National Holocaust Monument in Canada defaced by graffiti. (YouTube screenshot) (YouTube screenshot)
Vandalized Holocaust Monument

Jews make up 1.4 percent of the population in Canada but endure 70 percent of all religious hate crimes.

By David Swindle, The Algemeiner

The Ottawa Police Department’s hate and bias crimes unit has begun an investigation into an act of vandalism discovered on Monday at the Canadian city’s National Holocaust Monument.

Red paint proclaimed “Feed Me” in tall, thin letters below the gray structure’s front sign before workers covered the graffiti with a black tarp. The message appeared to be a reference to the humanitarian situation in Gaza, where Israel has been waging a military campaign against the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas.

The vandals also dumped their paint in four other locations, two on either side of their message.

In a Monday statement on X, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said he was “appalled” at the crime.

“This is a monument that commemorates the six million Jewish lives murdered during the Holocaust, and the millions of other victims of Nazi Germany. It is a space for mourning and remembrance, and its defacing is reprehensible,” Carney wrote.

Other officials expressed their outrage at the antisemitic act.

“This is not a way to address the concerns that people have, either about what’s happening in the Middle East or certainly about what’s happened in our own country with the high spike of antisemitism,” said Deborah Lyons, Canada’s special envoy on preserving Holocaust remembrance and combating antisemitism.

Lyons urged that combating antisemitism was “an effort that requires all Canadians to be engaged in fighting, I think, one of the strongest hatreds that we have ever seen Canada have to address. And if we fail at this, then we will fail at others in the future.”

Melissa Lantsman, who serves in the Canadian parliament as a conservative leader, wrote online that “defacing sacred ground in honor of the millions of victims of the Holocaust in the middle of the night with spray paint isn’t protest, it’s vandalism.”

The International March of the Living — a Holocaust education program that holds an annual march from Auschwitz I to Auschwitz II-Birkenau, the Nazis’ largest death camp where 1 million Jews were murdered during World War II — released a statement calling for law enforcement to investigate the vandalism as a hate crime and to ensure security for Jewish organizations.

“This abhorrent act is an assault on memory, truth, and dignity,” said Scott Saunders, CEO of the International March of the Living. “Holocaust memorials stand as solemn reminders of humanity’s darkest chapter and as warnings of what can happen when hatred is left unchecked. Defacing this monument is a cowardly attempt to erase history and spread division. We stand in full solidarity with survivors and with the Canadian Jewish community. We must never stay silent in the face of hate.”

Canadians who survived the Holocaust and their family members expressed their horror at the vandalism.

“I am sick. I could never believe that such an incident would happen on Canadian soil. I always felt the people living here were more compassionate and had more heart. But unfortunately, I was wrong,” Holocaust survivor Esther Fairbloom said in a statement. Calling herself “extremely sad,” Fairbloom added, “I don’t have the same faith as I used to. I don’t feel as strong. I don’t feel as secure. I feel safer in Israel.”

Lawrence Greenspon, co-chair of the monument committee, said, “My father is a Holocaust survivor. His sister and his mother and father were all killed. My daughter is named after his sister.” He said that “when somebody defaces the National Holocaust Monument, it is personal and it hurts, and particularly when it is such an act of hatred and antisemitism.”

Nate Leipciger is 95 years old. He survived Auschwitz and other Nazi camps.

“I feel terrible. I’m upset, I’m disgusted. ⁠It is a sad comment on our society, when a group takes out its hatred on the monument that represents the greatest crime in humanity by defacing it,” Leipciger said. “It just shows how depraved they are in their logic and how they’re completely unrealistic in thinking that putting graffiti ‘feed them’ onto the building would somehow help the people in Gaza.”

“Who is the message to?” Leipciger asked. “It’s Hamas that is stopping the Palestinians from being fed. I think it has to be made clear that the sign is misrepresenting in its terrible depravity. The people who are preventing the people from being fed is not Israel, but Hamas.”

According to the International March of the Living, 2024 saw a 670 percent increase in antisemitic incidents in Canada compared to previous years. This equates to Jews who make up 1.4 percent of the population enduring 70 percent of all religious hate crimes.

Fairbloom revealed the extent to which domestic antisemitism had frightened her.

“I’m scared to go out. It’s everywhere. It’s anywhere. And I live in a Jewish area,” she said. “The only way… is to stand together and fight together. I never thought I would say the word ‘fight.’ But we do, whether it’s by words or whether it’s by action. We have to.”

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