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Tag: Olivia Chow

Words hold much power

At an event hosted by the National Council of Canadian Muslims on Nov. 1, Toronto’s Mayor Olivia Chow said, “the genocide in Gaza impacts us all.” 

Four days later, protesters attacked a group of Jewish students from Toronto Metropolitan University at an event featuring a speaker who served in the Israel Defence Forces during the recent Gaza war.

Is this cause and effect? Did Chow’s words give a kind of permission for anti-Israel activists to act out violently?

Human nature doesn’t work so neatly. Suggesting one directly led to the other is both unprovable and probably specious.

Both of these incidents, however, are part of a larger zeitgeist.

For (at least) two years, Israel has been accused of monstrous barbarities. Accusations against the Jewish state include deliberate starvation, ethnic cleansing, intentional mass killings, wanton destruction of infrastructure and other assorted war crimes.

There are legitimate debates around the definitions of terms and whether or how they apply to recent events in Gaza. However, public discussions, as Chow demonstrated, rarely reflect these nuances.

As a society, we now widely accept that incendiary language can lead to incendiary actions. In discussions around immigration levels, for example, responsible public figures generally engage in discourse that does not demonize migrants or new Canadians. Concerns have been raised in recent years around the tenor of discussion around transgender issues, with advocates warning that some of the language can exacerbate emotional isolation, especially in transgender youth, and can lead to suicide ideation. Words, it is widely accepted, can have tangible, indelible impacts.

This thoughtfulness seems nowhere to be found when Jews and allies warn that the provocative language against the Jewish state is having serious impacts on Jews in Canada.

While cause and effect are rarely provable, correlations can be clearer. Over the past two years, combustible rhetoric against Israel has coincided with an unprecedented spike in antisemitic acts against Jewish institutions and people. One would think, under the circumstances, that reasonable people might see the potential that one is at least somewhat related to the other.

Raise this possibility, though, and you can expect to be met with assertions that “Zionists” are trying to silence criticism of Israel or that there is a “chill” on discussion of urgent and legitimate international matters.

This is an admirable defence of free speech. It is interesting, though, that concepts of almost unfettered free expression seem to be the redoubt of Israel critics who accept limitations on civil discourse in a vast range of other topic areas.

Is it a coincidence, also, that the very concept of “Zionists” controlling what other people are permitted to think and say about Israel dovetails with traditional antisemitic concepts of Jewish power and control?

What everyone should be able to accept – because the evidence is plain – is that there is a parallel between the intensity of rhetoric against Israel and increasing attacks on Jews in Canada (and elsewhere).

Toronto’s mayor is just one of many Canadian leaders who should know better than to nonchalantly toss around accusations, understanding that the pitch of condemnation against Israel is having concrete impacts on Jews in Canada.

Anyone with a public platform should behave in ways that recognize the intended and potentially unintended consequences of their words. A mayor of a Canadian city, for example, should know that her words will have limited effect on the lives of Palestinians, but plenty of impacts here at home.

In a diverse country like Canada, where inclusivity is considered a core value, people in positions of respect and power have a duty to act responsibly, to promote unity and avoid phrases that might inflame community tensions. 

Did Chow’s words directly lead to the violent attack on Jewish students this month? Almost certainly not. 

But they contributed to an environment already aggravated with tension and peril.

Format ImagePosted on November 21, 2025November 20, 2025Author The Editorial BoardCategories From the JITags antisemitism, language, Olivia Chow
CIJA-UJA host Toronto mayoral debate

CIJA-UJA host Toronto mayoral debate

At the debate are, from left, John Tory, Ari Goldkind, Doug Ford and Olivia Chow. (photo from cjnews.com) 

There wasn’t much focus on Jewish issues at the CIJA-UJA-hosted mayoral debate Sunday night, but Ari Goldkind, the race’s sole Jewish candidate, arguably stole the show with his caustic barbs directed at fellow candidate Doug Ford, particularly when he confronted the councilor on his brother’s past use of an antisemitic slur.

The debate, held at the Anne and Max Tanenbaum Community Hebrew Academy of Toronto’s Wilmington campus and attended by several hundred people, featured fringe candidate Goldkind debating alongside leading contenders Ford, John Tory and Olivia Chow.

The debate was moderated by National Post columnist Chris Selley, who gave each candidate several minutes to respond to questions on transit, taxes, community safety and conduct in city council.

Goldkind, a defence lawyer and the fourth-place mayoral contender, had the audience chuckling with one-liners such as “What does Ford stand for? Falsify. Overstate. Repeat. Deny” and “This campaign has turned into a reality show. It’s like the Kardashian show.”

He later took Ford to task for what he said was the former’s failure to apologize for an antisemitic slur uttered by his brother, Mayor Rob Ford – who made a conspicuous appearance partway through the debate – last March.

“Mayor Rob Ford called Jews the ‘K’ word,” Goldkind said. “And then he has the chutzpah to come in here tonight. He might get a free pass from the others on this stage, but not me. When you insult a whole people, you are not setting an example for the city.”

As the audience laughed and booed, Ford responded, “I have a Jewish doctor and a Jewish dentist … my family has the utmost respect for the Jewish community…. We look forward to working with the Jewish community, as we have for the last four years.”

He then added that he had already apologized on behalf of his brother for the remark, adding, “I’ve told [Rob] clearly that those comments were unacceptable.”

On the subject of funding proposed transit projects, Goldkind said, “I’m the only one on stage who’s open in saying we have to talk about taxes. If you believe Tory’s Smart Track plan is going to be free, or Ford’s ‘subways, subways, subways’ will be, or that Chow’s proposed tax increase [to fund transit] will only be on the wealthy, if you accept that math, they’ll earn your vote,” he said sarcastically.

He added: “I will ask each household in the city to pay 50 cents extra per day … then … instead of going to the provincial and federal governments with our hands empty, go to them and say, ‘the people of Toronto have spoken and we have a transit plan worth investing in.’”

Invectives aside, the four took turns laying out their respective visions for transit, with poll-leader Tory emphasizing Smart Track, his London, England-modeled surface rail subway plan. Meanwhile, Chow endorsed building light rail transit (LRT) and a downtown subway relief line, Ford called for subway expansion and Goldkind advocated for a downtown relief line, new LRT lines and replacement of the Scarborough subway line with LRT.

Regarding taxation, Ford and Tory both pledged to privatize garbage collection in the city’s east end.

Ford trumpeted his brother’s administration’s slashing of the vehicle registration tax. Chow said she would increase the land transfer tax for houses valued at more than $2 million and raise property taxes around the rate of inflation, and Goldkind suggested congestion fees and road tolls on certain highways to help pay for infrastructure improvements, as well as raising the land transfer tax on homes valued at over $1.1 million.

The candidates also addressed community safety and the recent spike in antisemitic incidents in Toronto.

Chow said the Toronto Police Service hate crimes unit could use more support and training to be able to better work with people, including those with mental health issues. She suggested that her plan to beef up after-school activities across the city could be a good antidote against “young people who get into trouble and get recruited by people who are full of hate.”

Tory brought up the need for better education for “the young and less young,” including more training for police and interfaith initiatives in the community.

Ford said that under his brother’s administration, the city hired more police officers and reallocated a number of officers to the Toronto Anti-Violence Intervention Strategy. He said the city needs more mentors for young people.

The Toronto mayoral election will take place on Oct. 27.

– For more national Jewish news, visit cjnews.com.

Format ImagePosted on October 10, 2014October 9, 2014Author Jodie Shupac CJNCategories NationalTags Ari Goldkind, Chris Selley, Doug Ford, John Tory, Olivia Chow1 Comment on CIJA-UJA host Toronto mayoral debate

Time to parade your views with pride

With our own civic and municipal elections in British Columbia weeks away, it may seem odd to take time to consider the impending civic vote in Toronto. Of course, the entire world has devoted some of its attention to Toronto politics this year, the guffaws and ridicule turning to sympathy now that incumbent Mayor Rob Ford has been diagnosed with a serious and rare cancer. This latest twist in the saga provides a needed insight into society’s divergent responses to some health crises – like a large malignant growth – versus mental health crises, of which the mayor has probably demonstrated multiple symptoms, yet which gathered little to no sympathy, only punchlines and ridicule.

All that is for another time. In the first candidates’ forum post-Rob Ford (his brother, councilor Doug Ford, has taken his place on the ballot), front-running candidate John Tory told the audience at a largely Jewish forum that he would vote against funding for the city’s massive Pride Parade if the anti-Israel group Queers Against Israeli Apartheid (QAIA) were allowed to participate.

Unlike Mayor Ford, both the candidates Tory and Olivia Chow have marched in the parade and express support for it. But Tory reportedly elicited huge applause by promising to withhold the approximately $160,000 the city grants to the parade if the anti-Israel group were allowed to participate.

Understandably organizers of the parade have balked at political intervention that would limit participation to certain condoned groups. It was not long ago that, rather than marching in the parade with their supporters, public officials were condemning the parade as an inappropriate, hedonistic bacchanal on the streets of the city.

As Jews and as Zionists, our gut is with those cheering in the audience. QAIA is a fringe of extremists who undermine gay rights in the Middle East by delegitimizing its only oasis of legal and social freedoms. And the use of the word apartheid to describe Israel is plain wrong.

There is a more fundamental value at play here, however. It is basic free expression. As we saw recently, the Vancouver Queer Film Festival experienced controversy over a Jewish community ad that included the Israeli flag. In this case, it is the gay community that is soiled by its association with repression of open discourse – while VQFF accepted the ad in question, they treated its revenue differently, donating it to another organization. The festival is currently reviewing its ad policy. Our advice to them: we shouldn’t give in to those who seek to suppress free expression; all sides should be heard.

And it’s the same for Toronto Pride. There could hardly be, in a democracy, a better opportunity outside of the voting booth to register one’s opinion than a parade. Rather than applaud censorship, opponents of QAIA should attend the 2015 parade, enjoy the show, wait for the QAIA contingent, peaceably let their opinions be known with a creative sign or a catchy cheer.

Don’t make QAIA martyrs to free expression by preventing them from participating. Show them that the public rejects their worldview.

Posted on September 26, 2014September 25, 2014Author The Editorial BoardCategories From the JITags Doug Ford, John Tory, Olivia Chow, QAIA, Queers Against Israeli Apartheid, Toronto Pride
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