Trudeau was criticized for not mentioning anti-Palestinian racism in an update to Canada’s anti-racism strategy
Critics warn that embracing the concept could end up targeting Jewish Canadians by conflating pro-Israel speech with racism, while insulating pro-Palestinian interpretations of history from criticism.
“While we stand firmly behind protections against discrimination for all communities, including Palestinians, (anti-Palestinian racism) crosses a line by targeting expressions of Jewish identity linked to Israel,” said Richard Marceau, the vice president of external affairs at the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, in a statement to the National Post.
“Holding differing opinions is not a breach of human rights,” continued Marceau.
She said in the statement that she welcomed Trudeau’s “commitment on adopting a definition of (anti-Palestinian racism) to describe the bias and discrimination far too many Canadian Palestinians are experiencing.”
The Prime Minister’s Office didn’t respond when asked by National Post whether Trudeau plans to follow Elghawaby’s suggestion.
“Racism is an appropriate construct for describing the experiences of Palestinians,” reads the report. “Israel’s treatment of Palestinians is… at its essence(,) predicated on the superiority and dominance of one group of people over another.”
Marceau says putting the two historical events side-by-side, “risks opening the door to Holocaust minimization.”
“These comparisons are problematic because they equate the Holocaust — a systematic, industrial-scale genocide in which six million Jews were targeted and exterminated solely for their identity — with the displacement of approximately 750,000 Palestinians during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war,” said Marceau.
“This framing not only undermines the historical uniqueness and gravity of the Holocaust but also fosters perceptions that Jews are committing atrocities similar to those they endured. By blurring these distinctions, anti-Palestinian racism diminishes the specific trauma of the Holocaust and undermines the educational impact of Holocaust memory.”
Avital Borisovsky, the director of communications for the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Centre for Holocaust Education, also called the comparison inappropriate.
“Comparing the Holocaust to any other historical event not only distorts and minimizes this dark chapter in history but diminishes its singularity,” said Borisovsky.
Richard Robertson, the director of research and advocacy with B’nai Brith Canada, says he worries that the adaptation of anti-Palestinian racism will lead to a two-tier system of human rights.
“The rights of Jewish Canadians will become secondary to those who wish to advance anti-Zionist narratives,” Robertson told the National Post.
Robertson also pointed to inconsistencies between anti-Palestinian racism and the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of antisemitism, which he says “enables the combating of forms of anti-Zionism that are manifestly antisemitic.”
Another is “drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis.”
Zahid told the National Post she was encouraged by the prime minister’s meeting with Elghawaby.
“I welcome the Prime Minister’s commitment to recognizing and adopting a definition of anti-Palestinian racism,” said Zahid in an email.
“In Canada in recent months, we have seen increasing levels of Islamophobia, anti-Palestinian racism and anti-Semitism. Before we can fight against such hatred, we need to be able to recognize what it is and what it looks like.”
“I look forward to working with the government to move this forward,” said Zahid.
National Post
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