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Scars yet to heal on Canada hate campus

October 8, 2009 14:32

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

2 min read

A month into the new academic year, Toronto’s York University is attempting to restore the confidence of the Jewish community after anti-Jewish and anti-Zionist harassment and intimidation dominated its campus last year.

Canada’s third-largest university is believed to have between 4,000 and 5,000 Jewish students, comprising about 10 per cent of its student body. Until recently, it was considered a particularly welcoming environment for Jewish faculty members and students, housing Canada’s first Centre for Jewish Studies and offering a Jewish teacher education programme, whose graduates fill the local Jewish day schools. It is situated close to major Jewish areas and its original faculty and leadership were heavily Jewish.

Yet there is lingering bad feeling over a nasty climate for Jewish students in 2008-2009.

“Many Jewish students were afraid to express their affinity for Israel,” said Howard English, UJA’s vice president for corporate communications. “And some, though I’m not sure it was a majority, were afraid to be visibly Jewish.”