Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau Set To Issue Apology For 1939 Refusal Of Ship Of Jewish Refugees

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Nov, 2018 12:42 PM
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will issue an official government apology today for what he will call the country's moral failure when Canada closed its doors to Jewish refugees during the Holocaust.
     
     
    The apology is months in the making and will focus on the decision by the government of William Lyon Mackenzie King in 1939 to reject an asylum request from more than 900 German Jews aboard an ocean liner that was nearing Halifax.
     
     
    Instead, the MS St. Louis returned to Germany and the passengers scattered in Europe.
     
     
    More than 250 of them died in the Holocaust.
     
     
    A handful of surviving passengers from the St. Louis are to be in the House of Commons when Trudeau rises to issue the apology later this afternoon.
     
     
    But the shooting deaths of 11 worshippers at a Pittsburgh synagogue almost two weeks ago have reframed the prime minister's plan for the apology and Jewish leaders expect Trudeau to say something more than that the Canadian government is sorry for a decision made decades ago.
     
     
    What they hope instead is that the prime minister makes a bold statement about anti-Semitism and commits to fight it, such as with a plan to tackle hate speech online.
     
     
    "We certainly hope it is a catalyst for a greater discussion about contemporary anti-Semitism and what can be done by all of us — regardless of our background — and particularly what can be done on the part of government and elected officials to fight anti-Semitism," Steve McDonald, the director of policy with the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, said last week.
     
     
    "Anti-Semitism directly affects Jews, but it doesn't only affect Jews and it's not a Jewish problem."
     
     
    The most recent figures on hate crime from Statistics Canada show the Jewish population was the most frequent target of religiously motivated hate crimes in 2016.
     
     
    When the Liberals first hinted at making the apology, it was seen through the lens of anti-immigrant sentiment and debate about how Canada handles refugees.
     
     
    Pictures and stories of the victims from the St. Louis circulated on social media last year in response to U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to ban immigration and refugee settlement from certain countries.
     
     
    The question of immigration and refugees today is not likely to be lost in the apology.
     
     
    "A call to action is what I imagine the prime minister wants to convey," said Robert Krakow, an American filmmaker who made a documentary about the St. Louis and its survivors.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada Can Claim At Least Partial Success Of Progressive Agenda In USMCA

    Canada Can Claim At Least Partial Success Of Progressive Agenda In USMCA
    According to Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer, it was little more than "politically correct posturing" that served only to weaken Canada's negotiating position.

    Canada Can Claim At Least Partial Success Of Progressive Agenda In USMCA

    Feds Restarting Indigenous Talks Over Pipeline, Won't Appeal Court Decision

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his government will follow the "blueprint" laid out by the Federal Court of Appeal in August, which said Ottawa had not properly consulted with Indigenous Peoples because it listened without trying to accommodate concerns.

    Feds Restarting Indigenous Talks Over Pipeline, Won't Appeal Court Decision

    Ontario Increases Hospital Funding By $90 Million To Address Overcrowding

    Ontario Increases Hospital Funding By $90 Million To Address Overcrowding
    The government will fund 1,100 hospital beds in total — including more than 640 new beds.

    Ontario Increases Hospital Funding By $90 Million To Address Overcrowding

    B.C.'s Kitimat LNG Deal Has John Horgan Juggling Greens, Liberals, Environmentalists

    B.C.'s Kitimat LNG Deal Has John Horgan Juggling Greens, Liberals, Environmentalists
    Horgan said LNG Canada's decision to build a $40 billion liquefied natural gas project in northern B.C. ranked on the historic scale of a "moon landing," emphasizing just how much the project means to an economically deprived region of the province.

    B.C.'s Kitimat LNG Deal Has John Horgan Juggling Greens, Liberals, Environmentalists

    Canada's Finance Minister Touts USMCA But Says Dairy, Steel Sectors Need Help

    Canada's Finance Minister Touts USMCA  But Says Dairy, Steel Sectors Need Help
    VANCOUVER — Finance Minister Bill Morneau says Canada's new trade deal will bring more economic stability, even as the government works to fairly compensate dairy farmers and deal with the dissatisfied steel and aluminum industry. 

    Canada's Finance Minister Touts USMCA But Says Dairy, Steel Sectors Need Help

    B.C. Introduces Poverty Reduction Plan To Cut Child Poverty By 50 Per Cent

    B.C. Introduces Poverty Reduction Plan To Cut Child Poverty By 50 Per Cent
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's government has introduced legislation aimed at reducing the provincial poverty rate by 25 per cent and chopping the child poverty rate in half over the next five years. 

    B.C. Introduces Poverty Reduction Plan To Cut Child Poverty By 50 Per Cent