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I declare the meeting open.
[Translation]
Good morning.
Welcome to meeting number 107 of the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on March 21, 2024, the committee is beginning its study of Islamophobia.
[English]
In regard to avoiding audio feedback, I want to remind members and all meeting participants in the room of the following important preventative measures. To prevent disruptive and potentially harmful audio feedback incidents that can cause injuries, all in-person participants are reminded to keep their earpieces away from all microphones at all times.
As indicated in the communiqué from the Speaker to members on April 29, the following measures have been taken to help prevent audio feedback incidents. All earpieces have been replaced by a model that reduces the probability of audio feedback. Please use the approved earpiece. For all unused earpieces, if you're not using them, keep them unplugged. Please consult the cards on the table for guidelines.
These measures are in place so that we can conduct our business without interruption and protect the health and safety of participants, including the interpreters.
[Translation]
I thank you in advance for your co‑operation.
[English]
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format. All our witnesses are appearing by video conference this morning. In accordance with the committee's routine motion concerning connection tests for witnesses, I'm informing the committee that all witnesses have completed the required connection tests in advance of the meeting.
For the benefit of members and witnesses, wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. As a reminder, all comments are to be addressed through the chair.
For the benefit of any new members attending this morning—welcome to our meeting—and for the benefit of our witnesses, I will use a card to tell you that you have 30 seconds left. When the time is up, I will gently pull up another card. I might give you a couple of seconds extra to wrap up; otherwise, I will need to interrupt you. Don't take it personally. That's just how things are done in committees.
This morning we will have one panel. It will go until one o'clock. All witnesses are appearing by video conference and they will all be on the same panel.
I've been given the names of members who will be asking questions. I will start with—
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First, we welcome Omar Babili, a student who is testifying as an individual.
[English]
We have Ali Islam, who is also here as an individual.
[Translation]
We also have with us Mr. Shaffni Nalir, who is the executive director of the Islamic Centre and Community Services of Toronto.
[English]
Finally, representing Youth Coalition Combating Islamophobia, we have Maryam Al-Sabawi, Dareen Shilbayeh and Hamza Omer.
I will begin with the first person on my list and ask Omar Babili to start.
You have five minutes, please.
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Assalam alaikum. Peace be upon you all.
I would like to respectfully acknowledge that I am an immigrant settler living, studying and playing on the unceded lands of the lək̓ʷəŋən people, known as the Songhees and Esquimalt nations, whose historical relationship with this land continues to this day.
Good morning, Madam Chair and honourable members. Thank you for the invitation to appear before this committee to share my experience and perspective for this committee's study on Islamophobia.
My name is Omar Babili. I am 25 years old and am currently studying civil engineering at the University of Victoria.
My first encounter with Islamophobia was in 2017 in Bellevue, Washington. The Islamic Center of Eastside, a place of worship and community for many Muslims, was burned down in an act of arson. This incident deeply affected me, as I was attending Bellevue College at the time. The destruction of our Islamic centre was a stark reminder of the hatred and bigotry that exists in our society.
Following this incident, my family suggested that I leave the United States due to concerns for my safety. They believed that Canada would be a safer place to practise our religion. However, my subsequent experience revealed that Canada is not immune to Islamophobia.
I am deeply concerned about the drastic rise of Islamophobia and anti-Arab and anti-Palestinian racism across Canada. Let me be clear here. The hate my community is subjected to is not abstract. It manifests in many ways.
On December 3, 2023, my fear became a stark reality. I was volunteering at a peace protest in my city of Victoria, exercising my right to free speech and assembly and calling for a ceasefire, a cause I deeply believe in. I hope this committee and the Canadian government realize how important it is for Canada to stand for peace in the crisis in Gaza.
As the day went on, I decided to renew my parking meter. On the way back, I noticed there was some commotion along the path that I had taken. I saw a man in a red car arguing with a protester. To my utter shock, the situation quickly took a turn for the worse. Suddenly, the same individual who was in the vehicle arguing with a peace protester started accelerating towards me. The sight of the vehicle accelerating towards me was terrifying. My heart started pounding. Adrenaline surged through me. Thankfully, I managed to jump out of the way, avoiding serious injury or perhaps even death.
Following the incident, I was still shaken. I decided to attend an open office event held by Dean Murdock, the mayor of the city of Saanich, B.C., to voice my concerns and to seek reassurance that my incident would not happen again. Surprisingly, after Mayor Murdock was informed that I was the victim of the incident, he showed very little concern and did not express any words of empathy or reassurance to me.
The lack of response and concern from our elected official was disheartening to me. It felt like my experience and the broader issue of Islamophobia were being ignored and did not matter.
Around this time, I had to write my final exams. The anxiety from the incident was overwhelming to me, so I reached out to my university department explaining my situation and asking for an exemption from taking my finals. Their response was far from supportive.
Throughout this ordeal, I received no support from the university. No one contacted me or checked on me, leaving me to navigate this stressful situation on my own.
The trauma of that day has been etched into my mind. I experience sudden flashbacks of what happened, and I cannot help but live in constant fear. Every time I leave my house, I am gripped by anxiety wondering if this could happen to me again or to someone else just because they are exercising their freedom of speech.
This whole experience has made me feel like I have lost my right to express my beliefs freely and safely. The lack of support from our elected officials and the university has only reinforced this feeling, leaving me uncertain and feeling isolated.
This incident is not an isolated one. It's part of a broader pattern of violent Islamophobia and harassment that many Muslims in Canada face every day. The psychological toll of living with this fear is immense and impacts our daily lives. Hate and violence towards our community or any other community should not be tolerated.
Today, I want to ask members of this committee to take strong action against Islamophobia and anti-Palestinian racism and to protect our civil liberties, including the right to peacefully protest.
Thank you.
I speak to you from London, Ontario, the traditional home of the Anishinabe people for over 13,000 years.
This Thursday will be the third anniversary of the day my niece Madiha Salman, her husband Salman Afzaal, her mother-in-law Talat Afzaal, her 15-year-old daughter Yumna Afzaal and her nine-year-old son Fayez Afzaal were deliberately attacked by a pickup truck driven by a young man.
Three generations were erased with the aim of scaring Muslim Canadians into leaving Canada. What was the crime my family committed? They were being visibly Muslim in public. That attack was neither unspeakable nor unimaginable to happen here. For decades, Muslim Canadians have been deliberately portrayed as a fifth column. I'll repeat that. In a pervasive narrative, Muslim Canadians are being actively and intentionally portrayed as outsiders and foreigners—as the “other”. This is a depiction that continues and thrives, an intentional depiction that eventually has real, brutal and deadly consequences. Which of you will say that the conditions that led up to June 6 no longer exist today?
The perpetrator behind the attack on our London family took direct inspiration from two men, highlighting the international interconnectedness of ideological hatred. The first was a 2019 terrorist attack at a mosque in New Zealand that left 51 dead. The second was a California attack, also in 2019, inspired by the New Zealand manifesto. This man tried to set a mosque on fire, and when that arson was thwarted by congregants who happened to be inside the mosque, the man escaped and shot three people in a synagogue instead. What this tells us is that hate is transferable.
The innocence of all the children in my family vanished, especially that of my nine-year-old great-nephew, now an orphan. He has come face to face with the most evil fruit of what is a socially acceptable and unchallenged othering, the end result of a monolithic labelling of Muslims that believes deviant acts committed overseas are somehow the responsibility of individual Canadian Muslims to shoulder. The shameless othering of Muslims in daily life doesn't even feel the need to hide its face. I told Fayez Afzaal that a criminal just a few years older than Yumna ran over everyone, leaving nobody alive. “Not even one?” is what he asked. This is the price of Islamophobia that Fayez has to pay for the rest of his life.
My youngest son thought, “How could someone kill another person without knowing them, and even if someone hated a person, why would they kill them?” In his sweet innocence, he thought that if the criminal had taken the time to sit down for kebabs and a mango smoothie with our family, the criminal would have changed his mind. My son now wonders if his native Canada is really a safe place. Does his Muslim identity make him less Canadian?
As Muslims, we pray five times during the day. In the past, when my son had to pray in public, he had no issue, but now when he has to pray, he's conscious that people are judging him, or worse, that someone will desire to hurt him. He wonders when he puts on his hockey jersey with the name “Islam” emblazoned on the back what name or comments other parents may throw. He says that he used to look at his home as a safe place. “Canada is still my only home,” he says, “but now I'm not so sure how welcome or safe I feel.” He is 13.
My middle son, a teenager one year younger than Yumna, told me that hatred of Muslims has taught him that it's dangerous for a Muslim Canadian to feel attached to anything or anyone because nothing is guaranteed, not even tomorrow. He's 16.
My daughter, my eldest child, just two years older than Yumna, lost her vivaciousness and sense of belonging. She fell into deep isolation, using it as a shield in an environment that was telling her that Muslims do not belong. She says that she didn't feel heard or valued by society. She has learned that striving for happiness is unrealistic; instead, we should strive for peace. She is 18.
For my wife, the effect of the violent expression of Islamophobia is that, in her mind, she now says a final goodbye whenever the children and I walk out the door every single day. It's exhausting for her, but this is her reality. She has lived through a war and seen and experienced violence overseas, but she never felt as vulnerable as she does now. She says perhaps it's because she felt lied to about Canada's diversity and promise of equality for everyone. She feels short-sighted for believing that this promise was for everyone. Since the attack, she has lost faith that society will give equal worth to its citizens. Is equal worth only for Canadians of European heritage?
A young woman in my family who wears the hijab is scared about the what-ifs when she steps outside. The hijab, a sign of humility, a signal to others about her honesty and devotion, now makes her a walking bull's eye. Not only does it put her in danger, but it puts anyone alongside her in danger, so on top of carrying fear, she now has to carry guilt.
As we approach the third anniversary of the attack on our London family, let me read to you some of the comments sent in over the last few weeks to the volunteers and the City of London employees organizing the vigil on Thursday evening. “Islamophobia is not a thing.” “When will the City of London stop sucking Islamic ****?” “Stop pandering to a people who would sooner slit your throat than help you.” “People like you are the problem.” “What have ‘muslims’ done for us, besides nothing?” “No sympathy.” “Stop terrorizing Jewish folks in Toronto.“ “Piss on Islam.” “You all will be held accountable. We are coming for all of you.” “Keep London Pure.”
As a family that was the victims of a hate crime, we feel there is an unrealistic lack of resources and insufficient willpower to understand hate and to talk about how it develops, how it's propagated and how it can be combatted. I ask Parliament to do a better job of explaining why Islamophobia matters if it only affects 5% of the population. Is it real? Is it being exaggerated? Why should 95% of Canadians care about it? I ask parliamentarians to say what should be obvious: Is Canada ultimately a nation for the descendants of white Europeans, or is it something else?
Listen to your conscience. Stop the intentional othering and dehumanization of Muslim Canadians. Look to your right and left when you sit in the House, and call out your colleagues. We are Canadian. Pass or amend the online harms bill to protect our youth, but get it passed.
I've seen foot-dragging at the provincial level with no passage of the our London family act, the act that includes proposed changes to education and creates safe zones around religious institutions. There's a Senate report on Islamophobia that came out in November 2023. Will this committee be taking that off the shelf?
I saw, Madam Chair—
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Good morning, Madam Chair and honourable members. Thank you for the invitation to appear before this committee for its study on Islamophobia.
My name is Shaffni Nalir. I grew up in Toronto, where I currently live with my wife and four children. I immigrated with my parents, who fled civil war and religious persecution in Sri Lanka. I grew up going to the Bond Street Nursery School, which was operated by the Metropolitan United Church. I grew up, like most Canadians in my age group, with 50¢ freezies, saving up pennies to buy candy from the corner store and watching The Elephant Show with Sharon, Lois and Bram. However, unlike most Canadians, I can brag that I saw them live—twice.
Growing up as a visible minority, you learn to have thick skin. Don't disrupt the peace. Stay quiet and absorb the offhanded insults, sarcastic comments and occasional physical bullying. Up until recently, I stopped seeing myself as a grateful guest in Canada and realized that I am in fact a host, and I hope to be a gracious one. Canada is as much my country as any other Canadian's.
I want to share our community's experience with Islamophobia and hate-motivated violence targeting our places of worship. I'm the general manager at the Toronto Islamic Centre and Community Services, the first and only mosque on Yonge Street and the only mosque in the University—Rosedale riding. On October 10, 2020, our mosque received a threatening email from an individual claiming to be associated with the Jewish Defense League, or JDL, an organization listed as terrorist by the FBI. Some of the content of the threatening email included, “We will [kill] every muzzie. We have the guns to do a Christchurch all over again”. We reported this threat to local law enforcement, and they advised us to close the mosque for a few days as they assessed the threat. For four long weeks, our mosque was closed to the public and to our congregants. There was fear and panic among them.
I want to remind this committee that our community lives with the trauma of the Quebec City mosque terrorist attack that took the lives of six worshippers in January 2017. During this time, my family was concerned for my safety and would often discourage me from going to our mosque to do any administrative work for fear that I would not return home. Since that incident, we've had several hate-motivated graffiti incidents at our mosque and the occasional banging on our doors and windows while we were inside praying.
However, on November 18, 2023, threats to our mosque turned into action. At around 6:30 in the morning, just after the morning prayer, I, along with around 50 congregants, including small children, heard several loud bangs on the windows and door of our mosque. A few congregants and I rushed outside to see what occurred, only to be met with an individual on a bike hurling racist threats at us, saying, “You effing Arabs. You effing Muslims. We're going to finish you all.” Then this individual spat several times in our direction and rode off.
I went inside to call the police and report what happened. Shortly after, this individual returned and threw a large rock at a group of congregants who were socializing in front of the mosque. Thankfully, he narrowly missed the elderly caretaker of the mosque by a few inches. He then yelled, “You're all dead” and sped off once again.
I and a few congregants chased him down and managed to corner him. Thankfully, at the same time, a traffic officer happened to be in the area to help control the situation. Police arrived on the scene shortly after. After the officers learned what had happened, they proceeded to arrest him. I felt a huge sigh of relief. Later that evening, Toronto police released a statement. We learned that this individual had also committed several other offences a few days prior and had attacked two other individuals because of their faith. He was charged with a total of 14 charges.
Since that day, I cannot fully focus on my prayer in the mosque because I'm always thinking about who will walk in and how I will respond to protect my community members. Every time I hear the door open, my whole body tenses up because I fear the worst. My children grew up at this mosque. In fact, my youngest son took his first steps in this mosque. My wife and I, along with many other parents, consider our mosque to be a safe space for children to roam freely, without parents feeling the need to worry. This individual robbed our community of its sense of safety at our mosque, which is the foundation of our community.
I admit we were afraid, but we were not deterred. We still pray in congregation but have increased our annual security budget from $4,800 to $36,000. Our budget includes 24-hour monitoring and recording, and active-shooter drills and training for our congregants. Nowadays, we always have worshippers standing guard while others pray.
Today, I want to ask this committee to take action against the Islamophobia and violence that our communities are facing and ensure that our government provides protection for our places of worship.
Thank you.
My name is Maryam Al-Sabawi, and I am a grade 12 student.
Yumna was my close friend. Yumna and I had been in the same class since the second grade. In high school, we joined the International Baccalaureate program together and shared almost every class. We ran for student council as a duo. We planned to start a business together, whose profits, we agreed, would be donated to charity. We planned to go to university together. We often spoke of our futures, our hopes and our dreams, like most young kids do.
Yumna was more than a friend to me. She was a confidante, a support system, a study partner, a secret keeper and a giver of hope. Most importantly, she was a constant reminder that good friends do exist.
I miss Yumna. Not a day passes that I don't think of her. I miss her laughter, her smile, her kindness and her sense of humour.
If only we could press rewind. This is what I do each night. I rewind the memories, rewind the sound of her laughter, rewind the endless text messages and rewind the conversations that so deeply connected me to her. I even rewind June 6, 2021. That's when I wish I could press pause. But I can't.
The thought of my friend being targeted, hunted in the streets, mowed down and killed just because of her Muslim faith has been very debilitating, especially as a 14-year-old Muslim girl. Can you imagine how difficult it has been to process what happened? Can you imagine the difficulty of simply existing, feeling safe or trying to move on?
Three years have passed, and parts of me have gone with it. Losing Yumna has left a gaping hole in me. There aren't enough words in the dictionary to describe how difficult these past few years have been. I have been consumed by the thought of what she used to be, what she could have been and what she is. Night after night, I've awoken to the same dream—Yumna being run over as she walks home with her family. I wake up in a sweat, thinking, “Don't worry, Maryam. It's only a dream.” But it's not.
The grief is overwhelming, so much so that at times I'm no longer recognizable to those who love me. At times I'm not even recognizable to myself. I'm not the same. None of us are. How could we be? Most 14-year-olds don't have to worry about burying their friend and then having to figure out how to make sure they don't have to bury any others. I never imagined that the most formative years of my life, my teens, would be spent fighting hate and Islamophobia so that others would not experience the pain that my friends and I have had to experience.
The world placed a responsibility on our shoulders that would have crushed a mountain, but we had to carry it because others haven't. We had to carry it so that no one else would feel the pain that we have felt. We had to carry it because if we didn't, it seemed as though no one else would.
Sleepless nights, fear of trucks and an inability to go for walks have caused me to reflect on what was actually taken from us on June 6, 2021. We didn't just lose Yumna and her beautiful family. We also lost our sense of belonging, our sense of community, our sense of safety and our sense of self. We even lost our innocence. The world isn't as kind as we had believed it to be. All of it was taken because of hate that was left unchecked, hate that was given endless opportunities to grow and hate that was carefully incubated through the silence of others.
I often think of Yumna's last moments. I often imagine her lying alone. I wonder if she was afraid, if she felt pain or if she knew that death was imminent. These thoughts keep me up at night. Just when my mother had finally convinced me that she had died on impact, I learned at the trial that her eyes were open, that she was foaming at the mouth and that perhaps she was trying to speak. I wonder what she wanted to say. I wonder what her message to you would be. I wonder how many others have to die.
Once again, I feel paralyzed, moving through the motions, struggling to exist and struggling to make sure this doesn't happen to anyone else. I'm exhausted. My family is exhausted. My friends are exhausted. My community is exhausted. We cannot even grieve in peace. He took from us what did not belong to him, and there is no way to give it back.
The grief is overwhelming, and we have been forced to carry the weight of that grief. That grief hurts. It stings, it burns, it shatters, it crushes and it can even kill. It has robbed us of our dreams, our hopes, our peace and even our sense of self. That grief has been the greatest equalizer in our community, as no one has been able to escape it.
It is our hope that our government will stop using language that dehumanizes us, whether it's referring to Muslims here or Muslims abroad. It is the continuous dehumanization of Muslims that enables others to justify our killing and enables the violent Islamophobia we continue to experience in our schools, in our streets and in our communities.
It is our hope that our governments, on all levels, will recognize the importance of education in addressing hate towards Muslims and will use education as a tool to combat this hate. It is our hope that our government will put politics aside and put people first.
I have to leave because I have a class, but my friends Hamza and Dareen from the YCCI will be answering questions on behalf of the YCCI.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you to all the witnesses—including Maryam, who's just left for her class—for powerful testimony and for turning the pain and personal loss that you've experienced into trying to solve some of the problems of today and hopefully improving the situation here in Canada.
I want to ask Dr. Islam a question.
First, Dr. Islam, thank you for your powerful testimony. You've suffered personal loss and we appreciate your perspective on this.
I noted in an article I read that cited you that you don't use the name of the perpetrator who took the lives of your family members. Likewise, with the Quebec City mosque shootings, where six individuals were killed, you said that you wouldn't use the perpetrator's name. I want to ask you a question about that.
The law had been changed previously so that in cases in Canada—fortunately rare cases—of mass murder or multiple murder, for individuals who perpetrate these heinous crimes, there would not be a sentencing discount, so to speak, for the fact that someone took more than one life. They would get consecutive life sentences.
Previous to the change in law, if someone—we heard recently of the story of Paul Bernardo—took multiple lives, they could only get one period of parole ineligibility, which is 25 years. Subsequent to the change that was brought in, an individual, like the individual who shot three RCMP officers in Moncton, could receive consecutive periods of parole ineligibility. That person received a 75-year sentence instead of a 25-year sentence.
We heard from victims' families. The widow of one of the victims of one of these crimes said that while this doesn't bring back her loved one, she does take solace in that her daughter will not have to attend parole hearings every two years to try to keep this individual behind bars.
As you are probably well aware, a few years ago the Supreme Court of Canada struck down this law on consecutive periods of parole ineligibility. There was some strong commentary afterwards. I know that the former president of the Islamic cultural centre, where the shooting took place, expressed disappointment with the court's decision, saying, “In our view, this decision fails to take into due consideration the atrocity and the scourge of the multiple murders which are multiplying in North America, as well as the hateful, Islamophobic and racist aspect of this crime.” He also said, “Our deep concern is about the orphans that will see the murdering person in the roads of Quebec City 25 years after this tragedy.”
Do you feel that we as a Parliament or the government should take some strides to respond to this court decision?
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I think the justice system did what it could under the limits it's operating under. There are constraints, and I'll explain some of them.
The committee is interested in learning about Islamophobia. It is not one disease entity. There are many different types, and it has many different manifestations. The most benign form, if we can look at it from a disease model, is borne from ignorance about Muslims. There's a sly and sinister form borne from, let's say, geopolitics, where anti-Muslim hatred is used as a justification to keep Muslim voices out of the top spheres of power and influence—and that's intentional.
There's a form of Islamophobia that comes from the far left, and there's a form of Islamophobia borne from white nationalism. That type goes hand in hand with anti-Semitism, misogyny, anti-Black racism and being anti-LGBT. There are many different paths to the same end result. What we don't understand, I think, is how Islamophobia, when it goes up in one of these categories, affects the others. This is where governments, Parliament and academics can add value. If you don't look at all the different building blocks of hate, I don't think you'll get to some of the root causes behind the hatred that exists.
There's another element that is trying to catch up to the times. The way that hatred was spread in the past is very different from the way it is now. Technology companies have a large role to play, because they're not simple conduits of information. There's a way of getting radicalized and falling into echo chambers and filter bubble. That happens online. That's another big piece that we have to catch up on, and simple fact-checking isn't enough to keep people falling into circles of hate. Source-checking needs to be a big variable in how we look at how hate is spread. I don't think we're doing a good job there right now.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you, esteemed witnesses, for joining us this morning. Your testimony is important.
As far as I'm concerned, I'm learning things. I learned some at the meetings we held on anti‑Semitism, and this morning I'm learning some about Islam. I don't think we've finished learning.
I'll pick up on what Mr. Islam just said: Maybe we don't know enough about Islam, the Muslim religion, and maybe there's a need, indeed, to know more about the precepts of this religion.
That said, we all want to have a safe living environment, obviously. We want our streets to be safe, and we want everyone to be able to live the religion of their choice freely and without persecution.
Recently, the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights has focused a lot on anti‑Semitism. Now, we're looking at the issue of Islamophobia.
Mr. Islam, should we treat all forms of discrimination equally? Think, for example, of Islamophobia, anti‑Semitism, racism, which you were just talking about, or discrimination based on skin colour or sexual orientation. All of this is detrimental to maintaining a healthy climate in Canada and Quebec. In your opinion, should we treat all these forms of discrimination in the same way, or are there particular challenges that we need to tackle differently, particularly in the case of Islamophobia?
Mr. Islam, my question is for you.
Madam Chair, can the witness hear me?
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
As I was saying, I thank all the witnesses for being with us today.
Anti‑Semitism is an important, even major, concern for all of Quebec and Canada. Personally, I'm delighted to learn more about the Islamic religion and the lives of Muslims in Canada. Your testimonials will certainly help us.
We've just conducted a study on anti‑Semitism. This has enabled us, in my case at least, to learn a great deal about the Jewish religion and the various challenges facing the Jewish community in Canada. This morning, I'm learning about the challenges you face. I find these lessons very valuable. So thank you for being here.
I have a question for Mr. Islam.
As I understand from the testimony we've heard so far, people feel fear when they walk in the streets, go to school or go to public places. Ms. Al‑Sabawi and a few other witnesses mentioned this to us today. This is important.
The question I have is: Should we treat different forms of discrimination and the challenges they pose in the same way? Let's think about Islamophobia, anti‑Semitism, racism based on nationality or skin colour, or discrimination against LGBTQ groups, for example. Should we treat all these problems in the same way, or should we consider different solutions in the case of Islamophobia, since the challenges are different?
Mr. Islam, I'd like to hear your opinion on this matter.
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All the forms of hatred that you mentioned, each and every single one, absolutely deserve addressing. There is some overlap, and where there is overlap, there are common solutions that would work to address some of the similarities.
I mentioned that one of the forms of Islamophobia comes from white supremacism, a belief in the great replacement theory. The Islamophobia that comes from that goes hand in hand with anti-Semitism. I quoted one of the inspirations of the perpetrator of my family's killing. He was inspired by New Zealand. He was inspired by California. The terrorist in California, when he wasn't able to set fire to the mosque, shot people in a synagogue.
You can certainly draw a chain of killers—even in Buffalo, New York, which happened in 2022; in El Paso, Texas; and at the Pittsburgh synagogue. The great replacement theory, the echo chambers that people fall into and the rabbit holes people go down are real things, so addressing them would address many types of hate at the same time. However, doing that wouldn't provide a complete solution.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
I want to start by expressing my condolences to the families that have lost loved ones. I thank the witnesses—and I agree with the chair—for the bravery of being here today.
I know that all members of the committee will want to know of any consequences of your appearance today. I heard from one of the witnesses who appeared in our anti-Semitism study of an attempt to retaliate for their appearance at the committee, and we will be taking measures to make sure that we follow up on that. We care very much and will be very vigilant about any attempts to intimidate people who appear before our committee.
Your powerful testimony today illustrates what I hoped we would achieve. When we started with the idea of studying anti-Semitism, I believed we should also study Islamophobia, not necessarily because they always go hand in hand, but because these are two of the most virulent forms of hatred presently in our society.
What you have said to us today about the loss of a sense of belonging and the loss of a sense of safety is very powerful and is something that Parliament really must address. I want to ask Mr. Nalir from the Toronto Islamic Centre and Community Services what he feels has been most effective in helping restore a sense of security, if that's been possible, and what would be most helpful in trying to restore a sense of security to the members of his mosque.
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No. The messages the government has sent on this I don't think are convincing. I keep hearing “Diversity is our strength”. It's a mantra. It doesn't carry any meaning for me. Why is it our strength? How has government shown that it's our strength? If you don't have an answer to that, I don't think people are going to believe it at face value when you say it.
The protection of any minority, not just Muslims, has to be conveyed by the government. I think it's the government's job to do a much better job of saying, “This is how we protect the most vulnerable or marginalized communities, and this is why we should be doing it.” I don't think putting out more facts is going to sway people who think otherwise. There has to be a much more compelling reason for bringing Canadians, all Canadians, together, and that's the government's job to do.
The othering of minorities happens. As Hamza just alluded to, it's happening at the institutional level. That could be from people who, for political reasons, want to make Muslims the “other”. That has to be addressed.
Parliamentary committees play a role in this. Particularly after the 9/11 era, the individuals and organizations that were asked to speak at parliamentary committees were pulled in from organizations and think tanks that are funded by private donors and private family foundations, not supported by the general Muslim populace or scholars at reputable universities. If you invite pseudo-scholars or partisan ex-Muslims to testify at Parliament, you're playing a role in the othering, and that's not right. House and Senate committees need to start an executive task of source-checking and not just fact-checking, because fact-checking in the modern era doesn't work.
:
Thank you, Chair, for including me today on this important issue.
Omar, Ali, Shaffni, Hamza and Maryam, assalam alaikum wa rahmatullahi wa barakatuhu, and welcome to the committee.
I'm sorry to hear all these factual stories about what has happened, about the suffering. Especially in Canada, it hurts to hear that we still have to deal with these issues, although we believe that we live in a world that is different from what we've experienced in past decades. There is no lack of evidence. There is no lack of incidents happening. I think there's a lack of action.
Dr. Islam, you've mentioned a few things. You said that the government message is not efficient. You believe that there are still things not being acted upon as far as how to tackle and deal with this issue goes. You examined what you call the “disease”, and then you mentioned that there are many types of Islamophobia, which we realize. It could be regional. It could be ethnic. It could be religion- or sect-based. It could be any type or form.
We are facing a big challenge. I know that the Muslim community is not alone. There's anti-Semitism on the rise in the country too.
Dr. Islam, what is the action plan? We need a short-term plan and long-term solutions in this work in progress we are faced with. You're a community representative and you're attached to a family that went through this hardship. How do you see the solution? How can everybody work together? Is there a plan in your mind and in the community's mind? Do you think that's going to put things in a perspective that helps tackle this issue?
:
It's a great question, Ziad. Obviously, it will take people from many disciplines to do it. It's not just government. It won't just be community leaders.
The role of education is not something to be overlooked. We may tend to pass it off as a provincial responsibility, but for the sake of national unity and cohesion, the education system cannot be overlooked.
One of the drivers of hate is also one of the drivers of polarization. Generally speaking, no matter where you look, polarization has increased over time, and the middle is drying up. People are going one way or the other, and everyone is moving apart. It can be on a variety of issues. It could be on climate change. It could be on vaccines. It could be on anything. This is where the study of polarization has to overlap with the study of hatred. It will take many disciplines to come together.
The reality is that we don't get information anymore from benign conduits. We're being fed more and more information about what we like. If you interact with it, forward it and comment on it, the algorithms assume that you like it. You're going to get more and more. Tech companies know this and they take advantage of it. This serves their purposes. They don't have a duty to be responsible citizens. I think this is creating a wedge in society.
The answer is very complex. As I said earlier, the messaging to the public has to be very effective. It has to appeal to emotion and not be just fact-based. If we start with the education system to inoculate people against different types of echo chambers and inoculate people against logical fallacies and mental traps, that can start at a very young age. This goes beyond teaching math and spelling. This goes to the heart of logic. If we start in the elementary school system, I think we're going to be better off as a populace.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you to all the witnesses for being here and to all members for studying this important matter.
This is a very apt conversation. We're having many important conversations about anti-Semitism. Now it's Pride Month. Our government addresses all forms of discrimination, be it anti-Black or other forms that exist in society. This is an extremely important study, and I want to thank the witnesses, especially those who have gone through personal tragedy, for their strength and courage. I hope their healing process is moving ahead.
I only have about four and a half minutes, so I'm asking for concise answers. I want to start off with Mr. Nalir.
Mr. Nalir, you mentioned the security of institutions—places of worship and community institutions. First off, are you aware of the security infrastructure program? If so—and I'm hoping you'll say yes—do you find it hard to access? Give a simple answer on those fronts.
:
Thank you so much. The liaison idea is a great idea.
I'd like to move on to Mr. Ali Islam.
You referenced a really important piece of legislation, Bill , which is the online harms act. I'm quite preoccupied with the online space. I've noticed on my own social media that when I post about certain issues, there's a lot of trolling. I don't know if it's from trolls in particular or bot farms, but I have a lot of trolling and a lot of it's hateful. I can't delete the middle fingers. I can't delete the hateful comments towards other identifiable groups.
I'm wondering if you think, from your knowledge, that Bill , the online harms act, will help address the issue of misinformation, bots and hate that's being spewed online.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you to all of the witnesses for being with us here today.
Dr. Islam, my first question is for you. First of all, I offer my sympathies to you and your family because I understand that you're related to the Afzaal family, who were the victims of a brutal attack in London three years ago.
I'm not going to use the person's name. The person who was ultimately convicted of this attack was charged and convicted of four separate charges of first-degree murder and one charge of attempted murder. In addition, the Superior Court of Ontario found that he had committed acts of terrorism. That didn't make any difference to the sentencing, but I want to know from you, in your opinion, whether it made a difference.
Does it make a difference to you, to your family, to the broader Muslim community and, I would say, to all Canadians that this person was found guilty of an act of terrorism?
Thank you to the witnesses for being here and for the powerful presentations, especially by Maryam.
Dr. Islam, I'm a father of three, and I was in London after the tragedy happened. My daughter goes to school. She's in grade 9, and she wears a hijab. Since that incident, I haven't let her walk home or walk to school. My wife picks her up from and drops her off at school.
That incident has had a lasting impact on every Muslim in Canada. I'd never felt that way before. My kids and family had never felt that way prior to this event. When you were talking about the incident and the feelings of your son and daughter, I could relate that to my family.
I want to ask how you feel about the court decision. I know you talked about it. You can see the government's response and our law enforcement and court's responses to that incident. Do you think we are working on improving how we tackle Islamophobia and anti-Semitism or not? What are your thoughts on that?
I want to thank all of our witnesses for being here today. For those of you who have experienced the loss of your loved ones, I want to add my personal condolences as well.
I was really struck by what Omar Babili talked about. He talked about the impact when his church was attacked. Local politicians really did nothing. It resonated with me, because we've had a hundred Christian churches in this country torched, and the Liberal government has said and done nothing. On the anti-Semitism study that we're just finishing up, we heard about the 500% increase in anti-Semitic hate events. Others felt as well that the federal government had not adequately acted.
I'm interested in hearing about Islamophobia, because since 2017, there's been a House of Commons study on Islamophobia, which brought forward 16 recommendations; the Senate report that was mentioned, which made 60 recommendations on what the government could do; and a national summit in Canada on Islamophobia. The government also put a special representative in place to combat Islamophobia.
With all of that, Omar, do you feel that the efforts of the federal government have decreased Islamophobia in Canada?
:
Thank you, Madam Chair, and thank you very much to all the witnesses.
The testimony you have provided has been very powerful. I know it wasn't easy, but I think you have all established that Islamophobia, regrettably, is alive and well and that as a country, we should be doing much better to combat Islamophobia, much as we do with other hate crimes.
I will start off with Dr. Islam.
Mr. Fortin started off with a question about whether there are commonalities between Islamophobia and anti-Semitism. The reason is that he was wondering whether we could use the same tools for combatting Islamophobia. Obviously, both of them are disconcerting.
You had the opportunity to say that in certain respects, there were overlaps between the two. However, I suspect you also wanted to elaborate on what the particularities of Islamophobia are and why that's significant. Am I correct in my assessment, and would you care to elaborate on that point?
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
My question is for the student, Mr. Omer.
Currently, section 319 of the Criminal Code prohibits promoting hatred or fomenting anti‑Semitism. However, there is an exception to this prohibition. Section 319(3)(b) states that “no person shall be convicted of an offence … if, in good faith, the person expressed or attempted to establish by an argument an opinion on a religious subject or an opinion based on a belief in a religious text”. It is therefore forbidden to foment hatred or anti‑Semitism, but one can do so if, in good faith, one expresses an opinion on a religious subject.
A bill has recently been introduced to eliminate these exceptions, so that no one can, under any circumstances, foment hatred or anti‑Semitism. It doesn't matter if the person is basing their statements on a religious text. It should simply be forbidden.
I'd like you to tell me what you think, in about thirty seconds, Mr. Omer. Then, I'd like to put the same question to other witnesses.
Actually, my question was more for student Hamza Omer, who has been added to the panel, but hasn't had a chance to answer any questions yet. That's okay, I'll let it go, since time is running out.
I'd like to hear Mr. Nalir's response to that same question.
Did you hear the question, Mr. Nalir?
It seems not, so I'll let it go.
So I'll turn to you, Mr. Islam. I apologize, but I only have a few seconds left to hear your opinion on the matter.
Section 319 of the Criminal Code prohibits the promotion of hatred or anti‑Semitism. There is an exception that says you can do so if you base it on a religious text. We propose abolishing this exception. What do you think?
Witnesses, thank you very much for coming today. Again, all members appreciate very much your being candid and appearing with us. If there is anything you feel you can contribute to us that you were asked and were not able to fully respond to, please send in your answers.
That brings me to what I need to ask the committee about. I'm proposing that the date of Friday, June 21, be the deadline for briefs for the study of anti-Islamophobia. I want to put on the record that June 21 will be the deadline for anybody to submit any briefs for this study. I think the reminder was that they are to be three pages in length.
That brings us to the end of our committee.
Witnesses, thank you very much.
Members, thank you very much. Does anybody have their hand up based on what I said?
Mr. Garrison.