against Jews that most municipal,
provincial and the federal government tolerate, while decrying
antisemitism and linking it to the evil of 'Islamophobia'; a meaningless
sop when it is abundantly clear that Islamists within Canadian society
are the fount of the avalanche of antisemitic rhetoric and venom of
today.
"It
is not OK to subject a minority in this country to unprecedented levels
of hate because of the actions of a foreign government."
"The numbers speak for themselves. This is a national crisis, and we have not seen a response sufficient to the moment."
"We
need a whole-of government approach. We need the same response to
tackling antisemitism that we've seen from our federal government when
it comes to other crises in this country."
Richard Robertson, B'nai Brith
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| Aleph Bet Judaica, seen after a rock was thrown at its window on Sunday, Apr. 26, 2026. (Courtesy Photographer)
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