Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

'I'm A Nazi:' Bangladesh-Origin Calgary Teacher Fends Off Racial Attack In Manitoba, Posts Video

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Aug, 2017 12:08 PM

    WINNIPEG — A teacher who came to Canada from Bangladesh eight years ago says a man who claimed to be a Nazi launched racist verbal attacks at her for wearing a hijab during a visit to Manitoba this summer.

     

    Kaniz Fatima of Calgary posted video of the encounter on social media this week and says women who wear hijabs need to be prepared for such comments.

     

     

    She says she was with relatives on July 2 near Pinawa, about 95 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg. They were driving around looking for scenic spots and asked a man in a parking lot for directions.

     

    Fatima says the man quickly became abusive and told her he was a Nazi, then ordered her to take off her hijab and go back to her country.

     

    Two women who were passing by heard the exchange and told the man that Fatima had just as much right to be in Canada as he did.

     

    In the video, the man can be heard telling Fatima: "I'm a Nazi. Do you know what a Nazi is? Take your head towel off in this country."

     

    "GO BACK TO YOUR COUNTRY - Take your head towel off- F......ing B..... " - get ready to face those RACIST filthy comments if you have your hijab on. It happened to me, it might happen to you. Location - around Pinawa, Winnipeg #racismagainstmuslims #islamophobia

    Posted by Kaniz Fatima on Tuesday, 22 August 2017
     

    The teacher calls him a racist and tells him she can dress any way she wants, but the man tells her: "It (the hijab) supports Muslims" and moments later he says: "Go back to your country."

     

    "This is my country," Fatima replied.

     

    "No, it's not," the man said.

     

    One of the two passersby can be heard telling Fatima: "You don't even have to explain yourself. You're just as much Canadian as he is."

     

    Fatima says she was shocked and scared for herself and her family, but there was no physical confrontation.

     

    Helmut-Harry Loewen, a retired University of Winnipeg sociology professor who monitors hate groups, said the encounter seems to be part of a trend.

     

    "We've certainly seen here in Manitoba a rise ... in open expressions of racism, or Islamophobia in particular," Loewen said Thursday.

     

    "There's an increased willingness, I would venture to say, on the part of some critics ... of refugee and immigration policy, to be much bolder and to break certain taboos around racial discourse which we haven't seen in many, many years."

     

    Loewen said while many people argue the election of Donald Trump as United States president has emboldened some people in Canada and the U.S. to speak more overtly about racist feelings, the reaction to immigration policies in Canada also paints a disturbing picture.

     

    "I would also add that the election of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has also unleashed a storm, a torrent, of hate aimed against Trudeau because of his migrant policy," Loewen said.

     

    "If you look at a whole range of websites and also statements made by individuals ... Trudeau is cast as a terrorist sympathizer. In other words, proponents of a refugee policy of welcoming migrants to Canada are being cast as terrorists."

     

    There have been expressions of support for Fatima on social media.

     

    "This is not Manitoba, and this is not Canada. This kind of hate and vitriol have no place here," Winnipeg South Liberal member of Parliament Terry Duguid posted on Twitter. RCMP say they did not receive any complaint and are not actively investigating.

     

    "Get ready to face those racist filthy comments if you have a hijab on," Fatima warns in her social media post. "If it happened to me, it might happen to you."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Dollar Soars On 'Panic Rally' As Central Bank Hikes Interest Rate

    TORONTO — The Canadian dollar is soaring to levels not seen in nearly a year after the Bank of Canada announced it was hiking its key lending rate for the first time since 2010.

    Canadian Dollar Soars On 'Panic Rally' As Central Bank Hikes Interest Rate

    Death Of Missing Boy In Rankin Inlet Now Considered A Homicide: RCMP

    Death Of Missing Boy In Rankin Inlet Now Considered A Homicide: RCMP
    The 11-year-old boy, who police initially said was 12, had been missing for five days.

    Death Of Missing Boy In Rankin Inlet Now Considered A Homicide: RCMP

    Bank Of Canada Raises Interest Rate For 1st Time In 7 Years To 0.75%

    The Bank of Canada has raised its key interest rate as expected to 0.75 per cent — the central bank's first move upward in the cost of borrowing in seven years.

    Bank Of Canada Raises Interest Rate For 1st Time In 7 Years To 0.75%

    Remains Of Long-Missing Australian Man Found Near Grand Forks, B.C.

    Remains Of Long-Missing Australian Man Found Near Grand Forks, B.C.
    BURNABY, B.C. — The remains of an Australian man have been found nearly seven years after he disappeared in southeastern British Columbia.

    Remains Of Long-Missing Australian Man Found Near Grand Forks, B.C.

    Indian-American Lawyer Neomi Rao To Head White House Regulatory Affairs Office

    Indian-American Lawyer Neomi Rao To Head White House Regulatory Affairs Office
    The US Senate has voted to confirm Indian American lawyer Neomi Rao as the head of Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) at the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).

    Indian-American Lawyer Neomi Rao To Head White House Regulatory Affairs Office

    Air Canada Flight Nearly Lands On Crowded San Francisco Taxiway

    An apparent close call involving an Air Canada flight at San Francisco International Airport has sparked investigations from the airline and U.S. aviation authorities.

    Air Canada Flight Nearly Lands On Crowded San Francisco Taxiway