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Or sign-in if you have an account.Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks against antisemitism in front of members of the Jewish community and law enforcement leaders at Holy Blossom Temple in Toronto on Monday, June 1, 2026. Photo by Peter Power/PostmediaThe most extraordinarily limp, ineffectual line in Mark Carney’s comprehensively limp, ineffectual address on the growing scourge of antisemitism in Canada, delivered Monday afternoon at a synagogue in Toronto, might have been this: “When you come to Canada, you bring your faith, your tradition, your language, your story. You leave behind your wars and your animosities.”Enjoy the latest local, national and international news.Exclusive articles by Conrad Black, Barbara Kay and others. 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(Subscriber-exclusive edition on Fridays)By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc.We encountered an issue signing you up. Please try againTwo-and-a-half years ago, Hamas committed a pogrom in southern Israel, killing more than 800 civilians as well hundreds of others, and taking more than 250 hostages (dozens of which were later killed). Hamas leaders are smart enough to know hell would then rain down on them — and more to the point, on innocent Gazans living above their precious tunnels. Perhaps they underestimated just how much hell. But a fair number of Jews, both in Israel and the United States — and presumably Canada, although I’m not aware of any comparable polling — believe Israel went “too far” in its response in Gaza: 39 per cent in the U.S., the Pew Research Center found in September 2025.You shouldn’t harass people in their homes or businesses, as “pro-Palestinian” supporters have taken to doing, no matter what the polls say. My point is simply to underscore what’s at the root of it: Not politics, but pure, crystalline antisemitism. Canadian and American Jews can’t vote against Benjamin Netanyahu.The precise equivalent would be for Jewish Canadians to march through Arab and Muslim neighbourhoods waving Israeli flags in protest over what happened on October 7, 2003. But of course, Jewish Canadians don’t do that sort of thing. (Nor do the vast majority of Muslim Canadians, of course. One of the most frustrating things about watching police escort horrible people around Jewish neighbourhoods, protesting the residents’ Jewishness, is how few protesters there are. Police seem to have no problem telling counter-protesters to go away in order to keep the peace. Why not the protesters themselves?)But here we are. Western Jews who have to take it on the chin for Hamas’s pogrom against Jews, and an Israeli response over which they have no control whatsoever.So, it was a hell of a thing to say to a synagogue audience, surely, that all Canadians are to “leave behind your wars and animosities,” without naming the relatively few absolute cretins who are trying to ruin it for everyone — none of whom were in attendance.It’s extraordinary to me that Carney’s speechwriters can’t get past this obnoxious trope of stating aspiration as fact: “When you come to Canada … you leave behind your wars and your animosities” is just a more complicated version of “there is no place for antisemitism in Canada.” If there were no place for antisemitism, if everyone was leaving behind their wars and animosities, there wouldn’t be a problem.Also, what Carney stated as fact has never been true. It’s not true in any pluralistic society. And while I suppose it’s a lovely idea in theory, it doesn’t need to be true to maintain social harmony.Canada has been a very successful adventure in diversity. All in all, we have probably endured less than our fair share of ethnic and religious strife. But there has been plenty of strife nevertheless, and I’m sorry to report that much of it came from the “old world.”One of the Fathers of Confederation, Thomas D’Arcy McGee, was assassinated in 1868 by a fellow Irishman for having turned against Irish republican extremism.Canadian time travellers might be shocked to see how many swastikas were out and about in 1933 Toronto after Hitler’s rise to power. The only saving grace of the Christie Pits Riots in Toronto, on Aug. 16 of that year, was that various immigrant communities, notably Italians, aligned with Jewish immigrants to do battle with Nazis who had brought a giant swastika banner to a baseball game.“Six hours of rioting follows Hitler shout; scores hurt,” was the Toronto Daily Star’s headline the next day. “Jewish-Gentile ball game is marked by disorder as swastika flag raised; lead pipe was used; six constables only on hand though impending clash was forecast.” (Some things never change.)What was the Air India bombing, the worst terrorist incident in this country’s history, about if it wasn’t about imported “animosities”? We have never come to terms with that, to our shame, but we soldier on. There are myriad other examples. Hell, we can’t even get official bilingualism right — a legacy of Canada’s original old-world grievance.We’re lucky, and we have done a lot of things right, but we’re not special: You can’t ask people to bring their faith, culture, language and world view with them to Canada but leave any rivalries or grievances behind. That’s just not human nature. This insistence on combating dire situations with myth-making will eventually be a large part of the Liberals’ undoing. In the meantime, on the issue of antisemitism specifically, Carney’s government seems to have almost nothing to offer. And he offered it at a synagogue.National Post cselley@postmedia.com Get the latest from Chris Selley straight to your inbox Join the Conversation This website uses cookies to personalize your content (including ads), and allows us to analyze our traffic. Read more about cookies here. By continuing to use our site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Chris Selley: At a synagogue, Carney tells the wrong people to abandon their ethnic rivalries
If certain people really were leaving behind their wars and animosities in the old world, as Carney suggests, there wouldn’t be a problem
1,363 words~6 min read






