Jewish public school families demand change to fight rise in hate - Action News
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Ottawa

Jewish public school families demand change to fight rise in hate

Some Jewish parents and students say the surge in anti-Jewish incidents in Ottawa's English public schools is leaving many students feeling unsafe.

Anti-Jewish hate has become 'untenable' since Oct. 7 attack, student says

A parent outside a school board meeting.
Shira Waldman, a mother of four, is demanding action from the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board amid a rise in anti-Jewish hate. (Rachelle Elsiufi/CBC)

Some Jewish parents are demandingaction from Ottawa's largest school board, saying it hasfailed to protect their children from increased anti-Jewish incidents in schools since the start of Israel's war in Gaza.

"The kids are all afraid to identify as Jewish," said Shira Waldman, a mother of four, around an Ottawa-Carleton District School Board (OCDSB) meeting Tuesday night."It's the most horrible thing a parent could ever imagine."

The number of hate-related incidents reported to police in Ottawa rose nearly 20 per cent in 2023, withJewish people and 2SLGBTQ+peoplethe most-targeted groups.

The number of these hate-related incidents against Muslimsincreased 160 per cent from the previous year.

Waldman said the hatred and discrimination began in 2018 while her eldest child wasin high school.

"Kids would throw pennies on the floor and say 'You are a Jew, pick it up.' Drawing swastikas on the desk, saluting Hitler," she recalled.

Her kids, including two currently in OCDSB schools,have been taunted about gas and Jews in science class, she said.

"The horrible thing is that our family did survive the Holocaust where many family members did die in the gas chambers at Auschwitz," she said.

"These are deeply hurtful generational traumatic events pain that we carry with us."

Someone speaks at a lectern during a school board meeting.
Seven delegations spoke out about the wide range of bullying and harassment Jewish students faced in todays climate at a Tuesday evening meeting. (Rachelle Elsiufi/CBC)

She saidher children had so many negative experiences at the board's John McCrae Secondary School that she applied for a cross-boundary transfer for her youngest kid.

"It's not just one school,it's every school," she insisted.

Training, clarity onantisemitism

Waldman was one of dozens of parentsat Tuesday evening'sboard meeting.

Seven delegationsspoke about the wide range of bullying and harassment Jewish students face.

Leah Freedhoff,a Grade 11 student at Sir Robert Borden High School, saidanti-Jewish hatewas already at an unreasonably high level in public schools before the Hamas-ledattack on southernIsraeli communities on Oct. 7.

That attack killedaround 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies, with militants seizing more than 250 hostages some since freed and some since killed.

More than 36,000 Palestinians have since been killed in Israel's offensive, Gaza's health ministry says, and about a million more people have been displaced.

Since Oct. 7, Freedhoff said hate has become "untenable."

"I report the countless times we are verbally harassed in the halls and on social media by other students [and] we are told that nothing can be done. Or worse, we are told that it is not antisemitism," she said Tuesday night.

Leah Freedhoff wants the school board to adopt a working definition of antisemitism to combat the hate.
Grade 11 student Leah Freedhoff wants the school board to adopt a working definition of antisemitism to combat the hate. (OCDSB/Zoom)

Freedhoff said she has gone to her teachers and principals but they aren't trainedhow to deal with this type of hate, so"they just don't know what to do," she said.

"They aren't able to really classify what's happening as antisemitism it's because we don't have a definition of what antisemitism is and because they aren't trained."

Freedhoff wants the school board to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance'sworking definition of antisemitism, which Canada adapted in 2019, to help createa safe school environment for Jewish students.

She saidit includes clear examples of antisemitism, such as [not] holding Jewish people collectively responsible for the actions of the Israeli government.

Pino Buffone, the board's director of education, admits the board is on a "learning journey" when it comes to defining antisemitism.

"It is a work in progress for us," he told the delegation.

"We will continue to work at it and we'll continue to reach out to community partners that are trusted for us in providing us great advice on this very difficult time globally, but locally as well."

He added the board is also working ona better tracking mechanism forinstances of hate that occurinside schools.