Number of antisemitic incidents reached record high in 2023, says B'nai Brith Canada audit
Peter Zimonjic | CBC News | Posted: May 6, 2024 3:58 PM | Last Updated: July 12
'Zionism is not a dirty word or something anyone should be targeted for agreeing with,' Trudeau says
In its latest annual audit, B'nai Brith Canada reports the number of antisemitic incidents in the country more than doubled from 2022 to 2023 and has now reached a record high.
"If a physical barometer did in fact exist, the reading for 2023 would be off the chart," Richard Robertson, the group's director of policy and research, said in Ottawa on Monday, which is also Holocaust Remembrance Day or Yom HaShoah.
B'nai Brith, a Jewish advocacy organization, said that between Jan. 1, 2023 and Dec. 31, 2023, it logged 5,791 incidents of antisemitism, surpassing the previous record of 2,799 reported in 2021.
The audit report says the findings reflect the number of antisemitic incidents reported to B'nai Brith through its anti-hate app and hotline, as well as its incident reporting website. It also includes data collected from law enforcement agencies and other sources.
WATCH: B'nai Brith says antisemitism is on the rise in Canada:
Robertson said he's particularly troubled by the 208 per cent increase in the number of violent incidents, with 77 such incidents recorded last year, compared with 25 in 2022.
"The systemic nature of the antisemitism has forced Canadian Jews to question the continued vitality of the nation's Jewish communities," he said.
Robertson said that recent conflicts in Israel, first in May and June and then beginning on Oct. 7 of last year, "make it abundantly clear: when there is unrest in Israel, Jewish Canadians suffer unduly."
About 1,200 people were killed in the Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel on Oct. 7 and about 250 people were taken hostage, according to Israeli figures. More than 34,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed during Israel's military response since then, health officials in the territory say.
Robertson said antisemitic incidents were also driven by the invitation to Parliament of Yaroslav Hunka, a 98-year-old Ukrainian Canadian who served in the Nazi SS Galizien formation during the Second World War.
Hunka was invited to sit in the gallery in September by then-House Speaker Anthony Rota to attend Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's address to Parliament.
At the event, Rota introduced Hunka as a "Ukrainian hero" and a "Canadian hero," prompting a standing ovation in the House of Commons. Rota later stepped down from the Speaker's chair when Hunka's Nazi history came to light.
AI used to promote antisemitism
B'nai Brith Canada said it recorded a rise in antisemitic incidents coming from across Canadian society and from a wide variety of actors, including figures on the far right and far left and "those acting at the behest of foreign actors."
The incidents the group says it recorded include the firebombing of a synagogue and Jewish community centre in Montreal, eggs being thrown at a Holocaust Memorial Monument in Calgary, a Jewish student being assaulted in an antisemitic attack in B.C.'s Lower Mainland and a rise in antisemitic graffiti in public places involving messages such as "Kill the Jews."
The audit also refers to measures passed by student governments in support of the Boycott, Divest and Sanctions (BDS) movement. The movement seeks to put financial pressure on the state of Israel to follow international law and end what are seen as human rights abuses against Palestinians. B'nai Brith's report says those measures are antisemitic, which BDS supporters deny.
The audit also cites the "dissemination of antisemitic and anti-Israel imagery and messages online" by white supremacists, which it says have supported pro-Palestinian activism "under the guise of their hatred for Jews and Israel."
B'nai Brith also said in a media statement that artificial intelligence (AI) technology has been used to "to create antisemitic propaganda and materials."
David Matas, B'nai Brith's chief legal counsel, said his organization would be making submissions to Parliament regarding the forthcoming online harms bill. He said the proposed legislation needs to be strengthened to combat the threat posed by AI.
"Artificial intelligence, like a lot of technologies, is both a benefit and a harm," Matas said Monday. "With each new technology, as we come to appreciate the benefit, we have to put in the safeguards against the harm, and we have not done that yet."
Liberal MP Marco Mendicino, a member of the Canada-Israel Interparliamentary Group who attended the press conference, defended the bill but said the fight against antisemitism must start much earlier.
"The online harms legislation does make references to deepfakes, and this is probably the most disconcerting aspect of artificial intelligence," he said.
Mendicino said it is "equally important, if not more important, to ensure that we are educating young Canadians about the Holocaust and what antisemitism looks like today in the 21 century."
Conservative co-deputy leader Melissa Lantsman, who is also a member of the Canada-Israel Interparliamentary Group and was at the event to express her party's support, dismissed the online harms legislation as a solution.
"We are not going to solve this by criminalizing speech, particularly having a government decide what you can say and see on the internet," she said.
"Where the focus needs to be after this report must be in making sure that the physical security of institutions, of synagogues, of schools, of businesses of people in the streets who find themselves in the middle of vile, hateful demonstrations, are kept safe."
WATCH: 'It's not right' that Jewish people feel unsafe in Canada, PM says
Speaking at the National Holocaust Monument in Ottawa at an event to mark Yom HaShoah, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday that since the Oct. 7 attack on Israel there has been a "disturbing increase in antisemitism to a scale we have not witnessed for generations."
"Windows of synagogues have been broken and shot at, Jewish stores vandalized, all of these acts, open wounds of painful chapters in our collective history," he said.
Trudeau said that those continuing to deny the Holocaust or the Oct. 7 attacks are leaving Jewish Canadians feeling "isolated and unsafe in their communities."
"In a country like Canada, it should be and it must be safe to declare oneself a Zionist. Jewish or not, Zionism is not a dirty word or something anyone should be targeted for agreeing with," he said.
"It is the belief, at its simplest, that Jewish people, like all peoples, have the right to determine their own future."
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Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, who also attended the Ottawa event, said the memory of the Holocaust has started to fade and antisemitic attitudes have again started to gain favour.
"We see at university campuses, the hateful anti-Jewish rhetoric directed at innocent students. We see firebombings of Canadian synagogues; something we never would have imagined a short time ago," Poilievre said.
He said it's the responsibility of every Canadian to support the rights of Jewish people to proudly display their culture, history and religion.
"In the last year, antisemitic attacks are up over 100 per cent," he said. "That means the Jewish people are being doubly victimized, once with the bloodshed they witnessed in their homeland of Israel, and again on the streets and in their synagogues."