The Jerusalem Post

Canadian college retracts ban on Israelis

BC trade school denied enrollment due to ‘conflict and illegal settlement activity’

- • By LIDAR GRAVÉ-LAZI and Jerusalem Post staff

A Canadian trade school has rescinded its policy of not accepting Israeli students after outcry from the global Jewish community.

Israeli Stav Doron applied to study at the Island School of Building Arts, a Canadian school specializi­ng in wood constructi­on and design located on Gabriola Island in the province of British Columbia, yet was denied admission on the basis of his nationalit­y.

According to copies of emails received by The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday, Doron had been in correspond­ence with Patricia Rokosh, the ISBA’s manager of student services, since January.

When Doron applied for the course, Rokosh wrote back on January 25 that the school is “not accepting applicatio­ns from Israel.” She said the reason was “due to the conflict and illegal settlement activity in the region.”

Doron responded to Rokosh that, “It’s really sad to hear that a place that takes pride in taking students from across the world would behave like this.”

Rokosh wrote back: “It is sad that decisions being made halfway around the world impact us here as we have had a number of students from Israel attend the school in the past.”

The email continued: “This is a question of staying in line with our moral compass, which will always be important to us. We are still inclusive and cannot support that which is not inclusive.”

In his final email to the school, Doron wrote that, “not taking applicatio­ns from Israeli students just because they are from Israel is racism, which is basically what you are protesting against.”

Following reports on the rejections, the school received a number of inquiries from Jewish groups and individual­s, including Canada’s Center for Israel and Jewish Affairs and B’nai Brith Canada, demanding clarificat­ion and a retraction of the discrimina­tory policy.

The school then published a retraction on its website: “After significan­t thought and listening to all interested parties, ISBA has decided to rescind any restrictio­n placed on accepting students from Israel and apologize for any impact or inconvenie­nce.”

Michael Mostyn, chief executive officer of B’nai Brith Canada, said he was pleased with the speedy resolution though expressed outrage at the fact that such an incident had occurred in the first place.

“The fact that an educationa­l institutio­n in Canada would have the temerity to hold such a discrimina­tory policy is outrageous,” he said. “The school’s immediate reversal, when confronted with the truth of its actions, only illustrate­s the immorality of anti-Israel bias.”

Despite the reversal, Doron has expressed gratitude for the “outpouring of support,” but has said that he will not reapply to the school following the incident.

Israeli reporter Ido Daniel, who also serves as director of the organizati­on Israeli Students Combating Antisemiti­sm, first broke the story of the ban on the Hebrew Mako site.

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? THE ISLAND School of Building Arts (pictured) in Gabriola Island, British Columbia, was under fire for rejecting an Israeli student due to his nationalit­y.
(Courtesy) THE ISLAND School of Building Arts (pictured) in Gabriola Island, British Columbia, was under fire for rejecting an Israeli student due to his nationalit­y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel