A Pogrom Is Brewing in Canada
What all of this has led to is the suppression of open Jewish life in Canada, the hiding of Jewish symbols, the need to host Jewish events in secret or with even more intense security, and even some people fleeing the country. Students at Toronto Metropolitan University who recently shared that they “can’t be openly Jewish” on campus aren’t the exception. They’ve become the norm. “I went in with people hating me right off the bat and me not being able to make any friends who are non-Jewish in my classes or in my program,” one student said.A New Approach to Dealing with Boycott Activities: Exacting a Price from the PA
What is unfolding in Canada is not a grassroots, spontaneous expression of solidarity for Palestinians, although the press covers it that way.
This is an orchestrated effort to normalize antisemitic incitement under the guise of political activism. The days of exclusionary signs at golf clubs have been replaced by open calls for jihad and terrorist cosplay—all animated by an obsession with intimidating Jews, including in their own neighborhoods.
Pogroms rarely begin with organized massacres; typically, they start with tolerated incitement, with mobs unpunished, and with authorities hesitant to act decisively for fear of political blowback.
And that is perhaps the most alarming thing of all happening right now in Canada.
On more than one occasion, protesters clad in keffiyehs, inciting violence, intimidating Jews and non-Jews alike, and calling for the erasure of Israel have been met with equivocation.
Too often, authorities have hesitated to enforce laws against harassment and incitement when masked by the rhetoric of “resistance.” Political leaders have downplayed the extremist nature of these rallies. Universities and unions have wavered in condemning overt Jew-hatred cloaked in the language of activism, righteousness, and progressivism.
On one occasion, for instance, police officers in Toronto handed out coffee and baked goods to protesters. On another occasion, they allegedly arrested a Jewish man, in a Jewish neighborhood this month, for confronting the terrorist supporters who have taken to the streets every weekend since October 7, 2023. For nearly 600 days, Jews in Canada have been asking themselves: Is the state still on our side? Is law enforcement willing to do what it takes to shut this down?
In this sense, Wilf was perhaps more right than she could have imagined.
Canada now faces a moral test. Our institutions—from police and prosecutors to politicians and civil society—must decide whether to confront antisemitic threats firmly or equivocate and excuse them as protest.
This is not a Jewish issue. It is a Canadian one. A society that allows a vulnerable minority to be openly menaced cannot claim to be safe or just for any of its citizens. Antisemitism is often the first sign of broader social decay. If mobs can intimidate Jewish schools and hospitals today, what do we expect they’ll do tomorrow?
Everyone with eyes is bracing for the explosion.
For many years, Israel has been the subject of a widespread, coordinated attack to promote Boycotts, Sanctions, and Divestment (BDS). The goal of the BDS movement is to undermine Israel's legitimacy as the nation-state of the Jewish people. It is impossible to ignore the fact that the Palestinian Authority (PA) stands at the forefront of this struggle, in breach of all the agreements it has signed. To date, the State of Israel and its representatives have focused their efforts on combating BDS activities in various ways, mainly in the international arena.Seth Mandel: Columbia Exposes the ‘Academic Freedom’ Hypocrites
Against this background, and as a complementary activity, the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs (JCFA) has formulated a proposal for an alternative approach to this phenomenon.
The main thrust of the proposal is to exact a price from the PA for its activities to promote BDS by presenting and stressing the fact that BDS activities can be a two-way street.
Palestinian "exports" to Israel benefit the PA because they allow the employment of tens of thousands of Palestinians in various roles to produce the goods sold to Israel. The PA benefits from a situation where it acts simultaneously both to promote a boycott against Israel and to continue to profit from trade with it.
If Israel were not only to stop the entry of workers but also to expand the reduction of trade with PA territories to the point of a complete ban, the damage to the Palestinian economy could be enormous and would lead to an almost complete slowdown and even a rise in unemployment.
What these groups did yesterday at Columbia is, simply, what these groups do. There was no escalation, in other words. This is just what defenders of the tentifada groups have been defending all along.Abe Greenwald: The Campus Hamasniks Won’t Have It So Easy This Time
Here is how new Columbia President Claire Shipman described the scene she witnessed:
“I spent the late afternoon and evening at Butler Library, as events were unfolding, to understand the situation on the ground and to be able to make the best decisions possible. I arrived to see one of our Public Safety officers wheeled out on a gurney and another getting bandaged. As I left hours later, I walked through the reading room, one of the many jewels of Butler Library, and I saw it defaced and damaged in disturbing ways and with disturbing slogans. Violence and vandalism, hijacking a library—none of that has any place on our campus.”
So that’s what’s new—the idea that now, finally, these are not Columbia values.
Shipman continued:
“I am particularly heartbroken, and incensed, that this disruption occurred when our students are intensely focused on critical academic work. At a moment when our community deserves calm and the opportunity to study, reflect, and complete the academic year successfully, these actions created unnecessary stress and danger. I have seen how much our community wants to take back our narrative, to do what they came to Columbia to do—learn, thrive, and grow—not take over a library.”
That part is still up in the air, is it not? Whether the Columbia “community” wants to learn, or at least to change the narrative. It does seem as though Shipman wants to change the narrative.
That narrative has been carefully crafted by the protesters over the past year and a half. They have not spent any energy disproving the allegations against them, and last night they were beyond parody. The main protest group, Columbia University Apartheid Divest, put out a message in the middle of the standoff reiterating their cowardice and victim complex, whining that they “refuse to show our IDs under militarized arrest.”
The good news, I suppose, is that that statement proves that nobody in that group has ever been under actual militarized arrest.
Eighty of them were, however, eventually put under regular old arrest once the NYPD got involved. Before that, the school’s security team had done something remarkably wise: They refused to let protesters leave the “occupation” unless they showed their identification. Suddenly, the masks and keffiyehs were useless. These kids weren’t under some kind of Beijing-style surveillance state with facial recognition technology condemning them to a life of low social-credit scores. They were just dime-a-dozen thugs.
Even the groups who are usually highly defensive of the tentifada movement popped up with milquetoast statements about the students having gone too far. The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) quietly tsk-tsked the bad behavior. But it would have been nice had the “academic freedom” groups been leading the fight on campus to restore the academic freedom of the Jewish students under siege. Had they done so—had they cared enough about academic freedom to protect it from campus Hamasniks—they wouldn’t be fighting to restore hundreds of millions of dollars in funding to Harvard and Columbia and the rest. Alas, here we are.
via Commentary Newsletter sign up here There is little room left for pretending that they’re just a bunch of idealistic kids who hate war. Whether Donald Trump wins his fight against university radicalism, the effort itself is serving to bring the woke jihad’s worst actors out of the shadows. The group responsible for yesterday’s occupation at Columbia is none other than Columbia University Apartheid Divest (CUAD), the same organization in which pending deportee Mahmoud Khalil was a leader. Because of this case, we know that CUAD is on the record celebrating Hamas’s October 7 massacre, praising Yahya Sinwar, and mourning his death. In March, the families of hostages kidnapped by Hamas filed a lawsuit against CUAD and other activist groups for “aiding and abetting Hamas’ continuing acts of international terrorism.” That suit has brought to light what could turn out to be evidence of ties between foreign terrorists and American protesters.
It's all starting up again. Summer is coming, and that’s often protest season. Additionally, Israel is poised for a huge incursion into Gaza and protesters have now seized on their detained brothers and sisters as a further cause for violence and disruption.
I don’t think, however, we’re likely to see schools and law-enforcement react to these terrorist supporters as they did before Trump’s election. The difference is already noticeable. Thirty-one people were arrested for destruction at the University of Washington, and the school suspended and banned from campus 21 students. Columbia called in the NYPD, who arrested more than 80 people. They’re all going to be fingerprinted, and ICE is monitoring the results. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said State would be "reviewing the visa status of the trespassers and vandals who took over Columbia University’s library. Pro-Hamas thugs are no longer welcome in our great nation."
Whatever the ultimate extent of Trump’s success in breaking up the anti-Semitic pro-terrorist network and deporting the non-citizens involved, he’s already made an important difference. More Americans know who these people really are, and authorities are responding with more than words.
