Never Put Off Until Today What You Should have Said Yesterday
"There is a difference between peaceful protest and hateful intimidation."
"It is unconscionable to glorify the antisemitic violence and murder perpetrated by Hamas on October 7th."
"This rhetoric has no place in Canada. This is not who were are."
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
A
message of condemnation. From the Prime Minister of Canada. After
months of often more muted messages of hate, threats, viral
antisemitism. At no time did this man who for too long has been the
executive leader of Canada see fit to condemn antisemitism without
linking it to his cautions against 'Islamophobia'. Puzzling, given that
Muslims in Canada face very few obstacles to living an inclusive, normal
life of acceptance and equality. While at the same time Palestinian
agitators have sought every opportunity to slander Israel, deny that
Hamas is a terrorist entity, and harass Jewish-Canadians.
And
nor is he the sole politician in Canada to look the other way and
murmur approval of Canada's laws justifying free speech, even though
there are other laws that condemn and criminalize the deliberate spread
of racism, hate expressed against an identifiable group as an indictable
offence. The steady growth of a Muslim demographic in Canada make them
an impressive voting bloc, one recognized all too readily by politicians
more concerned over their re-election than representing basic security
issues.
This
past Saturday downtown Ottawa saw swarms of masked anti-Israel
protesters marching, waving banners, and flags, chanting directly before
Parliament Hill to support the terrorist attacks in southern Israel
that took place on October 7, 2023, killing over a thousand innocent
civilian Israelis, mass-raping girls and women, mutilating their
tortured bodies and slaughtering them, then taking hundreds of children,
women and the elderly as hostages back with them to Gaza where it
became a celebratory event.
Ottawa police’s
hate crime unit is investigating allegations of hate speech at a
pro-Palestinian rally on Parliament Hill over the weekend, where some
participants were heard chanting in support of the deadly Hamas-led Oct.
7 attack in Israel.
"Our
resistance and attacks are proof that we are almost free. October 7 is
proof that we're almost free. Long live October 7. Long live the
intifada. Long live every form of resistance", shouted one of the speakers. So, after all, this is
Canada. The Canada that we never realized existed. But it does. And
Jews in Canada are being hounded, harassed, threatened while their
places of worship are vandalized, Jewish children entering their
parochial school are cursed and shouted at, Jewish university students
ostracized.
There
was a time, early on, long before that fateful October 7, when a strong
leader would have expressed his condemnation of rising antisemitism and
acknowledged its source, and taken steps to criminalize the burgeoning
racism splitting Canadian society. Having done nothing of the kind, even
when Palestinian 'students' in Canada began organizing
'pro-Palestinian' marches celebrating the savagery visited on Israelis
by Palestinian terrorist groups starting the very day following the
carnage in southern Israel, the haters took it as tacit approval.
The
prime minister who cannot condemn the scourge of rising and rampant
antisemitism emanating from within the Canadian-Muslim demographic,
without also parenthetically mentioning 'Islamophobia' has, in very
fact, supported the antisemitism he has done nothing to tame, to
adequately censure, to reassure Canadian Jews that their place in Canada
is assured, safe and secure because Canadians care and Canadian
politicians are determined to ensure that Canada remains a nation where
justice and equality are not just words but conditions applicable to all
its citizens.
To
them a badge of dishonour by their lack of concern, by their lack of
remedial action, by their lack of assurances to Canadian Jewry that
Canada is their home, a place of origin where they are appreciated,
where they are safe and free from threats and violence.
Police are investigating allegations of hate speech used at a pro-Palestinian rally in downtown Ottawa on Saturday. (Radio-Canada/Maxim Saavedra-Ducharmes)
"There
is widespread bipartisan support for aid to Israel in the House of
Representatives, yet this legislative branch is being held hostage from
within, undermining both American and Israeli national security."
"Our members are compelled by their faith to act on this issue, and at we shall."
Sandra Parker, chairwoman, Christians United for Israel
"I
chose to speak from my heart and from my experience as an immigrant
whose family escaped from the most brutal, radical Islamofascist regime
in the world: the terrorist Islamic Regime in Iran."
"We came to Canada because we wanted to live a better life."
"We embrace Canadian values."
Ontario MPP Goldie Ghamari
Palestinian supporters hold a rally in downtown Toronto on Oct. 9, 2023. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)
Canadians
in general have seen their society upended in disagreements and they
have witnessed the strange phenomenon of their government hesitating in
its support for a Democratic state that has always had the support of
democracies throughout the world, including Canada, in recognition of
the legitimacy and the need for the existence of a Jewish State, to
preserve and protect embattled Jews from the Middle East to North
Africa, after the near-destruction of the world's Jewish population in
Europe.
Worse,
a government that no longer appears to feel there is any need to
support its own Criminal Code laws against promoting hate and violence
against an identifiable group, as week after week Muslim-Canadians who
have immigrated to Canada, along with refugees and migrants fleeing
Sectarian and tribal violence in their countries of origin march through
the streets of Canadian cities celebrating the Palestinian Hamas
terrorist group's incursion from Gaza into Israel to commit horrendous
acts of savagery on Jews.
The
explosion of antisemitism and the growing violence against Canada's
Jewish community inexplicably has drawn no level of government to
declare the hate-filled marches advocating for the destruction of Israel
and a 'final solution' for Jews intolerable, prepared to instruct
police to apprehend those involved and outlaw such displays of sheer,
unadulterated celebration of vicious atrocities committed against
southern Israel's farming communities where 1,200 Israeli civilians were
slaughtered.
When
Jewish lives were in peril during the Second World War, the Catholic
Church among others did nothing to admonish the leaders of the Third
Reich that their increasing acrimony, threats and final solution to rid
the continent of the presence of Jews represented a wholesale atrocity
of genocidal proportions. The Protestant Branch of the Church did no
better. Now, it is the evangelical Christians that have committed to
supporting the Jewish State, at a time once again when Jews are
threatened.
If
it is true as many would like to believe that not all Muslims subscribe
to the hate manifested by those who mask themselves with keffiyehs,
claiming Israel to be committing genocide against Palestinians by
responding to the mass rapes, murders, mutilations and hostage taking by
Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Palestine Liberation Organization
and ordinary civilian Palestinians on October 7, and that the majority
are peace-supporting and hate no one, there is no evidence of it. That
there is an absence of Muslim-Canadian voices protesting the violence on
the streets, the criminal acts perpetrated against Jewish parochial
schools, synagogues, social centres, and businesses is the reality.
We
see and hear only those Muslim-Canadians who bear signage accusing
Israel and Jews of genocide for fighting back against terrorism,
advocating for the destruction of the Jewish homeland, persecuting Jews
on the street, at universities and blocking access to areas where Jews
tend to live in groups. Nowhere do we see protesting Muslim-Canadians
who accept Jewish-Canadians as equals, entitled to live in peace and
security among the steadily growing demographic of Muslims in Canada.
Why is that?
Member
of Provincial Parliament in Ontario Goldie Ghamari and other expatriate
Iranians who fled the Republic for a life of freedom, finding it in
Canada, openly support their Jewish counterparts. Theirs is a rare
commitment among the Muslims who have settled in Canada for a better
life, yet are adamant in denying that life of security, social comfort
and prosperity to their Jewish neighbours. Jews, under duress by fellow
Canadians whose antisemitism is audible and terrifying to the
Jewish-Canadian population never resort to vilifying Muslims for being
Muslims, threaten them, bomb their mosques.
The
Liberal government of Justin Trudeau is prepared to invite Palestinian
Gazans to find refuge in Canada, adding to the already large contingent
of Palestinians living in the country who foment hate and violence
against Jews. Justin Trudeau cannot find it in himself to condemn the
rampant antisemitism and criminal acts committed against Jewish houses
of worship without linking antisemitism as a proscribed and hateful
symbol of discord, to 'Islamophobia'. The infinitely larger number of
Muslims now living in Canada as opposed to a relatively small Jewish
population mitigates against this man of authority's responsibility to
protect Jews in the greater need to placate the larger voting bloc.
Holding US and Israeli flags, a crowd of largely Evangelical Christians
pray during the Christians United For Israel (CUFI) 'Night to Honor
Israel' during the CUFI Summit 2023, in Arlington, Virginia, at the
Crystal Gateway Marriott, July 17, 2023. (Jacquelyn Martin/AP
"Probably
we're going to go back to the proxy war. [But now it's a proxy war with
the risk of] that sudden eruption of state-to-state war."
"Which we didn't have to worry about before."
Alex Vatanka, director, Iran program, Middle East Institute Research Centre, Washington
"The
explosion this morning in the sky of Isfahan was related to the
shooting of air defence systems at a suspicious object that did not
cause any damage."
"[Air defence batteries fired over reports of airborne drones, crews targeting several flying objects]."
Iranian army commander Gen. Abdolrahim Mousavi
"[Israel
appears to have carried out the attack to] check off a box [by sending a
message to Iran without doing anything too provocative that might upset
the U.S. urging restraint or to spark any further retaliation from
Iran]."
"It seems very limited, to send a message that 'we can strike you inside of Iran'."
Yoel Guzansky, senior researcher, Institute for National Security Studies, Tel Aviv
An anti-Israel parade in Tehran on Friday The New York Times
Neither
the sender of the message nor the message target appeared inclined to
linger on what appeared to be a restrained Israeli rebuke referencing
the 300 drones and Ballistic Missiles that Tehran sprinkled toward
Israeli airspace a week earlier. Message delivered. Message received. A
signal for Middle East political experts analyzing the interplay as both
enemies preparing to prevent the latest violent eruption from
ballooning into a full blown regional war.
"It
appears we're closer than ever to a broad regional war, despite the
fact that the international community will most likely make a great
effort to de-escalate tensions", commented Amos Harel, military-affairs commentator at the daily Haaretz
in Israel. The Islamic Republic of Iran has never made any secret of
its willingness to one day destroy Israel. Its furtive but obvious
nuclear program and focus on ballistic missile upgrades testament to
that oft-stated ambition.
Nor
is it unknown that Iran is a major sponsor of proxy terrorist groups in
the Palestinian territories, Iraq, Lebanon, Yemen and Syria all of whom
have become involved in attacking Israel from its borders following the
Israel Defense Forces' incursion into Gaza with the express and
well-expressed purpose of destroying Hamas's operations and
extinguishing as many of its operatives as possible, to defang one of
the deadly serpents spawned from the Republic's IRGC al-Quds division.
Rising
tensions in the wake of the October 7 flood of terrorists representing
Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and the PLO backed by Iran that saw
their operatives, along with ordinary Palestinian civilians attack
Israeli border farming communities where their sadistic savagery gave
vent to the hatred for Jews consuming their venom-patterned minds by
committing unspeakable atrocities against Israeli civilians in an
organized, well-rehearsed orgy of rape, mutilation and mass murder.
When
Israel mounted its offensive in Gaza, Hezbollah saw it as an
opportunity to strike Israeli targets opening a second front in the
north of Israel, necessitating the evacuation of Israeli villages around
the Golan Heights. Iranian-backed Shiite militias in Iraq, Syria and
Yemen fired missiles and drones throughout the conflict in lethal,
distracting moves obviously meant to exhaust Israel's military reserves.
For
its part, Israel has, over time, conducted airborne raids by its
fighter jets in Syria, Lebanon and Iraq to destroy arms shipments from
Iran to its proxies, focusing mostly on Syria in an effort to dislodge
Iran from a planned permanent presence on Israel's border. On April1st
an airstrike killed two Iranian generals in the Syrian capital Damascus
at an Iranian diplomatic compound for which Iran named Israel as being
responsible -- vowing a response.
On
the 13th of April Iran calculated a first-time direct attack and
launched a rain of missiles and attack drones toward Israel, virtually
all of which were intercepted by an international coalition of
preventive partnership that included fighter planes and missile
interception by the United States, France, United Kingdom, Jordan, Saudi
Arabia and the UAE, working in tandem with the IDF, resulting in one
human casualty in Israel and a minimally affected Israeli airbase.
Israel's
response to Iran's attack arrived a week later with Iranian authorities
claiming their air defences fired at a major airbase near Isfahan, home
to Iran's F-14 Tomcats, an ageing fleet of American jets predating the
Islamic Revolution. Sites associated with Iran's nuclear program are
also established in the Isfahan area, including the underground Natanz
enrichment site, featuring in previous Israeli sabotage attacks. That
response by the IDF coincided with Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei's 85th birthday.
Both
the UN's nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency and
Iranian State television declared all Iranian atomic sites in the areas
in question to be "fully safe"; "no damage" resulted. On the other hand,
it would seem that satellite imagery later revealed evidence of
probable damage at the Iranian air base following the Israeli strike. BBC Verify analyzed two images that showed part of an air-defence system at an airfield in Isfahan had been damaged.
"It's
extremely politically sensitive, obviously, but procedurally I believe I
made the right decision in the sense of past rulings of speakers and
precedents and traditions."
"In my opinion, having done the research, it appeared to me that the keffiyeh is being worn to make a political statement."
Speaker of the Ontario Legislature, Ted Arnott
"I think [Speaker Arnott's ruling] is the correct decision, in the same way we can't use other kinds of political clothing."
"We can't wear T-shirts that say 'Free the hostages', or wrap ourselves in a flag or whatever."
"We
have to follow the rules of the legislature. Otherwise, we politicize
the entire debate inside the legislature and that's not what it's about
... we use our words to persuade, not our items of clothing".
Progressive Conservative backbencher Robin Martin
"It really comes down to uniting Ontarians and communities."
"We see the division right now that's going on. It's not healthy, and this will just divide the community even more."
Ontario Premier Doug Ford
Keffiyehs
remain banned in the Ontario Legislature after a motion to overrule
House Speaker Ted Arnott’s prohibition failed to pass at Queen’s Park on
Thursday. CBC
One
would think and hope that someone of the political stature and
influence of the premier of Canada's most populous province would be
more aware and sensitive to the implications of permitting an iconic
symbol of Palestinian 'resistance' against the 'occupation' of Gaza and
the West Bank by the State of Israel would be recognized as throwing
political weight in the Palestinian-occupied wing of slanderous
propaganda. Worse, that seeing that symbol worn in the provincial
parliament, the impression that the provincial government agrees that
Palestinians and their terrorist hordes have the right to raid Israeli
territory to threaten, to rape, to torture, and to murder Jews in
Israel.
The
Speaker of the Ontario legislature appears to be courageously standing
on principle alongside the legislature's own rules when he defied the
popular (unanimous) decision of the Members of Provincial
Parliament when they opted to allow keffiyeh-clad individuals to display
their obvious rancor against Israel, bringing the conflict that rages
in the Middle East into Canada and its levels of government as an
entitlement to slander the Jewish State and propagate for its
destruction as a 'final solution' to their struggle to destroy the
ancestral Jewish presence in the Middle East.
The
keffiyeh is emblematic of Palestinian rejection of sharing the
geography that the United Nations General Assembly in 1947 partitioned,
offering Jews one portion of their traditional geography upon which to
declare a modern state, and the other to the Palestinians who claim the
entire territory as uniquely and solely theirs, rejecting the reality of
history that reflects a Judaean presence from antiquity to the present;
in fact the original 'Palestinians' as named by the Roman occupiers of
the Middle East during that era.
There
is a long-standing rule in the legislature that members may not make
use of props, signage or accessories with the intention of expressing a
political statement, and it is that rule that the Speaker of the
Legislature relied upon to refuse to permit that resonating political
symbol to make its appearance in the Legislature of Ontario. Having
established the facts through his own "extensive research", the Speaker
was confident in the applicability of his ruling.
The
unanimous consent of the legislature is sought by members of provincial
parliament when they wish to express solidarity with a specific theme
or event. Provincial NDP leader Marit Stiles had moved a unanimous
consent motion days earlier claiming the keffiyeh to be a culturally
significant item of clothing in Palestinian, Muslim and Arab communities
and as such should be given permission to be worn in Parliament. Some
of those present in the Legislature demurred, the loudest "no" emanating
from another Progressive Conservative MPP.
"Speaker Arnott is the longest serving MPP in the legislature and has
spent three decades upholding the rules and procedures of the House."
"As the longest serving woman at Queen’s Park I support his
ruling because it keeps with tradition and reminds members to keep our
debates focused on words rather than on political props."
"Arnott chose parliamentary convention over political weather [vanes]."
Ontario Conservative MPP Lisa MacLeod
Queen's Park, Toronto Frank Gunn, The Canadian Press
"Anti-Palestinian Racism" at York University, Hotbed of Anti-Israel Racism
"[York
University pledges to take] proactive steps to fight racial inequity
[which cannot be done unless administrators actively commit to isolate
and destroy the Zionist] settler colonial project."
"The
struggle for Palestinian self-determination will support the liberation
of all humans and non-humans [sic] from colonial oppression."
"It
is the systematic and structural denial of the Palestinian right to
self-determination and national liberation, and the collective existence
of the Palestinian people, while upholding Zionism."
"Zionism
is a settler colonial project and ethno-religious ideology in service
of a system of Western imperialism that upholds global white supremacy."
"Academic
freedom allows us to comment and critique on historically and
philosophically relevant topics in context and allows for the pursuit of
truth and fulfillment of university objectives."
"We propose that the department advocate for a more transparent and
effective University process for handling complaints and violations of
the code of conduct, including reparatory justice and/or grounds for
suspension or removal for individuals who violate the code of conduct
and community safety standards."
Department of Politics Palestine Solidarity Committee document
Students at York University drop a banner calling for a walk out in
solidarity with Gazans. Credit: Palestine Solidarity
Collective/Instagram
"[York
University is becoming a landscape of] surveillance, fear, intimidation
and repression [for anyone advocating] Palestinian liberation. [Faculty
members] should not be pressured to condemn Hamas."
"More students have expressed or reported feeling that the university has become an unsafe environment."
"[Any defence of Israel must be viewed as] anti-Palestinian, Islamophobic, and anti-Arab."
York University faculty committee, Department of Politics
York
University in Toronto has devoted itself to the loving care of the
sensibilities and sensitivities of their Palestinian students, amidst a
larger concern at the university over the plight of Palestinians in Gaza
and the West Bank who have attempted mightily over the last 70 years
and more to uproot the presence of Jews and the State of Israel,
labelling them as 'occupiers' on their own historical, well- documented
ancestral land which the Arab migrants from Syria, Jordan and Egypt,
purloining the ancient Roman-occupation-era designation of 'Palestine'
-- as a province of Jews for administrative purposes -- for their very
own, extend that 'ownership' to the land Israel sits on, as well.
These
are the Palestinians who declare themselves descendant of history's
Philistines and in the sense that the word is used today philosophically
, they certainly are, in character if not in historical context. The
fairly recent trend in immigration, refugee acceptance and illegal
migration that has gifted Canada with a large Arab/Muslim population has
resulted in the Palestinian propaganda machine working diligently to
defame Israel and frame Canadian Jews as undesirables. And whereas Jews
in Canada have never undertaken a campaign to discredit and isolate that
Arab/Muslim population, the latter has been labouring overtime to
succeed in doing just that to the much smaller Jewish-Canadian
population.
Antisemitism
and the pejoratives usually applied to Jews anywhere are not new, but
the rigour with which this campaign of several years' standing --
accelerated after the Hamas terrorist incursion into Israel with its
horrendous savagery imposed upon civilians and still-ongoing retention
as hostages of Israeli children, women and the elderly -- speaks volumes
of the group-characteristics of a violent people who cloak themselves
in the guise of victims of Israeli/Jewish 'genocide'.
The
large and growing presence of this discordant blight upon Canada's
traditional intake of immigrants from around the world has drawn out the
latent antisemitism in Canadian society to a formidable degree causing
Canadian Jews to feel uprooted psychologically yet again by the
preponderance of prejudice and racial/religious/ethnic/cultural winds of
suspicion and hate they see being played out in street demonstrations,
extolling the 'human rights' of Palestinian terrorists to 'resist' an
'occupation' that resulted from Palestinian violence against Jews.
Verbal
contortions and the invention of 'truths' that re-write history and
reality are grasped gratefully by those comfortable with their own brand
of antisemitism, layered over with the sanctimony of a sudden love
affair for Palestinians, felt to be justified by their aggressive
historical and cultural inaccuracies from a hymnal not that different
from the one conventional/traditional antisemites sing from. The
convenience of citing Critical Race Theory, and the comfort of snuggling
into Diversity, Equality and Inclusion gives additional impetus to the
smug who declare themselves defenders of human rights while denying
Israel's right of existence.
A
"recommendations report" dated April 5 from the political committee
devoted to the defense of Palestinians, within the Department of
Politics at York University proposed Israel cannot be defended since its
very existence is "anti-Palestinian", "Islamophobic" and "anti-Arab".
Henceforth they declared, any acknowledgement of the very existence of
Israel represents evidence of "anti-Palestinian racism". It is not,
needless to say, racist to declare the existence of Israel forbidden.The
Department of Politics Palestine Solidarity Committee issued its 9-page
document with great self-congratulation.
While
it is the beleaguered Jewish students suffering isolation, threats and
fear of violence, this committee engages in the kind of contorted
hyperbole that conflates fear and isolation not to the threatened
Jewish students but to the Palestinian students who are the source of
the threats against their Jewish student counterparts. The committee
approved a faculty mandate a month following the Hamas assault on
southern Israel to draft "a departmental definition of anti-Palestinian racism".
As
to the sacred principles of academic freedom and free speech, it is
made abundantly clear that anyone supporting Israel, working with
Israeli academics or having any connection however slight to Israel, is
not similarly entitled to free speech. The purpose of the document is to
advocate "severing ties with Zionist departments and institutions",
and to impose a complete commercial boycott on anything that can be
construed as having a link to Israel. Even recommending the boycott of
Aroma and Starbucks coffee companies, both headquartered in the US, with
no Israeli ownership or management.
The document makes it clear to the Department of Politics at York University that York's crisis of "anti-Palestinian racism" cannot be fought without the issuance of a departmental statement endorsing a boycott of Israel in support of "the struggle for Palestinian liberation".
"Yemen, Yemen, make us proud! turn another ship around!"
"Gaza called, Yemen answered. All Israeli ships are cancelled."
Canadian anti-Israel rallies
"Why is it always the non-Iranians who support the terrorist Islamic Regime in Iran?"
"As
an Iranian-Canadian, it makes me sick to my stomach to see my fellow
Canadians openly supporting a terrorist Islamofascist dictatorship that
murders innocent Iranians."
"This is not the Canada my parents immigrated to in order to escape persecution by the terrorist Islamofascist Ayatollahs."
MPP Goldie Ghamari
Palestinians
and supporters congregated at Toronto's Nathan Phillips Square two days
after the October 7 massacre by Hamas in southern Israel. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)
Cities
in Canada saw wild scenes of open celebration even before news emerged
of the Islamic Republic of Iran's Islamic Republican Guards Corp having
launched a prolonged direct air attack on Israel. There is little doubt
that many Iranians living in Tehran and detesting their ruling
Ayatollahs viewed this event with sorrow. In Canada, the majority of the
Iranian diaspora who arrived post-Iranian Revolution were anything but
pleased. Which didn't stop the abundant presence of Palestinians,
Syrians and other Middle East diaspora-Canadian-Arabs from jubilantly
celebrating the event.
Keffiyeh-wearing
demonstrators were seen in one circulated video cheering, banging
drums, and sending up celebratory smoke bombs, while a speaker declared
the wonderful news that "the Islamic Republic of Iran has just sent tens of drones toward Israel"; a 44-second video posted by Caryma Sa'd, Toronto lawyer who often documents such events taking place in Toronto. "Protesters
react to breaking news of Iran launching drones at Israel in
retaliatory attack for a strike which killed a top Iranian commander", he captioned.
This
was April 14 when the IRGC air division launched over 300 drones and
ballistic missiles into Israeli airspace. Israel and its regional and
international supporters were prepared; forewarned of an imminent
attack, they had their warjets on standby and reacted according to plan,
knowing it would take up to seven hours for any of the missiles and
'suicide' drones to reach Israel. Israel, the United States, Britain,
Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates all had a hand in
ensuring that none of the deadly projectiles reached their intended
goal.
One
can only imagine the dejection and disappointment of the celebrants of
Iran's attack must have felt when it was announced by the Israel Defense
Forces than the upshot of the Saturday/Sunday declaration of war turned
out that 99 percent of the weapons were shot down. A 7-year-old Bedouin
child in Israel was the sole unfortunate casualty when detritus from a
destroyed missile fell on her family home, as was a lightly-impacted
northern-Israel air base, which continued operations afterward.
People carry a Palestinian flag during a rally in front of City Hall in
Toronto, October 9, 2023. (credit: REUTERS/Kyaw Soe Oo)
The
Canadian celebrabrants were not to be put off by reality, continuing
into Sunday. On the Instagram account of Ottawa4Palestine a speaker in
Ottawa sang an improvised ditty to the tune of Yankee Doodle with the
phrase: "leave Palestine alone and Jews go back to Europe". Another video of a Montreal rally featured demonstrators changing "put the bullet in the house of fire ... we are your men, Sinwar", referring to Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, a chief architect of October 7's bloodthirsty savagery in southern Israel.
An
Iranian exile in Calgary -- Bahar Bahari, long a vocal critic of Iran's
theocracy, and a frequent attendee at pro-Israel demonstrations had
posted the Montreal video. The Jerusalem Post took note of the celebrations in Canada, publishing the headline "Toronto protesters cheer as Iran fires drones at Israel", even while Israeli counter-batteries just completed the last of the incoming missiles being shot down.
The
burgeoning anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian movement has been defiantly
open with their hate messages against Israel, their threats against
Canadian Jews, and their masked presence, disrupting traffic, blocking
bridges, issuing insults against Canadian police forces, harassing
Jewish business owners and Synagogue congregants, although their actions
and activities defy Canadian hate law. Issues of violence perpetrated
on Jewish parochial schools, Jewish social centres and Synagogues remain
unsolved.
Key
organizers of the hate-fests against the Jewish state are well known
for their activities, bordering on and often substantially illegal
criminal acts; Toronto4Palestine, Samidoun and the Palestinian Youth
Movement who organized joyful rallies within hours of the ghastly
October 7 mass rapes and massacres. Houthi attacks on commercial
shipping in the Red Sea have also been matters of organized celebrations
thanks to these organizers, all of whom if the Liberal government of
Justin Trudeau was the least bit interested in security and following
their own laws against terrorism would join Canada's list of terror
groups.
Two rallies were held in Halifax on Thanksgiving Monday — one in support
of Israel, the other in support of the Palestinian territories. (Jeorge Sadi/CBC)
"We
think the situation [rampant antisemitism] now is more critical
[currently than was the case in 2021 at Canada's first antisemitism
summit], and we point to police statistics to make our case."
"We feel that our demand [to convene a second national antisemitism summit] will be well-received by elected officials."
"It's critical to get stakeholders all at the same table."
"The fight against antisemitism is everyone's fight."
Marvin Rotrand, interim director-general, United Against Hate Canada
"We know that an attack on one of us is an attack on all of us."
"If
someone hates a person for being Jewish, they're going to hate me for
being Chinese, someone else for being Filipino, and so on."
"The
action summit must address the alleged confusion about what that chant
["From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free"] means and remove
the excuse for inaction, so that the people we trust to keep us safe and
uphold our laws can do so with full clarity."
Member of Parliament Kevin Vuong
A
call has arisen to convene a second Canadian national antisemitism
summit in the wake of the wave of antisemitism that has swept through
Canada following the October 7 Hamas terrorist attack in southern Israel
that left 1,200 Israeli children, women, men, and the elderly dead. A
sinister paroxysm of sadistic savagery unlike anything witnessed before,
as Palestinian terrorists gang-raped, mutilated and murdered girls and
women in Israel, and burned families alive in their homes on that
unforgettable day.
An
open letter signed by 200 politicians, community and spiritual leaders
called for another antisemitism summit. With it came a motion set to be
tabled in the Senate of Canada. A call for Canada's antisemitism envoy,
Deborah Lyons via an open letter, urged that a follow-up meeting to
continue the work of the initial summit held by former envoy Irwin
Cotler, Canada's long-time and premier human rights campaigner, to be
slated as soon as possible.
After
hundreds of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, along with PLO
terrorists rampaged through kibbutzim located close to the border with
Gaza, a campaign of hate, threats and intimidation erupted throughout
Canada, with Palestinians and other Arabs living in Canada as citizens
organized 'pro-Palestinian' protests in the immediate wake of the
savagery committed by Palestinians. Following which such protests became
frequent episodes of anti-Israel, anti-Jewish hate-fests.
Incidents
of such hate expressed against Canadian Jews more than doubled in
Toronto where antisemitism has become the most reported hate crime for
years, compared to last year's statistics. Across Canada other cities
report as well significant increases since October 7 of anti-Jewish
hate-fests. In Ottawa, the office tower where the Israeli embassy is
located saw vandals spray-paint anti-Israel graffiti on the building
exterior.
Simultaneously
a group of anti-Israel protesters once again shut down an intersection
south of the embassy, evidently a coordinated effort to create 'economic
blockades' against nations considered to be supportive of Israel.
Sitting and retired politicians at all levels of government, mayors,
school trustees, cultural and ethnic groups and faith leaders were among
the 200 individuals who signed the open letter.
Among
them MP Kevin Vuong who emphasized that combating antisemitism requires
commitment and action, not merely words and platitudes. The call for a
summit saw a motion tabled in the Senate by Senator Leo Housakos.
Senate of Canada
"We cannot allow antisemitism to become normalized, and we cannot allow the haters to believe they can act with impunity."
"It
is totally unacceptable that the Jewish community, whose history dates
to the foundation of our country and who have contributed so much to
Canada's well-being and success, should feel unsafe in their own
communities."
"We
are considering our steps, and this launch of so many missiles, cruise
missiles and UAVs into the territory of the State of Israel will be met
with a response."
Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi
Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system is seen intercepting rockets launched from the Gaza Strip | Source: Reuters
"Iran is a nation that endorses terrorism, and the world should have curtailed it much earlier."
"[Saudi
air defences automatically intercept] any suspicious entity [that
enters its airspace, which could refer to attacks from Yemeni Houthis,
another of Iran's terror proxies]."
"We confront every suspicious object that enters Saudi airspace. This is a matter of sovereignty."
"Two
days before the attack, Iranian officials briefed counterparts from
Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries on the outlines and timing of
their plan for the large-scale strikes on Israel so that those countries
could safeguard airspace. Information that was passed along to the U.S.
allowing Washington and Israel crucial advance warning."
Anonymous Saudi royal family source
Monday
Israel's war cabinet discussed a few potential military responses to
the Islamic Republic's Saturday/Sunday attack on Israel's airspace with
over 300 drones and missiles, some 99% of which were reportedly shot
down by the U.S., Israel, France, the U.K., Jordan and Saudi Arabia
before they could enter Israel's airspace. Each of the possible
responses under discussion were designed to inflict a meaningful
response to the Iranian regime, while carefully avoiding expansion
leading to a regional war.
The
war cabinet was mindful of the pressure exerted by U.S. President Joe
Biden and the diplomatic necessity of selecting an option that would not
induce the Biden administration to block its performance. Prime
Minister Netanyahu had been informed by President Biden on Saturday not
to expect Washington to support a retaliatory attack by Israel. "You got a win. Take the win", said Biden.
Yoav
Gallant, a war cabinet member and Defence Minister, informed his
American counterpart the following evening that there was no choice for
the Jewish state but to respond to the unprecedented drone and missile
strikes on Israel in response to an alleged airstrike by Israel that hit
Damascus, killing an elite Quds Force commander. Gallant emphasized to
U.S. Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin that the reality of ballistic
missiles fired at Israel without repercussions was not acceptable.
Gilad
Erdan, Israel's UN ambassador, showed a video of drones heading toward
Israel to the United Nations Security Council on Sunday.
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU via Getty Images
In
the final analysis the war cabinet had no option but to endorse a
strike back, remaining divided on the scope and timing of their
response. Minister-without-Portfolio Benny Gantz vowed to "exact the price from Iran in the fashion and timing that is right for us". Comprised of Netanyahu, Gallant and Gantz, as well as three observers, the war cabinet meant to reconvene Tuesday.
Following
the call with Biden, it was reported that Prime Minister Netanyahu set
aside the option of a swift strike on Iranian territory; a decision that
resulted in the Iranian attacks having "caused relatively minor damage",
which seems highly unlikely, since an aggressive act of war of this
dimension could not and would not be set aside as immaterial by any
other nation on Earth.
Saudi
Arabia accused Iran of responsibility for the Gaza conflict with the
intention of undermining progress in a normalization agreement between
Riyadh and Jerusalem. A royal family source revealed that Tehran's
promotion of terrorism led Riyadh to play a role in thwarting the drone
and missile attack that occurred on Saturday night. The Saudis shared
intelligence with the United States and Israel that helped to counter
the Iranian attack.
Intelligence
was also shared by the Emiratis who had forged diplomatic ties with
Jerusalem as part of the Abraham Accords in 2020. Initially cautious
around sharing information, Arab governments feared direct involvement
in the conflict that would leave them vulnerable to Iranian reprisal.
Despite which Riyadh and Abu Dhabi moved forward following discussions
with the U.S.
As
well, Amman agreed to permit the U.S. and other countries to fly
warplanes through its airspace, intercepting Iranian missiles and
drones, while the Jordanians themselves assisted in shooting them down.
Parts of a missile launched from a
missile are landed in Marj Al-Hamam area, during Iran's airstrikes
against Israel, in Amman, Jordan on April 14, 2024.
Anadolu via Getty Images
This represents a general opinion site for its author. It also offers a space for the author to record her experiences and perceptions,both personal and public. This is rendered obvious by the content contained in the blog, but the space is here inviting me to write. And so I do.