National Post

Air attack drew cheers by some in Canada

- Tristin Hopper Comment

Within minutes of news emerging that Iran had launched an unpreceden­ted direct attack at Israel, Canadian cities were witness to scenes of open celebratio­n.

In one widely circulated video, keffiyah-clad demonstrat­ors were shown cheering, banging drums and lighting off smoke bombs as a speaker announced “the Islamic Republic of Iran has just sent tens of drones towards Israel.”

The 44-second video was posted by Caryma Sa’d, a Toronto lawyer who regularly documents protests in the city. Sa’d wrote in a caption, “protesters react to breaking news of Iran launching drones at Israel in retaliator­y attack for a strike which killed a top Iranian commander.”

Around 4 p.m. Toronto time on Saturday, the Islamic Republic of Iran simultaneo­usly launched more than 300 drones and missiles against Israeli territory.

Although Iran has been supporting anti-israel terrorist groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah for decades, this was the first time that it had directly ordered a military strike against the Jewish state.

U.S., U.K. and even Jordanian war planes scrambled to assist the Israelis in shooting down the incoming stream. Ultimately, the Israel Defense Forces announced that more than 99 per cent of the Iranian weapons failed to reach their target, with the only significan­t casualty being a critically injured sevenyear-old Bedouin girl.

Neverthele­ss, Canadian celebratio­ns continued into Sunday. A video circulated on the Instagram account of Ottawa4pal­estine showed a speaker in the national capital singing an improvised song to the tune of Yankee Doodle containing the phrase “leave Palestine alone and Jews go back to Europe.”

The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs circulated video of a Montreal rally — first posted by Inst agra m user ii tutt ii 4 palestine—showing demonstrat­ors chanting “put the bullet in the house of fire ... we are your men, Sinwar.” The Sinwar likely refers to Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas and one of the chief architects of the Oct. 7 massacres.

Also on Sunday, video out of Calgary showed a man at the edge of an anti-israel gathering clutching a portrait of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khameini and holding his arm in a fascist salute.

That clip was captured by Bahar Bahari, an Iranian exile in Calgary who has long been a vocal critic of Iran’s theocratic government, and a perennial attendee at pro-israel demonstrat­ions in the city.

A fellow Iranian exile, Ontario MPP Goldie Ghamari, was among the most visible critics of Saturday’s celebratio­n in Toronto.

“Why is it always the Non-iranians who support the terrorist Islamic Regime in Iran?” she wrote in a widely circulated response to Sa’d’s Toronto video.

She added, “This is not the Canada my parents immigrated to in order to escape persecutio­n by the terrorist Islamofasc­ist Ayatollahs.”

Canadian celebratio­ns of the weekend attacks even received notice in the English-language Israeli press.

Israeli counter-batteries had only just finished shooting down the last of the incoming missiles when The Jerusalem Post published a story headlined, “Toronto protesters cheer as Iran fires drones at Israel.”

Neverthele­ss, the weekend celebratio­ns were not out of character for a Canadian anti-israel movement that has been open about celebratin­g violence directed at the Jewish state — only to call for ceasefires when that violence is the subject of retaliatio­n. All of the movement’ s key organizers—including Toronto 4 palestine, Samidoun and the Palestinia­n Youth Movement — organized celebrator­y rallies within hours of the Oct. 7 massacres. All three have similarly celebrated Houthi attacks on commercial shipping in the Red Sea.

The Yemeni rebel group — whose official slogan contains the Arabic phrase for “a curse upon the Jews” — has been regularly attacking civilian ships approachin­g the Suez Canal. For this, Canada is technicall­y at war with the group, having joined an internatio­nal military coalition to oppose the strikes.

But since January, Canadian anti-israel rallies began featuring chants including, “Yemen, Yemen, make us proud! Turn another ship around!” and “Gaza called, Yemen answered. All Israeli ships are cancelled.”

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