Hatred for Jews Has Mutated: Congress

'New anti-semitism' targets Jewish state
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http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=2314676

The manner in which anti-Semitism is expressed in Canada has mutated since the end of the Holocaust, according to Mark Freiman, director of the Canadian Jewish Congress, who says the underlying message of hate remains the same.

“(The message is) the evils that beset our society are caused by Jews,” he said.

Anti-Semitism’s latest mutation has identified Israel, the Jewish state, as its target, Freiman said.

Freiman testified Monday at a hearing for the Canadian Parliamentary Coalition to Combat Anti-Semitism, made up of MPs from all political parties who are examining the status of anti-Semitism in Canada, and seek to combat a global resurgence in the prejudice and hatred against Jews.

Having held seven hearings so far, the coalition plans to release a report after the inquiry ends in February.

Anti-Semitism in the early 21st century no longer seeks to rid the world of Jews, Freiman told the inquiry, but to rid the world of the Jewish state.

“The new anti-Semitism…employs double standards and resorts to demonization in order to delegitimize the world’s only Jewish state,” Freiman told the inquiry.

“What is equally anti-Semitic on the broader level is to tie what is said to be misdeeds by the state of Israel to its status as a Jewish state.”

Israel, however, should not be exempt from legitimate criticism of its policies and behaviours, he said. Illegitimate criticism takes the form of comparing Israel to South Africa during the apartheid era or Nazi Germany, Freiman said in a written report presented to the inquiry.

Freiman urged MPs to recognize that “so-called anti-Zionism can and often does cross over to anti-Semitism.”

But Denis Lemelin, another witness at the inquiry, told MPs he sees a difference between challenging and criticizing the actions of Israel and exhibiting anti-Semitic behaviour.

Lemelin is the national president of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, which in April 2008 passed a resolution at its national convention that demanded Israel end all military action and withdraw from occupied territories.

“Criticizing the policies and actions of Israel is a democratic right and to attempt to criminalize this dissent by labelling it as anti-Semitism is an unwarranted attack on our civil liberties,” Lemelin said in a written submission to the inquiry.

Adam Atlas, president of the Quebec Jewish Congress, told the inquiry on Monday that colleges and universities are where many groups express hatred or opposition toward Jews.

“People who are visibly Jewish feel uncomfortable on these campuses,” Atlas said.

Criticism of Israel degenerates into anti-Semitism when Israel is demonized, Gil Troy, a history professor from McGill University, told the inquiry. Opponents of Israel should have to justify their opposition to Israel, particularly when they don’t express opposition to such countries as Libya, Iran and Sudan, which are under dictatorships, he said.

Hatred for Jews Has Mutated: Congress

'New anti-semitism' targets Jewish state
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