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“We are deeply concerned that incidents of hate crime rose yet
again in Canada in 2021. This disturbing trend clearly proves the need
for proactive measures to stop the rising hate targeting diverse
Canadians based on their identity.” - Shimon Koffler Fogel, President
& CEO, CIJA
Statistics Canada released police-reported
hate crime data for 2021 revealing, once again, that hate crimes
targeting the Jewish and Black populations remained the most common
reported by police.
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Last weekend, British rapper Tyron Frampton (stage-name Slowthai),
performed at Osheaga, a large annual outdoor music festival in
Montreal, wearing a T- shirt emblazoned with a large red swastika.
The T-shirt was a replica of British designer Vivienne Westwood’s
1977 anti-fascism piece. Research showed that he has a history of
using attention-getting ploys to drive media interest.
Whatever the intent of the T-shirt, most concertgoers only saw a
musician sporting hateful symbolism. When it comes to antisemitism and
the swastika, CIJA’s position is that there should be no room for
confusion.
We determined that both Slowthai and Evenko had failed: Slowthai
should have known better than to wear a T-shirt with a Nazi symbol on
a public stage; and Osheaga’s organizers, Evenko, should have required
that the musician change his shirt before his performance.
We demanded an apology from both the performer and the event
organizer in a way that did not effectively reward the performer’s
disgraceful behavior with free publicity. We sent letters to Evenko
and to Slowthai via his agent. Read
those letters here.
Both the festival organizer Evenko
and Frampton
issued public apologies. Pursuant to receiving our letter, we
held a productive discussion with Evenko where they acknowledged their
culpability and where things went wrong, and pledged that such a
display would never happen again. We look forward to continuing our
conversation with Evenko.
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On behalf of the United Jewish Appeal of Canada (UJAC) we are
surveying members of small Jewish communities in Ontario to see how we
might support Jewish life in your community. To be sure your opinions
are heard, we invite you to take a few minutes to complete this
anonymous survey.
All information received is confidential and you do not have to
identify yourself. The information you provide will be summarized into
a report to help us plan for improved support and outreach to small
Jewish communities across Ontario. Please share this survey with
anyone who you feel might want to participate.
August 26 |
Ottawa
Pride Shabbat |
August 26 |
Calgary
Pride Shabbat |
September 5 |
Labour Day (CIJA offices
closed) |
September 25-27 |
Rosh Hashanah (CIJA offices
closed) |
October 4-5 |
Yom Kippur (CIJA offices
closed) |
October 9-16 |
Sukkot (CIJA offices closed
Oct. 10, 11) |
October 10 |
Canadian Thanksgiving (CIJA
offices closed) |
October 16-18 |
Shemini Atzeret |
Osheaga
music festival apologizes after British rapper appears in shirt with
swastika (Globe and Mail)
Osheaga
festival apologizes after rapper performs in T-shirt emblazoned with
swastika (CBC)
Race
relations foundation urges more help for victims as hate crimes rise
further (National Post)
Statistics
Canada is reporting that Jews remained the religious group most
frequently targeted by hate crimes in 2021 (The CJN)
Canadian
Jews under attack: Close to 50% rise in hate crimes towards Jews in
2021 (JPost)
StatsCan
Data Shows Hate Crime Up in Canada (CP24)
Increase
in Hate Crimes (CTV News Toronto)
Director
of Government Relations (Ontario) Associate
Director, Partnerships and Community Engagement Executive
Director – Atlantic Jewish Council Vice
President Operations - Jewish Federation of Ottawa
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