The Jerusalem Post

Ottawa sorry for ‘St. Louis’

- • By STEVE SCHERER

OTTAWA (Reuters) – Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau formally apologized on Wednesday for the country’s 1939 refusal to take in a ship carrying more than 900 Jewish refugees, adding that the country would do more to protect Canadian Jews from violence.

The St. Louis left Hamburg in May 1939 in desperate search for a safe haven from persecutio­n by Nazi Germany. After it was rebuffed by Canada and other nations, it returned to Europe, where historians have estimated that 250 of the passengers were murdered.

“We apologize to the 907 German Jews aboard the St. Louis, as well as their families,” Trudeau said. “We are sorry for the callousnes­s of Canada’s response. We are sorry for not apologizin­g sooner.”

The apology came less than two weeks after a gunman killed 11 people, including a Canadian woman, at a synagogue in Pittsburgh. Vigils were held across Canada in the aftermath of the attack. Jewish Canadians “are understand­ably feeling vulnerable” and there have been calls “to protect synagogues and other places that are at risk of hate-motivated crimes,” Trudeau said during his parliament­ary address.

“I pledge to you all now: we will do more,” he said, noting that around 17% of all Canadian hate crimes target Jews.

Shimon Koffler Fogel, head of the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, applauded Trudeau’s “historic apology” and his pledge to expand security measures for Jewish institutio­ns.

Earlier, Trudeau met with Ana Maria Gordon, the only surviving Canadian passenger from the ship, and her family members, and spoke about the need to fight antisemiti­sm.

Trudeau, a Liberal, has made a number of apologies for Canada’s historic failings.

Last week, the prime minister visited hundreds of indigenous people in British Columbia to apologize for the hanging of six chiefs 150 years ago.

In May 2016, six months after taking office, he stood in parliament to apologize to the descendant­s of hundreds of passengers of the Komagata Maru, a Japanese vessel carrying Sikh, Muslim and Hindu migrants who were refused entry into Canada under the 1914 immigratio­n laws.

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