Canada holds national antisemitism forum amid rising anti-Jewish incidents
Canadian ministers and Attorney-General met and discussed with provincial and municipal officials, law enforcement and prosecutorial representatives, and Jewish community leaders.
The Canadian government convened a national forum on combating antisemitism in Ottawa on Thursday, according to Public Safety Canada, amid rising anti-Jewish incidents in the country.
Public Safety Minister David McGuinty and Justice Minister and Attorney-General Arif Virani met with provincial and municipal officials, law enforcement, prosecutors, and Jewish community leaders to discuss challenges and strategies for addressing antisemitism.
Laws needed to be strengthened, and more federal funding must be allocated to police training, investigations, and response to disproportionately impacted communities, Toronto Police Service Chief Myron Demkiw told the forum.
Conversations like these are important and necessary. Today was an opportunity to learn from partners and offer feedback. The Toronto Police Service will continue to be a strong partner in the fight against antisemitism and all hate crimes. Please report any suspected hate crime… https://t.co/JSCNMeRtd8— Chief Myron Demkiw (@TPSMyronDemkiw) March 7, 2025
Public Safety Canada committed to investing C$26.8 million over four years to provincial and municipal police training. This would include training officers to ensure antisemitic incidents are identified and to cooperate with Statistics Canada to better record and report hate crimes, it said.
Federal government to work with Jewish community security initiatives
The federal government said it would work in partnership with Jewish community security initiatives.Bnai Brith Canada said much of the federal government’s plans had components of its own proposals, adding that promises had to be acted upon.