National Post

Jewish community express anxiety over pro-palestine protest at synagogue

‘This is a violation of the criminal code in Ontario’

- ARI BLAFF

Members of the Jewish community expressed their growing anxiety after anti-israel protesters picketed a Toronto-area synagogue with chants of “Go back to Europe” and burned an Israeli flag.

Rabbi Daniel Korobkin, the leader of the institutio­n in Thornhill, said religious sites should be exempt from such demonstrat­ions.

“A civil Canadian knows that there is a line, and that line is you don’t encroach on a house of worship. You worship the same God, and this is not right,” Korobkin told National Post in the midst of the demonstrat­ions outside his synagogue, which was hosting an Israeli real estate event Thursday afternoon.

“It makes me sad. This should never have been allowed. It’s not right. We would never do this to a Muslim mosque. We would never encroach on their property,” the rabbi continued, noting that some Canadian mosques have praised Hamas.

“This is a violation of the criminal code in Ontario,” Korobkin said, as an anti-israel protester chanted “they are demonic and we can be louder.”

At other times, anti-israel demonstrat­ors shouted, “Go back to Europe!” “Intifada, revolution!” and burned an Israeli flag.

“We’re in your neighbourh­ood and you’re not doing nothing about it,” a demonstrat­or yelled repeatedly, according to a video posted to X.

Meanwhile, a contingent of Iranian-canadians waved flags of the “Lion and Sun,” a popular symbol protesting the Islamic Republic, on the synagogue’s steps in support of the Jewish community.

Beth Avraham Yoseph of Toronto (BAYT) hosted “The Great Israeli Real Estate Event,” offering participan­ts advice about investing in “a piece of the Holy Land.” Most of the communitie­s fall within the Green Line, the internatio­nally accepted borders of Israel.

A couple of others — Ma’ale Adumim and Efrat — are large Israeli communitie­s located within disputed territorie­s and seen by the country as “consensus” settlement­s, or non-negotiable cities that will be included within Israel in a final peace deal.

The event organizers expected anti-israel protesters to disrupt the event and so urged people to show up for their own pro-israel demonstrat­ion. The event proceeded in the synagogue without any interrupti­ons.

“God bless the IDF! God bless our soldiers!” rung out from the pro-israel side.

The presence of hundreds of pro-palestinia­n counter-protesters inspired many who have never engaged in activism to stand with the Jewish community in solidarity with the BAYT.

“We came to support our community in Thornhill,” a Ukrainian-canadian who lives in the neighbourh­ood told National Post. “This should not be happening. We are in Canada, we live in Toronto. We have different opinions, and we have different views, but this violence has to stop; this intimidati­on of people has to stop.”

Some anti-israel demonstrat­ors said they were sympatheti­c to the concerns of the local Jewish community but felt that the synagogue’s endorsemen­t of the event made it a legitimate political target of protest.

One mother, whose children attend local Jewish day schools, denounced the tenor of pro-palestinia­n demonstrat­ors while defending their right to free speech.

“They’re allowed to say things that I vehemently disagree with, even hate,” the pro-israel supporter, who did not want to be named because of her work, told National Post. “What I take issue with is where they say it and how they do it. You should protest in front of organizati­ons that represent the parties that you’re protesting,” she continued, suggesting the Israeli consulate or provincial government buildings.

“But don’t protest in residentia­l neighbourh­oods where children are afraid. It feels very harassing. I can’t speak for their intent. I believe their intent is harassment. But I don’t know that for sure. But I can say that for, across the board, for Jewish people in this neighbourh­ood, it feels like harassment.”

“In my life, I never felt unsafe as a Jew in Canada, ever,” she said. “I knew there’s always been antisemiti­sm ... but I never realized the extent to which it existed in Canada. And I think it’s been emboldened.”

WE WOULD NEVER DO THIS TO A MUSLIM MOSQUE.

 ?? ARI BLAFF / NATIONAL POST ?? Organizers of an event at a Thornhill synagogue expected disruption­s from anti-israel protesters and urged people in the community to show up for their own pro-israel demonstrat­ion.
ARI BLAFF / NATIONAL POST Organizers of an event at a Thornhill synagogue expected disruption­s from anti-israel protesters and urged people in the community to show up for their own pro-israel demonstrat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada