Antisemitism in Canada: The Alarming Patterns We Cannot Ignore

This is not an easy piece to write. My blog usually celebrates stories, poems, children’s books, teaching resources, author spotlights, and moments of inspiration that remind us why we do what we do as educators and writers. But sometimes, the world around us demands that we look up from our books and ask harder questions.

This post may not fit the usual rhythm of this space, but that’s precisely why it belongs here. Because if we, as educators and storytellers, are not talking about what kind of world we are preparing our children for, then what are we teaching at all?

My hope is that this article offers perspective, clarity, and courage. That it gives you, not just as educators, but as Canadians, a lens through which to understand what’s happening, to recognize the patterns, and to feel empowered to say, “This is wrong.”


Patterns Repeating: Vilification and Dehumanization

History teaches us that mass tragedies never begin with violence – they begin with narratives.

For the Jewish community, the brushstrokes of hate often start with casting Jews as the root of society’s problems, followed by exclusion, scapegoating, and relentless public vilification. The propaganda that swept through 1930s Germany, where Jews were painted as outsiders and subhuman, did not erupt overnight. It grew slowly, normalized by silence and apathy.

Antisemitic Children’s Book
From the 1938 antisemitic children’s book The Poisonous Mushroom. The boy is drawing a nose on the chalkboard, and the caption reads: “The Jewish nose is crooked at its tip. It looks like a 6.”

That process feels disturbingly familiar today. From campus protests to mainstream news outlets, the narratives of victim and oppressor often exclude Jews or justify their suffering. The world’s response to Israel’s struggle since October 7, 2023, highlights this pattern unmistakably. Public marches and campus rallies are often framed as activism but are saturated with slogans and symbols reminiscent of older, dangerous prejudices.

Even more troubling is how these events are met with institutional ambiguity, tacit approval, or outright denial that hatred is taking place at all – especially when Jews are the targets.

A society desensitized to this moral contagion cannot thrive, nor can it survive. History has taught us this well. We said “never again.” Yet here we are, watching familiar shadows reemerge, cloaked in different uniforms, using different phrases, but spreading the same hate.

As educators, we carry a sacred responsibility to help students recognize when language and ideals are being twisted into tools of hate. Education is never neutral when it comes to moral truth. Silence, too, teaches – and if we are not intentional, it teaches indifference. By giving students the tools to identify antisemitism, even when it hides behind the language of advocacy, we not only preserve memory – we protect humanity.


Alarming Statistics: The Evidence of Escalating Hate

The numbers speak for themselves, and they paint a grim picture.

Despite Jews comprising less than 1 percent of the Canadian population, they remain the victims in about 70% of religion-based hate crimes reported to the police, according to recent national data (2023–2024).

In 2024 alone, B’nai Brith Canada recorded 6,219 antisemitic incidents, a staggering 124% increase in just two years. These included violent assaults, threats, and acts of vandalism. Police-reported hate crimes against Jews jumped 71% between 2022 and 2023.

Antisemitism today rarely announces itself outright. It arrives cloaked in moral language, woven into movements that claim to fight for justice. When hatred is framed as activism, it gains moral cover and social legitimacy. What was once condemned as prejudice is now too often excused as advocacy — a dangerous evolution that normalizes hostility toward Jews within the public conscience.

And this isn’t only happening on our streets – it’s happening in our schools.

According to the Government of Canada, nearly three-quarters of all reported antisemitic incidents in Ontario schools occurred within the Toronto District School Board (TDSB) and York Region District School Board (YRDSB)—two of the country’s largest and most diverse educational institutions. These incidents range from antisemitic graffiti to verbal harassment and threats.

These aren’t isolated acts of ignorance. They are warnings. Indicators that antisemitism is not just resurfacing – it is embedding itself into the environments where our children learn and grow.


Institutional Failure: Inclusion That Excludes Jews

Despite these realities, antisemitism often remains a blind spot in many anti-hate and equity initiatives. School boards, universities, and advocacy groups have introduced vital programs addressing anti-Black racism, anti-Asian hate, Islamophobia and LGBTQ+ inclusion. Yet, the fight against antisemitism is frequently absent, diluted, or dismissed as political rather than moral.

Government measures—like Ontario’s expansion of Holocaust education—are welcome but far from enough. Too many anti-hate toolkits and professional development sessions omit or minimize antisemitism, leaving Jewish students and staff isolated, misunderstood, or afraid to speak out.

Inclusion, when practiced selectively, becomes exclusion. When “everyone is welcome—except for Jews,” we are replicating the very logic of the ideologies we claim to oppose.


Diversity Misused: When Inclusion Gives Space to Hate

Diversity is one of Canada’s greatest strengths – an ideal that promises a society where all cultures and identities thrive. Yet, this noble concept can be manipulated, cloaked in progressive language that enables harmful ideologies to flourish in plain sight.

When hate, especially antisemitism, is disguised as advocacy or “legitimate discourse,” it grants prejudice a seat at the table. That distortion creates a paradox: principles meant to unite us are twisted to divide us.

Protesters in Toronto waved Hezbollah flags and desecrated Israeli flags.
Protesters in Toronto waved Hezbollah flags and desecrated Israeli flags.

The hate visible in our streets, our schools, and online is not a Canadian value. Canada’s strength lies in genuine respect and moral consistency, not selective empathy. If we fail to defend our shared values, we risk having them redefined by those with ill intent.

Diversity must never be a shield for hate, nor a pretext to silence Jewish voices. True inclusion protects every community and ensures diversity builds bridges – not walls.


Embracing Individual and Collective Identity: Unity as Our Strength

Canada’s multicultural identity is often described as a mosaic – a beautiful blend of differences. But while we celebrate our individuality, we must not lose sight of our collective identity as Canadians.

When society fractures into competing groups, when empathy is distributed based on identity, we lose the cohesion that sustains democracy and peace.

Our enduring strength lies in unity – in the shared values of dignity, respect, and justice. Hate marches on our streets are profoundly un-Canadian and must be unequivocally condemned. Just as we would never tolerate KKK marches, we must not excuse those that target Jews.

Without leadership and accountability, chaos fills the vacuum. Laws meant to protect all citizens must be applied consistently, or they lose their moral power. If we remain silent, we allow others to define what it means to be Canadian, and to rewrite our shared values in the process.


Bridge: From Awareness to Responsibility

The numbers are sobering, but statistics alone do not drive change—people do. Educators, writers, and community leaders hold an extraordinary power to shape the moral imagination of the next generation. Our classrooms, our words, and our silence each send messages about whose pain matters and whose does not.

The presence of antisemitism in our schools, particularly where inclusion should thrive, reminds us that awareness is not enough. What’s needed now is moral courage—the willingness to name antisemitism even when it is uncomfortable, and to ensure that every conversation about equity includes Jewish identity as part of our shared human story.


What We Can Do: Education as the Antidote to Hate

Education has always been the first line of defense against ignorance—and the most enduring force for empathy.

To counter antisemitism, we must make its study and recognition a living part of our educational culture, not a historical footnote. That means ensuring professional learning, curriculum design, and classroom conversations reflect a deep understanding of antisemitism – its history, its modern expressions, and its devastating consequences.

This isn’t about politics. It’s about humanity.

When educators frame these lessons through universal values – fairness, dignity, and moral clarity – they help students see that hate doesn’t exist in isolation. It grows in silence, and it spreads when unchallenged.

We can model true inclusion by:

  • Naming antisemitism explicitly in anti-hate policies.
  • Including Jewish voices and stories in literature and classroom conversations.
  • Teaching critical literacy, so students can recognize when “advocacy” masks prejudice.
  • Responding consistently – in tone and in policy – to protect all students equally.

These small acts build moral resilience. They teach that being Canadian means standing up for one another, even, and especially, when it’s uncomfortable.


A Call to Courage

#NeverAgain is not a slogan – it’s a promise. Yet for the past two years, institutions we counted on, to remind us of the dangers of forgetting, are sitting idly by, and in some cases, allowing it to take root in their spaces, yet again.

The same mechanisms – scapegoating, vilification, institutional neglect, and social normalization – are again visible today.

To stay silent now is to let others define what it means to be Canadian, and what it means to be human. To speak up is to affirm that our values are not negotiable.

As educators and writers, we hold a quiet but profound power: the power to shape conscience. The classroom, the page, the conversation, each can become a place where clarity and compassion take root.

Antisemitism will not vanish on its own. But through education, truth-telling, and moral conviction, we can ensure it never finds comfort here again.

Lora


It is my hope that, as educators, we can lead thoughtful conversations about empathy, respect, and truth in our classrooms. If you are looking for a simple place to start, the Antisemitism Teacher Toolkit provides ready-to-use activities and discussion prompts to guide meaningful dialogue.

Because what we teach, and the conversations we choose to have, shapes the next generation’s understanding of justice, inclusion, and humanity.

Educate Against Hate

As we witness an alarming rise in antisemitism worldwide, we’re reminded of the important role parents and educators play in pushing back against violence, intolerance and hate. 

Now, more than ever, it is imperative for us to lead by example and instil compassion in our students’ hearts, an essential ingredient for a healthy, morally driven society. As our children’s most powerful influencers, we are their conduit to the world. The way we interact and talk about others, what we say, or don’t say, becomes vital in their understanding of the world. By reinforcing kindness, tolerance, and compassion, we embolden our children with the skills to live peacefully and comfortably in a diverse world.

Equally imperative is that while we teach our students to be accepting of different views, ideas and thoughts, a hard line must be drawn to disallow tolerance for destructive ideologies based on hate. Violence and its glorification should never be the end result of differing viewpoints. Nothing but destruction awaits there. Teachers can counteract learned biases and attitudes of intolerance that children may learn elsewhere. Stereotypes and lies must be challenged and rooted out through education. 

When we explicitly teach our students to respect those who are different from us, the cycle of hate is challenged and disrupted. This is especially important in today’s world where we see hostility based on national and religious differences. We must prepare our students to live in a diverse world, with people that may have different beliefs and experiences than them. We must teach our children to look at the world from different perspectives and challenge the notion that differences make us enemies. Simply put, diversity means we have more partners to learn from. It is this uniqueness that enriches the world.

Most importantly in today’s world, we must teach our children not to tolerate hate. We must encourage them to counter evil with acts of kindness and love, with the inner light they all have.

 With that in mind, I would like to share some of my poems from the book, A Sackful of Poems. It is my hope that they can be useful in starting important conversations with our students – discussions about tolerance, peace, empathy, kindness, diversity, acceptance, appreciating differences, and recognizing how our words and actions can hurt or heal. 

With hope for a more compassionate future,

Lora

To download a free copy of the poems for your personal use at home or in the classroom, please click HERE.

A World Gone Awry

I’m at a loss.

On October 7th, 2023, Hamas, an internationally recognized terror group, invaded Israel and committed unspeakable, inhumane atrocities against innocent Israeli civilians – an act that has left the global community in heart-wrenching shock.

Babies snatched from their mother’s arms, shot and beheaded.
Children axed, murdered while sleeping, tied and piled, burnt alive.
Girls raped and maimed, paraded as trophies.
Parents and children, bound, beaten, tortured in each other’s sight.
Men and women, young and old, kidnapped to a fate unknown.
Families terrorized as they answered calls, witness to their loved ones’ execution.

Pure evil.

All of this, while Hamas supporters in Gaza cheered and celebrated, proudly waving their flags and antisemitic placards. All the while, here in Canada, on our streets and school campuses, terrorist sympathizers celebrated the massacre of innocent lives, echoing vile sentiments of Jewish genocide.

Vicious. Heartbreaking. How on earth did we get here? Here, where rape is celebrated by other women. Here, where shooting Holocaust survivors is cheered post a Never Again era. Here, where slicing a mother’s womb and taking a life not yet born is glorified.

While most of the world came together in love and support, heartless human beings celebrated; celebrated the shooting, burning and beheading of children and babies!
There are simply no words.

In times of heart-wrenching tragedy and chaos, it is often educators who find themselves at the forefront of efforts to make sense of a world gone awry. I often reach out to you to recommend books for kids, enlighten you on important people in children’s literature and sometimes comment on how we see the world and how it could make sense for kids. Today, I’m reaching out to you for something completely different. Today I seek your support to help change this devastating trajectory, where the global moral compass has gone askew, where young minds can no longer decipher truth from corruption, where the media infects to breed a heartless society, while others yet, sit silently and watch.

The ensuing celebrations by terrorist sympathizers is absolutely abhorrent and inexcusable. It is indicative of an ethical decay permeating our “woke”, yet morally adrift world. While Jewish communities worldwide mourn the death of their loved ones, Hamas supporters taunt and inflict more pain to the wounds, chanting, Gas the Jews, holding signs that call to wipe Israel off the map, handing out sweets, dancing, cheering, celebrating. How on earth did we get to a place so callous and vile, a world so detached from what it means to be human? A world where the barbaric slaughter of innocent Jews is met with a call to murder all Jews worldwide? Where is the outrage?

Regrettably, this horrifying call for genocide echoes a dark and haunting chapter in history. It is a disturbing reminder of the sentiments and principles that once facilitated the systematic extermination of six million Jews during the Holocaust in Nazi Germany. This malevolent ideology thrives on vilification, dehumanization, desensitization, and unwavering justification, shamelessly parading on our streets still today, infiltrating school campuses, dominating news outlets, and permeating social media platforms.

The relentless indoctrination of young minds has left an indelible mark, grooming them with an onslaught of hate-filled propaganda directed at Israel, and by extension, Jews across the globe. This prolonged exposure has reached a point where distinguishing fact from fiction, discerning good from evil, has become an overwhelming challenge. Tragically, this distorted reality finds its expression in the odious rallies that endorse terror and violence. We witness a disheartening culmination of toxic messaging, misleading teachings, revisionist history, fake news, biased media narratives, celebrity endorsements, the intersectionality of minority groups, and the exploitation of a victimhood mentality.

In the dynamic realm of social media, words are powerful, capable of building or destroying with precision. As educators, we bear the responsibility to ensure that our students understand the gravity of their digital expressions, not falling prey to the insidious influence of memes, hashtags, likes and facile buzzwords. Words fired without comprehension are akin to firing bullets oblivious to where they land, an action both reckless and harmful.

It is our role to guide students in comprehending the impact of their words. We must equip our youth to resist the allure of the herd mentality, to withstand social pressures that may lead them to parrot ideologies they do not fully understand. The path to moral literacy in our present world necessitates the ability to discern and sift through propaganda and bias, in pursuit of what is genuine and truthful. Our mission is to raise a generation of critical thinkers, not keyboard warriors whose words aim to hurt and destroy from a detached distance.

As teachers, we must ask ourselves, where have we lacked? Where do we need more education? Is it science or math, or perhaps the injection of emotional intelligence and a sense of morality? We’ve seen this before, we’ve lived through the horror, yet the world is sleeping. The murder of six million Jews did not begin with gas chambers, it began with a wicked idea and people turning a blind eye. It began with finger pointing and blaming. It began with lies. What we see today is a new oppressor, but an old propaganda.

I remember the terror attacks on 9-11. It was 22 years ago and my first year teaching. I had a grade two class. The announcements came on and I froze as I tried to digest what I was hearing. How would I explain this to my students? After our lessons about love, respect and kindness, how would I make meaning of something that lacked all of that? Then driving home that day I heard someone on the radio quote Mr. Rogers, “Look for the helpers”. And so after the questions and digesting the facts, we focused on rebuilding with the love that poured out.

Twenty two years later, another evil has crept on our doorstep, this time targeting Jewish communities worldwide. I can only hope that my students remember my words today, and look at the massacre in Israel with nothing but compassionate eyes. I pray that today they are the helpers. This gives me hope in a world gone awry.

I’d like to end with an excerpt from a book by Dr. Chaim Ginott’s, “Teacher and Child.” It speaks to our role as educators, and what the world needs more of right now.

I am a survivor of a concentration camp. My eyes saw what no person should witness: gas chambers built by learned engineers. Children poisoned by educated physicians. Infants killed by trained nurses. Women and babies shot by high school and college graduates. So, I am suspicious of education. My request is this: Help your children become human. Your efforts must never produce learned monsters, skilled psychopaths or educated Eichmanns. Reading, writing, and arithmetic are important only if they serve to make our children more human.

As Remembrance Day approaches, we are reminded of the sacrifices made for a better tomorrow. This moment of reflection serves as a poignant reminder of our duty as educators to steer our students away from moral decay. Let this day inspire us to embrace our role, engage in meaningful conversations, and cultivate empathy in the young minds we nurture. As we remember the past, let us also shape a more compassionate and ethical future, where the values that underpin our society are not commodities, but pillars of our shared humanity.

With deep empathy and hope for a kinder future,

Lora