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The Discussion That Anti-Zionism is Not Anti-Semitism

shack

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Zionist is code word for Jew. Hatred of Jews is rampant especially in Terb.
It's a well-know anti-Semitic trope. The number of people protesting around that false-flag of Zionism really shows that nothing has actually changed since WWII.
People hated Jews for being Jews and they still do, exactly the same as the Nazis. I hear that there's been a recent surge of sales of brown shirts. It's all the rage.
 

shack

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All zionists are also supremacists, aren't they?
So the only racism that counts as racism is antisemitism, since no other race are humans.
We've heard all of your rhetoric Geno. We haven't heard any comments on what DiManno wrote.
 

shack

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You care about those other topics? Great. Create a thread. This one is about Israel and therefore we stay on topic talk about Israel, Zionism and anti-Zionism.
So you admit not caring about these other issues.

You now admit that it is a truism when people say, "No Jews, no news." That is exactly what you just said.

All you care about is demonizing Israel while you pretend to be worried about the humanitarian crisis. You've just proved that you've been lying. You don't care about any other humanitarian crises.
 
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NotADcotor

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All this we don't hate Jews we are just Anti Zionism reminds me of back in the day when white supremacists absolutely insisted [or some of them did] that they didn't hate blacks, they just wanted a separate homeland. Nobody believed them, hell I am pretty sure they didn't believe it either. Sadly in this case I don't think the usual suspects have the self awareness to see their own hatred.
 
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Leimonis

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Sadly in this case I don't think the usual suspects have the self awareness to see their own hatred.
they are beaming virtue signals out of their ass and are convinced that they are the greatest humanitarians ever
 

Frankfooter

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I'm against moronic posts/questions like this. Did I write that article, Geno? Did I voice an opinion on this practice?

The article is about how, based on this campaign, it shows that a Jew doesn't have to be a Zionist to be attacked by the people spreading hate. It debunks your claim

Tell us your opinion on these doctors being systematically intimidated and harassed within their profession by people who don't care if he's Zionist or not. How do you defend the actions of these Jew hating racists? You say you only hate Jews who are Zionists. If this is as you claim , condemn this anti-Semitic campaign.
The very first line under the headline of your article:

Dr. Philip Berger last week penned a letter in which 555 Jewish U of T physician faculty members declared their Zionism and their right to work openly as Zionists.

Your article says they were hated for being zionists, not for being Jewish.
As they should be.
Zionism is racism and now zionism = genocide.

 
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Frankfooter

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All this we don't hate Jews we are just Anti Zionism reminds me of back in the day when white supremacists absolutely insisted [or some of them did] that they didn't hate blacks, they just wanted a separate homeland. Nobody believed them, hell I am pretty sure they didn't believe it either. Sadly in this case I don't think the usual suspects have the self awareness to see their own hatred.
During Vietnam protesters were called commies and commie lovers.
 
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shack

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It is irrelevant whether or not I care about those other issues,
It is the core point in proving your hypocrisy when you make a false claim to care about Palestinian humanitarian crisis.

The fact that you don't care about any of those other humanitarian crises, means that humanitarianism is never on your radar. "No Jew, no news" is your credo. You've now verified this several times in this thread.
 

shack

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The very first line under the headline of your article:

Dr. Philip Berger last week penned a letter in which 555 Jewish U of T physician faculty members declared their Zionism and their right to work openly as Zionists.

Your article says they were hated for being zionists, not for being Jewish.
Here's my article. None of what you say is in there. It, in fact, says the exact opposite of what you are saying. It's unbelievable what you think that you can get away with.
How a malevolent online campaign targets Jewish doctors (thestar.com)
 

Klatuu

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Here's my article. None of what you say is in there. It, in fact, says the exact opposite of what you are saying. It's unbelievable what you think that you can get away with.
How a malevolent online campaign targets Jewish doctors (thestar.com)
You are completely in the dark about this issue. All these Drs declared they are Zionist.

OVER 550 JEWISH PHYSICIANS IN THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO’S TEMERTY
FACULTY OF MEDICINE PROCLAIM THEIR ZIONISM

“Today, 555 Jewish physician faculty issued a public statement declaring their
right to work openly as Zionists free of censure. They define for themselves
what is antisemitic and will not let antizionists define it for them.”

http://daradocs.org/wp-content/uploads/Press-Release-website-version.pdf

I used to like Phil Berger but he is just an old entitled bigot now. He seems to think because he helped out on other good causes that he should get a pass for supporting Israeli genocide now. Not going to happen Phil. Use your head.

There’s no evidence of antisemitism in this article. And there was no doxing of the Drs who signed this letter…..they all published their names along with their views. Supporting the genocide of Palestinians seems to be in direct contradiction of their mission as healers while on the public payroll.
 
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canada-man

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The Same soviet Union who created the palestinian movement also created "anti-zionism" ideology



Red Terror: How the Soviet Union Shaped the Modern Anti-Zionist Discourse4



Zionism has become perhaps the most maligned and distorted term in the vernacular of the Arab-Israeli conflict. The origins of modern anti-Zionist discourse needs to be explored and the association to the Jewish national liberation movement with racism and Nazism needs to be questioned.

The Arab-Israeli conflict traverses decades, manifests in regular wars, terrorism and endless political skirmishes in international forums. It is also a battle to establish narratives – victims and aggressors, Davids and Goliaths, oppressors and oppressed. Language and the meaning given to basic concepts form a key part of this battle. It is easy for Jewish people to establish a claim to the territory known as Judea and Samaria. The later formulation “West Bank,” coined by the Jordanians following their occupation of the area in 1948 is a bland geographic descriptor that strips the territory of its historical significance. The Associated Press recently stumbled into the morass of political language when it declined to identify the men who tortured and killed Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympic Games in 1972 as Palestinian terrorists, instead calling them “guerillas” and “gunmen.” There is also no term in the vernacular of the conflict that is misapplied and distorted more than “Zionism.”

Zionism, correctly understood, refers simply to the return of Jewish people to “Zion,” one of several names given to Jerusalem and the surrounding lands in which the Jews lived and governed in ancient times. In the late 19th century, the idea of returning to those lands shifted from a seemingly intangible ideal and wistful age-old expression of yearning for freedom, to a precise, secular, political movement.

The aim of Zionism was to reconstitute a Jewish state in the territory the Jews knew as “Eretz Yisrael” (The Land of Israel), and which had been renamed “Palestine” following the suppression of the final Jewish rebellion by the Roman Emperor Hadrian in the year 135 CE. The Balfour Declaration, United Nations General Assembly Resolution 181 (II), and a succession of binding instruments of international law from the San Remo Resolution to the League of Nations Mandate for Palestine, had all recognised that the Jews were a distinct people with an unbroken connection to the land and a right to reform their state in some part of that land.

Zionism therefore was the foundational movement of the modern state of Israel. As such, those determined to erase an autonomous Jewish presence from the Middle East have assessed that if they can succeed in depicting Zionism as something loathsome and unjust, the case for Israel can be dramatically undermined.

The contemporary campaign to distort the meaning of Zionism and to associate it with popular concepts of evil, largely has its origins in the rapid deterioration of Soviet-Israeli relations, which conditioned attitudes to Israel in the political left.

Zionism was once celebrated by the left as an organic movement of national return and a model for national liberation and decolonisation movements throughout the world.

Israel’s victory in its War of Independence and refusal to succumb to far mightier foes was positively awe-inspiring to adherents of political movements predicated on toppling structures of power. As chronicled by Philip Mendes in his study of Zionism and the political left, “all international communist parties supported partition and the creation of a Jewish State.” The US Communist Party called Israel “an organic part of the world struggle for peace and democracy,” while the French Communists viewed the Jewish fighters as the comrades of resistance fighters throughout the world.

But as Israel charted its own course, emerged from its wars economically and militarily superior to the Arabs, and became more ambitious and assertive in how it conducted its security affairs, the support of the Soviet Union and of the international left entered a sharp decline, followed by a complete reversal.

As the Cold War set in, Israel’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, assured the US Ambassador that Israel was “western in its orientation, its people are democratic, and realise that only through the co-operation and support of the US can they become strong and remain free.”

Israel’s “western orientation” became abundantly clear to the Soviet Union when it joined Britain and France in the Suez Campaign in 1956 to liberate a key maritime route linking Asia to Europe amidst threats to nationalise the canal by Egypt’s President Gamal Abdel Nasser, a key Soviet ally.

The campaign, seen by Moscow as a direct threat to its strategic power in the Middle East, sent the Soviets into a state of foaming apoplexy, resulting in threats to deploy nuclear weapons against the British and French and to annihilate Israel entirely.

The Soviet Union had already cut diplomatic relations with Israel in February 1953, only weeks before the death of Stalin and after a period of rapid escalation of state antisemitism, culminating in the notorious “Doctors’ Plot,” in which Jewish doctors in the Soviet Union were accused of plotting to poison Party officials.

Soon the state media was saturated with anti-Zionist propaganda, depicting bloated, hook-nosed Jewish bankers and all-consuming serpents embossed with the Star of David.

Anti-Zionism had become virtually indistinguishable from antisemitism. As the British political theorist Alan Johnson observed, “what ‘the Jew’ once was in older antisemitism – uniquely malevolent, full of blood lust, all-controlling, the hidden hand, tricksy, always acting in bad faith, the obstacle to a better, purer, more spiritual world, uniquely deserving of punishment, and so on – the Jewish state now is…”

In time, these depictions would reach not only the Soviet reader but through Soviet satellites in Europe, South America and the Middle East, and through communist parties and publications throughout the world. These ideas would hence nestle in far-left circles in the West, including political parties, human rights organisations, militant trade unions, and of course, campuses.

The propaganda was highly compelling and steeped in long-established themes of Jewish bloodthirstiness, greed, corruption, manipulation and cunning. It would contend that the very existence of a Jewish homeland was not only a plot of imperialism, but a mortal danger to the peace of the world.

It was what Hitler called the “big lie” – the use of dramatically overblown fiction to deceive the public. Hitler, the supreme propagandist, observed that the bigger the lie the more believable it was: “It would never come into people’s heads to fabricate colossal untruths, and they would not believe that others could have the impudence to distort the truth so infamously …”

The big lies about Zionism would soon find their way into the most influential forums in the world. When a sub-commission of the United Nations was tasked with drafting a convention on the “elimination of all forms of racial discrimination,” the proceedings naturally focused on apartheid, neo-Nazism and antisemitism. But the Soviets viewed the reference to antisemitism as a direct rebuke to their anti-Jewish measures, and served up an amendment that “was almost a joke,” even to the Soviet delegation itself.

The amendment inserted Zionism into the listed forms of racism. According to sources close to the deliberations, the Soviets understood “full well that the idea that Zionism is racism is an indefensible position,” yet they floated it anyway, in part to turn the US-led initiative into farce, and in part perhaps, to see how far a “big lie,” could go.

Ultimately, the Convention was adopted with neither antisemitism nor Zionism referred to – the ploy had worked. But the seed has been planted.

On 10 November 1975, the General Assembly of the United Nations passed resolution 3379 on the “elimination of all forms of racial discrimination,” which determined that “Zionism is a form of racism and discrimination.”

The US Ambassador to the United Nations Patrick Moynihan called the resolution “a great evil …” that had given “the abomination of antisemitism the appearance of international sanction.”

The proposition that the Jewish emancipation movement was actually a form of racism, now declared to be truth by the United Nations, could then be used to purge mainstream Jewish voices from liberal campaigns and civil society organisations.

In 1977, student unions across Britain debated motions along the lines of Resolution 3379. York, Salford, Warwick and Lancaster went further, passing motions to expel their Jewish societies “on the grounds that they are Zionist and therefore racist.”

The concept of denying platforms to fascist and white supremacist speakers on university campuses was now being applied to stifle mainstream voices who expressed support for the state of Israel.

Moynihan foresaw this. An earlier UN resolution had, at the instigation of the Soviet Union, viewed “racism to be merely a form of Nazism.” It followed that if racism was merely a form of Nazism and Zionism is a form of racism, then Zionism is a form of Nazism.

On this basis, anti-Zionist students could harass Zionists and be seen as taking a noble stand against Nazism. This twisted logic was applied by anti-Israel students at Sydney University in 2015 when they attempted to stop the public lecture of a retired British colonel for his earlier statements in support of Israel. This was also experienced by the organisers of the Chicago Dyke March who blocked Jewish participants from marching with Stars of David on the basis that Zionism was a form of “white supremacism.”

The theme of Jews becoming the new Nazis, a double blow that associates Zionism with supreme evil and mocks the victims of the Holocaust by equating them with their murderers, has become a mainstay of anti-Zionist discourse.

In a conflict as deep-seated and volatile as this, it may seem like a trifling pursuit to seek to restore accurate meaning to terminology. But there can be no hope for peaceful coexistence between Israelis and Palestinians so long as the movement on which Israel was established seven decades ago, the movement that expresses Jewish hopes and Jewish rights, is so poorly understood and so successfully distorted.

Alex Ryvchin is co-chief executive officer of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry. His new book is “Zionism – The Concise History

This article is published under a Creative Commons Licence and may be republished with attribution.



Red Terror: How the Soviet Union Shaped the Modern Anti-Zionist Discourse - Australian Institute of International Affairs - Australian Institute of International Affairs
 
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Frankfooter

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Here's my article. None of what you say is in there. It, in fact, says the exact opposite of what you are saying. It's unbelievable what you think that you can get away with.
How a malevolent online campaign targets Jewish doctors (thestar.com)
Now you're posting a different article, of course.
That one's behind a paywall but its more of the same antisemitic crap.

You realize that by arguing its antisemitic to criticize genocide that you are arguing that all Jews back genocide, right?
Do you really think that's true?
 

Frankfooter

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Thanks for admitting that you cannot refute a word of what Dimanno wrote and that you support this campaign because it exposes you as being disingenuous when you say that you don't hate Jews only Zionists. Until you address the points she made in this article then there is no need to do anything other than refer you back to the article. You are making my case for me.

All you can do is spew ad hominems instead. I am not surprised.
If you have a subscription copy the full text here.
Then explain why you think its antisemitic to be against genocide, why you argue that all Jews back the genocide in Gaza.
 

Frankfooter

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Hilarious that you are unable to post without using twitter (other people’s opinions), sheeple much or what?
That post provided genocidal quotes from the Israeli leadership to support my argument.
Hilarious that you support those people and genocide, isn't it?
 
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Klatuu

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If you have a subscription copy the full text here.
Then explain why you think its antisemitic to be against genocide, why you argue that all Jews back the genocide in Gaza.
Here it is. A completely self absorbed and entitled litany of racism


“Dox a doc a day.
As anti-Israel — often anti-Jew — protests violently roil campuses across America, a different campaign dripping with malevolence is specifically targeting Jewish physicians right here in Ontario.
There’s no fig-leaf of divestment from Israel, no camouflage exploiting the horrors experienced by civilians in Gaza. Rather, the doxing has been a directed, co-ordinated crusade aimed at physicians whose only “offence’’ is their Jewishness.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW


On social media and via pro forma emails sent to hospital administrators and leadership at teaching institutions, these doctors are being harassed, intimidated and professionally compromised. While part of the strategy is to victimize one particular doctor on a given day — lifting names of individuals who signed a letter last November under the banner of Doctors Against Racism and Antisemitism — the undertaking has spreader wider, become far more encompassing.
Of course most of the garbage is anonymous but on literally hundreds of occasions — letters and emails to MPs, for example — signatories of that DARA letter have been appropriated falsely as if they’re the ones demanding politicians take a harsher position on Israel’s military tactics.
“They’re prompting people to make complaints to their places of work, colleges and universities, hospitals, associations, faculty, the College of Physicians and Surgeons,’’ says Dr. Lisa Switzman. “This has been going on since the beginning of November in a systematic, co-ordinated way, with literally a Jewish doctor of the day.’’
Switzman, whose been involved with tracking the attacks, is uncertain how it all began or who triggered the onslaught. “Basically it was put out by someone who is very anti-Israel, saying these are terrible physicians who’ve signed this letter. All the letter said was that we support Israel and we’re Zionists. Being Jews and supporting Israel’s right to exist is really important to us.’’


Anonymous social media accounts joined the swarming on various platforms, postings that were recycled. “It incited very hateful, antisemitic attacks directly to doctors,’’ continues Switzman.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW


“What was especially upsetting is that they were targeting mainly female family physicians, probably because we’re seen as more vulnerable. At a time of a significant health-care crisis with family physicians, this put added stress on them. Many were quite distraught. Why would you do that to physicians who are saving lives and helping people?’’
The campaign became more heated after pro-Palestinian protesters convened outside Mount Sinai Hospital. “They posted form letters that auto-populated to many more people,” says Switzman. “Because all you have to do is click on it. But that incited other people to send hateful emails to doctors personally.’’
The doxing expanded to physicians who’d never signed the DARA letter.
Initially, some hospital administrators summoned doctors who were identified, to remind them of institutional social media policy. Some doctors were suspended while investigations of complaints were launched. Generally, however, hospitals and medical faculties have been supportive, more concerned about security for the targeted.
“This is why we’ve been scared for so long about speaking out in public, because now we’re going to be targeted,’’ says Switzman. “They’re silencing us. It’s important for people to know what’s happening to Jewish doctors and medical students and residents, that it’s not OK and it needs to stop.’’
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW


Of the original tweets and other comments posted by the doctors afterwards targeted — those the Star has been able to examine — none were overtly hostile or political. Many had expressed revulsion over the Oct. 7 Hamas atrocities in Israel, many conveyed support for Israel or tried to present the historical context, some condemned attacks against Jewish businesses and schools, others pleaded for calm.
Dr. Ilana Halperin had, on Oct. 8, posted a quote often attributed to Golda Meir: “If the Arabs put down their weapons today, there would be no more violence. If the Jews put down their weapons today, there would be no more Israel.’’
Anonymous accounts immediately attacked, going after her job.
After she was tagged on a tweet in early November, it turned into an onslaught. “Somebody said, ‘Does anybody have Zionist doctors? They’re the worst of humanity.’ That got a lot of traction.’’
She was called in by the department head where she teaches. “She said first and foremost she was afraid for my safety because there had been a number of complaints about me at the university. She wanted me to stop tweeting because she was scared for me. She actually said, your message is good but the medium is wrong. You’re not going to change anybody’s mind on Twitter and everything you say is being used against you.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW


“I realized she was probably right. But at the same time it was really distressing, to have to silence a core of my identity where it felt so important to speak up and share my perspective. My identity is made up of three core roles: I’m Jewish, I’m a doctor and I’m a mother.’’
Halperin deleted her entire Twitter account. “Which was pretty disappointing because I’d had a Twitter presence for a long time. There were a lot of interactions for my medical area of practice. But at that point it became not a safe place to be.’’
One consequence was that Halperin received a negative teaching evaluation from a student. “Negative teaching evaluations are a really big deal for a university faculty because it can impact your ability to get promoted. Eventually the evaluation was removed from my record because it was found to be totally vexatious. They were trying to pull this personal side of my identity into the learning environment. But the damage was already done because it made me afraid to teach. Mostly a fear of being mislabeled, misunderstood, that they may not actually engage with the medical content because they’re now preoccupied with who I am as an individual.’’
Halperin adds: “I worry about the next generation of Jewish students. I’ve spoken to Jewish medical students and residents who feel they have to completely scrub their resumés and applications of anything that might identity them as being Jewish or a supporter of Israel.’’
Another female doctor, with three young children — she asked not to be identified — had surveillance cameras installed around her home, arranged security for the person who takes her kids to school and hired professionals to scrub her social media accounts. “What I’d posted was about my own fears essentially. Not even close to hateful about anybody.”
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW


Her hospital considered for her safety, even provided her with a “screamer alarm,’’ in case she was physically threatened on the way to her car.
“On the other hand, I don’t know if they immediately saw it for what it was, which was a co-ordinated antisemitic attack demonizing Jews.’’
This doctor’s father, now deceased, was a Holocaust survivor. “I dedicate my work and my career to just doing some good, which he taught me. He would be shocked to see what’s happening today in Canada. I’m shocked.
“It’s an awful, scary feeling. It’s soul-destroying.’’

Rosie DiManno

Rosie DiManno is a Toronto-based columnist covering sports and current affairs for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: @rdimanno.
 
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Frankfooter

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Here it is. A completely self absorbed and entitled litany of racism


“Dox a doc a day.
As anti-Israel — often anti-Jew — protests violently roil campuses across America, a different campaign dripping with malevolence is specifically targeting Jewish physicians right here in Ontario.
There’s no fig-leaf of divestment from Israel, no camouflage exploiting the horrors experienced by civilians in Gaza. Rather, the doxing has been a directed, co-ordinated crusade aimed at physicians whose only “offence’’ is their Jewishness.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW


On social media and via pro forma emails sent to hospital administrators and leadership at teaching institutions, these doctors are being harassed, intimidated and professionally compromised. While part of the strategy is to victimize one particular doctor on a given day — lifting names of individuals who signed a letter last November under the banner of Doctors Against Racism and Antisemitism — the undertaking has spreader wider, become far more encompassing.
Of course most of the garbage is anonymous but on literally hundreds of occasions — letters and emails to MPs, for example — signatories of that DARA letter have been appropriated falsely as if they’re the ones demanding politicians take a harsher position on Israel’s military tactics.
“They’re prompting people to make complaints to their places of work, colleges and universities, hospitals, associations, faculty, the College of Physicians and Surgeons,’’ says Dr. Lisa Switzman. “This has been going on since the beginning of November in a systematic, co-ordinated way, with literally a Jewish doctor of the day.’’
Switzman, whose been involved with tracking the attacks, is uncertain how it all began or who triggered the onslaught. “Basically it was put out by someone who is very anti-Israel, saying these are terrible physicians who’ve signed this letter. All the letter said was that we support Israel and we’re Zionists. Being Jews and supporting Israel’s right to exist is really important to us.’’


Anonymous social media accounts joined the swarming on various platforms, postings that were recycled. “It incited very hateful, antisemitic attacks directly to doctors,’’ continues Switzman.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW


“What was especially upsetting is that they were targeting mainly female family physicians, probably because we’re seen as more vulnerable. At a time of a significant health-care crisis with family physicians, this put added stress on them. Many were quite distraught. Why would you do that to physicians who are saving lives and helping people?’’
The campaign became more heated after pro-Palestinian protesters convened outside Mount Sinai Hospital. “They posted form letters that auto-populated to many more people,” says Switzman. “Because all you have to do is click on it. But that incited other people to send hateful emails to doctors personally.’’
The doxing expanded to physicians who’d never signed the DARA letter.
Initially, some hospital administrators summoned doctors who were identified, to remind them of institutional social media policy. Some doctors were suspended while investigations of complaints were launched. Generally, however, hospitals and medical faculties have been supportive, more concerned about security for the targeted.
“This is why we’ve been scared for so long about speaking out in public, because now we’re going to be targeted,’’ says Switzman. “They’re silencing us. It’s important for people to know what’s happening to Jewish doctors and medical students and residents, that it’s not OK and it needs to stop.’’
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW


Of the original tweets and other comments posted by the doctors afterwards targeted — those the Star has been able to examine — none were overtly hostile or political. Many had expressed revulsion over the Oct. 7 Hamas atrocities in Israel, many conveyed support for Israel or tried to present the historical context, some condemned attacks against Jewish businesses and schools, others pleaded for calm.
Dr. Ilana Halperin had, on Oct. 8, posted a quote often attributed to Golda Meir: “If the Arabs put down their weapons today, there would be no more violence. If the Jews put down their weapons today, there would be no more Israel.’’
Anonymous accounts immediately attacked, going after her job.
After she was tagged on a tweet in early November, it turned into an onslaught. “Somebody said, ‘Does anybody have Zionist doctors? They’re the worst of humanity.’ That got a lot of traction.’’
She was called in by the department head where she teaches. “She said first and foremost she was afraid for my safety because there had been a number of complaints about me at the university. She wanted me to stop tweeting because she was scared for me. She actually said, your message is good but the medium is wrong. You’re not going to change anybody’s mind on Twitter and everything you say is being used against you.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW


“I realized she was probably right. But at the same time it was really distressing, to have to silence a core of my identity where it felt so important to speak up and share my perspective. My identity is made up of three core roles: I’m Jewish, I’m a doctor and I’m a mother.’’
Halperin deleted her entire Twitter account. “Which was pretty disappointing because I’d had a Twitter presence for a long time. There were a lot of interactions for my medical area of practice. But at that point it became not a safe place to be.’’
One consequence was that Halperin received a negative teaching evaluation from a student. “Negative teaching evaluations are a really big deal for a university faculty because it can impact your ability to get promoted. Eventually the evaluation was removed from my record because it was found to be totally vexatious. They were trying to pull this personal side of my identity into the learning environment. But the damage was already done because it made me afraid to teach. Mostly a fear of being mislabeled, misunderstood, that they may not actually engage with the medical content because they’re now preoccupied with who I am as an individual.’’
Halperin adds: “I worry about the next generation of Jewish students. I’ve spoken to Jewish medical students and residents who feel they have to completely scrub their resumés and applications of anything that might identity them as being Jewish or a supporter of Israel.’’
Another female doctor, with three young children — she asked not to be identified — had surveillance cameras installed around her home, arranged security for the person who takes her kids to school and hired professionals to scrub her social media accounts. “What I’d posted was about my own fears essentially. Not even close to hateful about anybody.”
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW


Her hospital considered for her safety, even provided her with a “screamer alarm,’’ in case she was physically threatened on the way to her car.
“On the other hand, I don’t know if they immediately saw it for what it was, which was a co-ordinated antisemitic attack demonizing Jews.’’
This doctor’s father, now deceased, was a Holocaust survivor. “I dedicate my work and my career to just doing some good, which he taught me. He would be shocked to see what’s happening today in Canada. I’m shocked.
“It’s an awful, scary feeling. It’s soul-destroying.’’

Rosie DiManno

Rosie DiManno is a Toronto-based columnist covering sports and current affairs for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: @rdimanno.
As suspected, the doctors wrote a letter declaring they were zionists and then were shocked people think they're racist asshats as a result.

All the letter said was that we support Israel and we’re Zionists.
 
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niniveh

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WHY U.S POLITICIANS ARE SHITTING BRICKS: STUDENT PROTESTS.

And in their panic we see their erratic behaviour of appearing on campuses, shouting "AntiSemitism". It was easy to verbally bludgeon university presidents at Harvard, MIT & Penn into silence. But student protesters are another kettle. The more we see vicious attacks from cops on peaceful campus demonstrators, the more explosive will be the proliferation of campuses joining in. I wouldn't be surprised to see high schoolers, soon, pouring into the streets. All reminiscent of long past days when we demonstrated to defend civil rights, voter registration, Freedom Summer and of course to stop the dangerous and misguided war on Vietnam. I hope there is no repeat of a Kent State event, but then there will be those trigger happy "leaders' in Washington or Texas or even some terbites here who will stand up and cheer.

 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts