Establishing such bubble zones could help stamp out hate in Jewish communities

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Bubble zones: they work.

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Bubble zones – also known as “buffer zones,” or “safe access zones” or access zones” – first started to show up in the early 1990s. Back then, women seeking legal abortions, or just seeking advice, were routinely being harassed and threatened at clinics and hospitals that provided those services.

Going back to 1984, doctors offices and abortion clinics in the U.S. were being bombed. One doctor was shot to death at a clinic in Florida in 1993. A clinic volunteer was murdered in 1994, again in Florida. And, across the United States and Canada, women were being threatened and attacked for going near places that provided safe and legal abortions.

In 2000, Dr. Henry Morgantaler told this writer that he had received “untold thousands” of death threats over the years. And that he, his staff and his patients regularly needed protection from violence.

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So, legislatures started to create what are often called bubble zones. That is, defined areas where certain activities are against the law – initially, to protect doctors, nurses and women providing or seeking abortions. By creating a designated buffer zone around a clinic, police were compelled to act. So if an anti-abortion lunatic crossed the line, they’d get arrested. Simple.

It’s now apparent that we need to do likewise for Canada’s 400,000 Jews – around their places of worship, in particular. The pro-Hamas, Jew-hating mobs have targeted Jewish businesses, community centres, schools and synagogues. Police weren’t preventing the attacks, or they weren’t doing enough to keep the haters away.

So, create bubble zones around those places where Jews are most vulnerable – like synagogues.

Quebec (surprisingly, given the province’s documented problems around anti-Semitism) went first. Earlier this month, the Quebec Superior Court made history by ordering groups associated with extremism – Montreal4Palestine, Palestinian Youth Movement Montreal, Alliance4Palestine – to stay at least 50 metres away from Jewish institutions in predominantly-Jewish areas of Montreal, Notre Dame de Grace and Cote-des-Neiges.

Then, a few days later, Vaughan Mayor Steven Del Duca proposed the same thing for his city. Del Duca urged councillors in the city north of Toronto to approve a bylaw that would prevent protests near places or worship, schools and child care centres.

The objective, Del Duca said, was to stop those who “incite hatred, intolerance and violence” in such places.

Del Duca’s law would keep the Israel-haters 100 metres away from designated places. Anyone who violated the law would face fines up to $100,000.

Now, Toronto Councillor Brad Bradford is pushing for a similar law in Canada’s largest city. He wrote to Ontario’s Attorney-General to call for the creation of what he called “safety zones” around places of worship, but also important social infrastructure. That addition is welcome, too, because the pro-Hamas mobs have shown their willingness to block major roadways and target hospitals.

“A shocking 56 per cent of incidents have been anti-Semitic and target Toronto’s Jewish community,” Bradford said in his letter.

Bradford explained in an interview why he took action.

“Over the past six months, there has been an absence of leadership at City Hall when it comes to ensuring people have the right to practice their faith in peace without fear of violence or persecution,” he explained. “We’ve seen businesses attacked because of who owns them, we’ve seen neighbourhoods targeted because of who lives there, and it continues to undermine the diversity, tolerance, and acceptance that used to be the hallmark of Toronto… It has to stop.”

Establishing safety zones, Bradford said, “would be a meaningful step that would provide another (way) to stamp out hate and start to restore the type of civility and tolerance we ought to expect in a city like Toronto.”

Brad Bradford is right – as are the other leaders in Quebec and Ontario who are taking action. We need to protect people when they are at prayer – when they are most vulnerable. We need to make neighbourhoods feel safe again.

Establishing safety zones, as Bradford calls them, would do just that.

Will Canada’s other leaders follow his lead?

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QOSHE - KINSELLA: Safety zones needed to protect Canada's 400,000 Jews - Warren Kinsella
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30.03.2024

Establishing such bubble zones could help stamp out hate in Jewish communities

You can save this article by registering for free here. Or sign-in if you have an account.

Bubble zones: they work.

Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada.

Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada.

Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience.

Bubble zones – also known as “buffer zones,” or “safe access zones” or access zones” – first started to show up in the early 1990s. Back then, women seeking legal abortions, or just seeking advice, were routinely being harassed and threatened at clinics and hospitals that provided those services.

Going back to 1984, doctors offices and abortion clinics in the U.S. were being bombed. One doctor was shot to death at a clinic in Florida in 1993. A clinic volunteer was murdered in 1994, again in Florida. And, across the United States and Canada, women were being threatened and attacked for going near places that provided safe and legal abortions.

In 2000, Dr. Henry Morgantaler told this writer that he had received “untold thousands” of death threats over the years. And that he, his staff and his patients regularly needed protection from violence.

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