Lethbridge Herald

Hasidic Jews ordered to leave Quebec residence

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — MONTREAL

A group of Hasidic Jews in a town north of Montreal will be forced to leave the residence where they’ve been staying following a Quebec Superior Court injunction, the town’s mayor said Sunday.

Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts Mayor Denis Chalifoux said the town sought the court order because the group is using the residence as a place of worship, in violation of local bylaws.

Chalifoux alleges that up to 60 mostly young people come to stay temporaril­y in two or three duplexes or triplexes on the property each summer, where he says they hold loud gatherings that disturb neighbours.

“They create a nuisance, there’s garbage all around the house, they go to bed at 2 a.m. and bang drums,” he said in a phone interview.

Chalifoux said the neighbourh­ood is zoned for residentia­l use only, and the rules do not permit buildings to be used as places of worship, dormitorie­s, or summer camps.

He said the town has sent numerous letters, warnings and citations since 2015 to try to resolve the conflict, but had no success.

Representa­tives from the group could not be reached for comment.

But on Saturday, Montreal’s La Presse newspaper quoted an anonymous member of the group as saying the problem wasn’t the group’s behaviour, but rather the fact that its members were Jewish.

Chalifoux, for his part, denies the eviction order is based on antiSemiti­sm, noting that the area is home to a large Jewish population and there haven’t been any similar conflicts with other groups.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada