Bullying, Threatening Jewish Children in Toronto
"They told him, we need to kill you.They started shoving and kicking him. And he was really vulnerable and by himself in that situation. The vice-principal who was outside in the playground, she was standing probably far away, so she couldn't hear what was transpiring, but when it started to become physical, she went to defuse the situation.""And when my son told her, 'Can I please share with you what happened? [she told him 'I don't have time for this'.""We were at a bit of [a] loss, but that same evening, a parent knocked on our door saying, 'I've heard so-and-so happened from my child. I want to just make sure that you're all OK'.""They [the Faywood Arts-Based Curriculum School, North York, Toronto] need to do something. They're doing literally nothing. They say they're doing stuff but nobody knows what they're doing."Adi Cohen, mother of four school-age children, Israeli doctor in Canada on fellowship
A
visiting Israeli family of two parents, both doctors working
temporarily in Toronto in the medical profession is unimpressed with the
Toronto District School Board having taken no discernible action
relating to the ongoing, serious and threatening antisemitism their two
oldest children, in Grades 8 and 5 are experiencing. Their two other
children, in Grade 3 and senior kindergarten have not yet suffered any
of these worrisome indignities.
Repeated
bullying suffered by the two older children predates the October 7
Hamas attack on Israel, but since then the confrontations have
escalated. Death threats have been uttered against both children. Three
police reports were filed by the family, owing to the school's inaction
in creating a safe environment for their Jewish students. Incidents
serious enough to alarm other members of the community some of whose
children had experienced similar bullying.
Their concerns resulted in a "community support walk"
that took place one Friday morning a few days back, a symbolic move
that sent a message that all is not well. There was one incident when
the second oldest child in the Cohen family was accosted while his older
brother was elsewhere. A group of students uttered death threats
mocking that his older brother wasn't available to protect him. After
the incident the older brother approached the group and a physical
altercation ensued.
The
Cohen parents went to the school to speak with the vice-principal and
principal the following day when an investigation was launched
concluding that "comments were made on both sides". When the school administration was pressed for details, Adi Cohen was informed her son had told the group to "go back to their homeland";
a clue that the group was comprised of Muslim youth. Her son, however
denied that statement, correcting it that he had really said, "go to your room lunch".
"He
has a pretty heavy [Israeli] accent. and they took the aggressors'
words for what happened without even asking and the aggressors denied
everything that happened." Following another meeting
with parents and representatives of the school board the investigation
was reopened. She was informed by another principal the second
investigation found the incidents occurred just as her son described,
yet she was left with no impression that the other students faced any
consequences, as a result of privacy laws.
Citing
another incident, the older boy was bullied on video that was shared on
social media, where a substitute teacher failed to intervene. Her son
felt provoked to action and attempted to snatch the phone from another
student. "The
school is doing nothing, the teacher was doing nothing, they just let
it happen. At some point, he got so frustrated, he tried to physically
take the phone away and then they wanted to suspend him for violence", she explained.
In
yet another incident sticks, stones and a water bottle were thrown at
her son as he walked to school. The boy has been warned by other
students that they would "do to him what Hamas did to Israel". A WhatsApp community group organized a day of support walk for the two boys, sending out a flyer to garner support, reading: "Our community must act. If school can't keep our kids safe, we will." The flyer also read: "No megaphones, no flags, this is about our children's safety".
The
visiting Israeli mother's activism inspired other families of other
students at the school who are "terrified" to thank her for speaking out
publicly and bringing attention to the situation where Muslim students
are preying on Jewish students in a situation where those in authority
appear to be sitting on their hands and ostensibly waiting for things to
calm down; in the process of doing nothing, signalling that the threats
and bullying can continue without disciplinary action being taken.
In Toronto, community members come to walk a boy to school whose family says he has faced ongoing antisemitic bullying, May 17, 2024. |
"I do believe that he feels that he's not alone. And it gives him the courage and the strength to keep on standing up for himself and for others. [The walk, and support offered by other families is] very helpful.""I just need this to stop. I need to know that my son is going to school and that he's safe and that he's been taken care of.""And that I won't get a phone call from the hospital saying something has happened."
Labels: Bullying Threats from Muslim Students, Care and Security for Jewish Students, Community Response, Toronto District School Board
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