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Anxiety intensifies in Toronto's suburbs as anti-Muslim rhetoric escalates

yung_dood

Banned
Jul 2, 2011
1,698
1
0
GLENN LOWSON/THE GLOBE AND MAIL
CAROLINE ALPHONSO
EDUCATION REPORTER
19 HOURS AGO
APRIL 14, 2017

Hamza Aziz makes sure to stay close to a friend at all times, and his parents have told him not to be outside after dark – precautions the student never imagined would be needed in his quiet corner of suburban Toronto.

But recent tensions between his school board and some members of the community, including anti-Muslim groups, over providing space for Mr. Aziz and other students to pray as a group every Friday have heightened concerns about safety in the Peel region, just west of Toronto.

"[My parents] are afraid of hate crimes towards the Muslim community, especially since that's been on the rise lately," said Mr. Aziz, a high-school student in Mississauga.

That anxiety forced the Peel District School Board to step up security measures at its most recent board meeting on Wednesday evening. Police and security guards were present, guests had to sign in and show identification at the door and the meeting was videotaped. Outside, a group who covered their faces with bandanas to prevent nearby protesters from identifying them said they were there to escort people into the board office safely.

Recent incidents in Peel have caused concern among Muslims, who are among the area's largest religious minority groups. At an earlier school-board meeting, audience members shouted anti-Muslim rhetoric, tore pages from a Koran and stepped on the religious text. More recently, an inflammatory video circulating online offered a cash reward for a recording of Muslim students using hate speech in Friday prayers.

And on Wednesday evening, Peel police were called to a Mississauga neighbourhood after graffiti with the words "White Power" was smeared on a Canada Post mailbox. The words were scrubbed off, and police say they are investigating.

Critics argue a secular school system should not accommodate religion. But Ontario boards, both public and Catholic, are legally required to provide religious accommodation when it is requested.

Devout Muslim students have observed congregational prayers, known as Jummah, in Peel schools for more than two decades. But the issue came to the forefront in the fall, when the board began reviewing whether to allow students to write their own sermons, approved by a school administrator, or be required to choose from six prewritten ones.

After some push-back from community members and students, such as Mr. Aziz, who said the decision to limit their sermons violated their right to religious freedom, the board earlier this year revised its procedure and allowed students to deliver their own sermons or choose from several prewritten ones approved by local imams.

But vocal opponents used the issue to step up their anti-Muslim rhetoric.

Mr. Aziz said he overheard those in the audience at a previous board meeting call him a terrorist. He said another person told him he was not a real Canadian. A friend has been threatened on social media, he said.

A teacher in Peel, who asked that her name be withheld because she fears for her family's safety, said she asked her teenage son if he wanted to keep participating in Friday prayers at his Brampton school. He told her that the congregational prayer was a form of meditation for him, and he was not going to let fear stop him. The prayer is about 15 minutes.

"I think parents are feeling, 'Are our children safe during Jummah prayers?'" she said, adding that her fear grew after the video offering a cash reward. "As a parent, I get afraid that what if one day that hate and negative rhetoric becomes escalated and it's a Muslim child who ends up being in front of that heat."

The teacher has lived in Brampton for 21 years. She said neighbours have asked her why the situation has grown so heated. Some Muslims in the community said they had been targeted on social media after they spoke out against Islamophobia.

"There is a lot of fear," she said. "It's hard for Muslim kids to know that there's so much hatred against them."

Ibrahim Hindy, an imam in Mississauga, said community leaders are telling organizations to increase security at their events. The fear is that the rhetoric will escalate. In January, six worshippers were shot and killed at a Quebec City mosque. Alexandre Bissonnette, 27, faces six charges of first-degree murder.

"People are wondering at what point the police will get involved, because they feel like there are targets being placed on their back and there's a climate of fear that's being generated against them," Mr. Hindy said. "Like we saw in Quebec, you create that climate of fear and intimidation and it takes just one person to do something catastrophic."

Mr. Hindy sits on the Peel school board's multifaith group, which meets four times a year and advises educators on how to accommodate students on significant faith days.

"Nobody thought it would ever reach this point," Mr. Hindy said of the anti-Muslim rhetoric in his community. "But it's not happening in a vacuum … I think that there's generally been a rise in anti-Muslim hate groups and anti-Semitic groups and there's general rise of hatred."

For his part, Mr. Aziz said misconceptions about Muslim prayers are being torqued by "hateful people in order to mislead the general public." Students at his school participating in the Friday prayers have told him they feel unsafe.

"I feel that sentiment, too," he said, "however, I will not give in to the fear-mongering."

https://beta.theglobeandmail.com/news/toronto/anxiety-intensifies-in-peel-as-anti-muslim-rhetoric-escalates/article34714564/?ref=http://www.theglobeandmail.com&click=sf_globefb&service=mobile
 

SkyRider

Banned
Mar 31, 2009
17,572
2
0
I think the body they found in Scarborough this morning is a 24 year old Muslim.

I still think Muslims here are much much safer than Muslims in Muslimland. Car bomb killed around 100 in Syria to-day.
 

fuji

Banned
Jan 31, 2005
80,012
7
0
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
is.gd
The level of anti Muslim hate out there now is similar to the demonization of Jews in the 20s. That paved the way for the removal of their rights in the 30s.
 

Smallcock

Active member
Jun 5, 2009
13,703
21
38
The level of anti Muslim hate out there now is similar to the demonization of Jews in the 20s. That paved the way for the removal of their rights in the 30s.
Diversity is strength?
 

SkyRider

Banned
Mar 31, 2009
17,572
2
0
Muslims need to improve their public image. Calling people Islamophobes doesn't cut it. Whining to Trudeau doesn't cut it.
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
59,843
6,341
113
Muslims need to improve their public image. Calling people Islamophobes doesn't cut it. Whining to Trudeau doesn't cut it.
So do us Irish. And blaming people for what others a few people a world away are doing is disgusting.

As I posted in another thread, this past week saw three work related public shootings in the US (a mall, a school , and a gym). That sure seems like more of a threat to North America that Muslim terrorism.
 

buttercup

Active member
Feb 28, 2005
2,569
4
38
GLENN LOWSON/THE GLOBE AND MAIL
Mr. Hindy sits on the Peel school board's multifaith group, which meets four times a year and advises educators on how to accommodate students on significant faith days.
How about meeting four times a year to advise multifaith students on accommodating themselves to traditional Canadian values?
 

frankcastle

Well-known member
Feb 4, 2003
17,887
239
63
Muslims need to improve their public image. Calling people Islamophobes doesn't cut it. Whining to Trudeau doesn't cut it.
unfortunately sometimes they are right....islamaphobia is real. just look at the broad brush some people use on terb.

it is not whining to ask to be treated in the same ways as others within the laws of canada.
 

frankcastle

Well-known member
Feb 4, 2003
17,887
239
63
I think the body they found in Scarborough this morning is a 24 year old Muslim.

I still think Muslims here are much much safer than Muslims in Muslimland. Car bomb killed around 100 in Syria to-day.
yeah i guess gays and women should also just shut up and feel lucky the live in canada.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
80,633
17,845
113
Muslims need to improve their public image. Calling people Islamophobes doesn't cut it. Whining to Trudeau doesn't cut it.
Calling people out for racist or sexist behaviour does in fact change behaviour.
I remember as a kid that we'd all use racist names against Pakistani's, Italians and just about everyone who wasn't WASP. Just as calling someone or something 'gay' used to be about the worst thing you could call someone. Calling out that type of behaviour has made it less prevalent.

Calling posters here for racist attitudes calls attention to behaviour and attitudes that need to change.
 

Butler1000

Well-known member
Oct 31, 2011
28,812
3,468
113
Calling people out for racist or sexist behaviour does in fact change behaviour.
I remember as a kid that we'd all use racist names against Pakistani's, Italians and just about everyone who wasn't WASP. Just as calling someone or something 'gay' used to be about the worst thing you could call someone. Calling out that type of behaviour has made it less prevalent.

Calling posters here for racist attitudes calls attention to behaviour and attitudes that need to change.
Exactly. So the passages in the Koran that say incite Hatred against Gay people, or the ones that in inspire misogyny need to be called out. And the preachers that include them in sermons need to be called out.

And when those that believe in those passages try to tell you that because it's religious it's ok need to be called out and told they can't hide behind their religion and practice these things. That they are wrong. And their belief system is wrong.
 

Butler1000

Well-known member
Oct 31, 2011
28,812
3,468
113
That is what the public school system teaches every day, Canadian values.
While allowing the Islamic Teachings, including separation of the sexes, and even the teaching that menstruating girls are "unclean" on site.

Sends a mixed message don't you think?
 

FAST

Banned
Mar 12, 2004
10,069
1
0
While allowing the Islamic Teachings, including separation of the sexes, and even the teaching that menstruating girls are "unclean" on site.

Sends a mixed message don't you think?
When The School of Continuing Religious Indoctrination has preference over an education in computer sciences in a PUBLIC school,...that is in fact what you get.

FAST
 

frankcastle

Well-known member
Feb 4, 2003
17,887
239
63
I really implore people to please take a look at this fact sheet made by the peel board

http://www.peelschools.org/aboutus/equity/Pages/default.aspx

The perception that religious accommodations is something new and created for Muslims is false.

The perception that other kids were deprived of education as a result of these prayers is false. The information regarding the computer lab came as a result of hearsay..... where a mother was retelling a story told by a daughter to another mother.

How old was the child? Do you think she can explain the inner workings of booking a computer room and who was scheduled to use it? In all likelihood what happened was a teacher took their kids to the computer lab early or didn't book the lab (assuming that much of the story was true). It's very easy for a mother to claim she heard something from another mother because with no names it is very tough to verify.

The board's stance is that it was an unused room and that the supervising teacher was doing it on their own time as a volunteer.

A BBC article mentions Rise Canada and a man with the last name Banjeree who led a campaign against Friday prayers in TDSB in 2011 and draws to question how much is public outrage vs specific interest groups causing the uproar.

If you google Ron Banjeree you will find that he has said some pretty crazy shit.

Hate to say it but the Ontario Human Rights Code is on the Muslims' side. End of story. Sorry some people don't like that but it really isn't a big deal and your child will not suffer as a result of this.
 

slowandeasy

Why am I here?
May 4, 2003
7,232
0
36
GTA
The level of anti Muslim hate out there now is similar to the demonization of Jews in the 20s. That paved the way for the removal of their rights in the 30s.
The claim that the level of Anti-Muslim hate is similar to Jews in the 20s is just not true. The insinuation that this will lead to the removal of rights is ridiculous.
 

SuperCharge

Banned
Jun 11, 2011
2,523
1
0
The claim that the level of Anti-Muslim hate is similar to Jews in the 20s is just not true. The insinuation that this will lead to the removal of rights is ridiculous.
Its the same bullshit excuse when the antifas use Hitler to describe Trump supporters. They don't have a fucking clue. I say let all those antifas have to do some military time, that should straighten them out.

The only removal of anyones rights here in Canada was our right to wish people a "Merry Christmas" and hear the National Anthem played in schools in a country founded on Christianity. They want us to recognise their freedoms and rights as they trample on ours when they 'chose' to come here for a better life, for a CANADIAN lifestyle..They can keep fucking dreaming.

There is a huge grass movement of really pissed off Canadians from all backgrounds that are starting to wake up! I talk to people from all parts of Canada and I hear the same things from them. They are pissed off at all this anti-islamaphobia shit (They think it's a joke as we don't have a islam problem here in Canada) and the 400+ million dollars that are being shipped out to the middle east while us Canadians can barely decide on what to pay, the heat or the food bill. 2019 is going to be an beautiful year. The liberals already know they are done. So what are they doing? They are doing a liberal switch. Liberals are pretending to be Convservatives now. Just happened last week in Vaughan.

WATCH: Riding nomination chaos: Is Patrick Brown a conservative in name only?
 

SuperCharge

Banned
Jun 11, 2011
2,523
1
0
GLENN LOWSON/THE GLOBE AND MAIL
CAROLINE ALPHONSO
EDUCATION REPORTER
19 HOURS AGO
APRIL 14, 2017

Hamza Aziz makes sure to stay close to a friend at all times, and his parents have told him not to be outside after dark – precautions the student never imagined would be needed in his quiet corner of suburban Toronto.

But recent tensions between his school board and some members of the community, including anti-Muslim groups, over providing space for Mr. Aziz and other students to pray as a group every Friday have heightened concerns about safety in the Peel region, just west of Toronto.

"[My parents] are afraid of hate crimes towards the Muslim community, especially since that's been on the rise lately," said Mr. Aziz, a high-school student in Mississauga.

That anxiety forced the Peel District School Board to step up security measures at its most recent board meeting on Wednesday evening. Police and security guards were present, guests had to sign in and show identification at the door and the meeting was videotaped. Outside, a group who covered their faces with bandanas to prevent nearby protesters from identifying them said they were there to escort people into the board office safely.

Recent incidents in Peel have caused concern among Muslims, who are among the area's largest religious minority groups. At an earlier school-board meeting, audience members shouted anti-Muslim rhetoric, tore pages from a Koran and stepped on the religious text. More recently, an inflammatory video circulating online offered a cash reward for a recording of Muslim students using hate speech in Friday prayers.

And on Wednesday evening, Peel police were called to a Mississauga neighbourhood after graffiti with the words "White Power" was smeared on a Canada Post mailbox. The words were scrubbed off, and police say they are investigating.

Critics argue a secular school system should not accommodate religion. But Ontario boards, both public and Catholic, are legally required to provide religious accommodation when it is requested.

Devout Muslim students have observed congregational prayers, known as Jummah, in Peel schools for more than two decades. But the issue came to the forefront in the fall, when the board began reviewing whether to allow students to write their own sermons, approved by a school administrator, or be required to choose from six prewritten ones.

After some push-back from community members and students, such as Mr. Aziz, who said the decision to limit their sermons violated their right to religious freedom, the board earlier this year revised its procedure and allowed students to deliver their own sermons or choose from several prewritten ones approved by local imams.

But vocal opponents used the issue to step up their anti-Muslim rhetoric.

Mr. Aziz said he overheard those in the audience at a previous board meeting call him a terrorist. He said another person told him he was not a real Canadian. A friend has been threatened on social media, he said.

A teacher in Peel, who asked that her name be withheld because she fears for her family's safety, said she asked her teenage son if he wanted to keep participating in Friday prayers at his Brampton school. He told her that the congregational prayer was a form of meditation for him, and he was not going to let fear stop him. The prayer is about 15 minutes.

"I think parents are feeling, 'Are our children safe during Jummah prayers?'" she said, adding that her fear grew after the video offering a cash reward. "As a parent, I get afraid that what if one day that hate and negative rhetoric becomes escalated and it's a Muslim child who ends up being in front of that heat."

The teacher has lived in Brampton for 21 years. She said neighbours have asked her why the situation has grown so heated. Some Muslims in the community said they had been targeted on social media after they spoke out against Islamophobia.

"There is a lot of fear," she said. "It's hard for Muslim kids to know that there's so much hatred against them."

Ibrahim Hindy, an imam in Mississauga, said community leaders are telling organizations to increase security at their events. The fear is that the rhetoric will escalate. In January, six worshippers were shot and killed at a Quebec City mosque. Alexandre Bissonnette, 27, faces six charges of first-degree murder.

"People are wondering at what point the police will get involved, because they feel like there are targets being placed on their back and there's a climate of fear that's being generated against them," Mr. Hindy said. "Like we saw in Quebec, you create that climate of fear and intimidation and it takes just one person to do something catastrophic."

Mr. Hindy sits on the Peel school board's multifaith group, which meets four times a year and advises educators on how to accommodate students on significant faith days.

"Nobody thought it would ever reach this point," Mr. Hindy said of the anti-Muslim rhetoric in his community. "But it's not happening in a vacuum … I think that there's generally been a rise in anti-Muslim hate groups and anti-Semitic groups and there's general rise of hatred."

For his part, Mr. Aziz said misconceptions about Muslim prayers are being torqued by "hateful people in order to mislead the general public." Students at his school participating in the Friday prayers have told him they feel unsafe.

"I feel that sentiment, too," he said, "however, I will not give in to the fear-mongering."

https://beta.theglobeandmail.com/ne...beandmail.com&click=sf_globefb&service=mobile
You should look into Iqra Khalid the Mississauga MP who has brought on the M-103 motion and look into her father. You will see she has an agenda. We're all onto her though. Mississauga folks are very very unhappy with this Pakistani communist. We aren't as dumbed down here in Canada as opposed to our neighbors so we won't be putting up with this. Guaranteed!
 
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