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The Montreal riots should be a wake up call for Canadians to take antisemitism seriously

There are still too many in Canada who refuse to admit this is a real problem

November 24, 2024 12:20
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Anti-Israel and Anti-Nato protestors in Montreal (Alamy)
3 min read

The juxtaposition couldn’t have been more damning. Last Friday night, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was filmed dancing in Toronto at a Taylor Swift concert. At the very same time in Montreal, where he is an MP, there were riots where small explosive devices and metal barriers were thrown at the police, shop windows were smashed, and cars set ablaze. It was violent chaos, with police injured, arrests made, and people wearing keffiyehs and masks screaming abuse. Perhaps the most chilling comment occurred the previous day, and it wasn’t screamed but spoken quite calmly. A woman walked in front of a peaceful gathering of Jewish counter-protestors and said slowly and deliberately, “The final solution is coming your way, the final solution. You know what the final solution is?”

300 NATO delegates were in the city on Friday and a spokesperson from Divest for Palestine said the protest was all about NATO's "complicity with Israel's military while it's conducting its genocide in Gaza, war crimes in Lebanon, Syria" and that "it's enforcing illegal occupation of Palestinian territories." Well of course that was what is was about!

Trudeau did eventually take to social media, stating that, “What we saw on the streets of Montreal last night was appalling. Acts of antisemitism, intimidation, and violence must be condemned wherever we see them.”

Fine words, but this is hardly the first time that the Jewish community has been targeted. Dozens of bomb threats were sent to synagogues in 2024, and Jewish schools and community centres have been vandalized, fires started outside, and even shots fired at them. There have also been attempted boycotts at Jewish-owned shops where any Israeli connection is discovered. Canadian Jews report being screamed at and abused, and many say that they no longer wear anything publicly that would make their Jewishness obvious.