, 06.03.2024 08:14 AM

My latest: when the bomb hits

You’re Canadian. You have a regular, normal life.

Imagine what it feels like when someone throws a bomb at your place of worship. Imagine that. It’s hard to, isn’t it? Of course it is. This is Canada, not some place in the Middle East.

Maybe you don’t go to church. Maybe it’s been a while since you’ve gone somewhere to pray.

But, if you’re a Canadian, chances are that you’ve been to a wedding or a funeral or a baptism or something like that. Chances are you’ve been to a place where people go to pray. It’s normal. It happens a lot in Canada, still.

When you’re there, you look around. Apart from the clothes they’re wearing, and maybe a book of prayers or hymns, nobody is carrying anything special. Nobody is carrying a gun or a knife or pepper spray or a fire extinguisher. That’s for certain.

You don’t need those things when you go to a place of worship in Canada. You go there for solitude or to be with other people. And, perhaps, when you’re there, you become faintly aware of something: you are totally, completely vulnerable. You’re defenceless, like everyone else is. There’s no security because you don’t need it. Not in Canada.

At the Schara Tzedeck synagogue on Oak Street in Vancouver, they need security. Since October 7, and before it, there’s been trouble. There’s always trouble, actually. As far back as 2016, the Jewish Federation of Greater Vancouver was tripling how much it spends on security for Jewish places of worship.

That didn’t stop someone from throwing a bomb at the lovely inscribed doors of the the Schara Tzedeck synagogue last week, however. People were inside, praying, when the bomb slammed against the doors, bursting into flame.

So, imagine that. You’re somewhere in Canada, praying, and someone throws a bomb at you. What does that feel like? Can you even imagine it?

Aron Csaplaros doesn’t have to imagine it. He lived it. Aron is the British Columbia Regional Manager for B’nai Brith Canada. He’s a good guy.

Aron’s job is to advocate for the Jewish community in the Lower Mainland. He does that by fighting antisemitism and hate – hate in all its malevolent forms, not just against Jews – and to help out when one or some of Vancouver’s 27,000 Jews need a hand.

Aron takes antisemitism seriously. Along with being a Jew living in Canada post-October 7, Aron is the grandson of Holocaust survivors. Asked if he’s feeling targeted in Canada for being a Jew, Aron says: “Every day.”

On the night the firebomb hit the front doors of the synagogue, he was not far away. The synagogue is in a nice Vancouver neighborhood, just a bit South and East of Granville Island. Aron describes what happened next.

“The second I received a frantic call about a fire at the synagogue, I jumped in my car, not knowing what to expect. This is the synagogue I attend weekly and that I first attended when I was ten days old.”

When Aron arrived, there were only a few congregants there – one of them had thrown his coat on the fire to put it out – and a lot of officers from the Vancouver Police and Fire Departments. Aron made his way over to the police to find out what he could.  

He describes the scene. “Over time, more and more people started to arrive. Rabbis from different synagogues, people who don’t attend this particular place of worship, and of course many of the synagogue’s congregants. Needless to say, the community was stunned, horrified and disgusted that such a large Jewish institution would be targeted in such a violent and dangerous attack.”

He pauses. “It was especially concerning that someone harbors so much hate for Jews that they would be willing to try and burn down a synagogue – where people pray for peace every day, where volunteers pack food boxes for the needy.”

Aron had known some of the people there for years, decades. He tried to speak to all of them, to comfort them.

He told them he and others would be working “with the police, to ensure that the perpetrator is found and brought to justice, and that we do not see an escalation of these types of violent, antisemitic attacks.”

Except, there has been an escalation. There has. A big one, right across the country. In the same week, in fact, schools for little Jewish kids in Montreal and Toronto had been sprayed by bullets. Asked about that, Aron says:

“[The Vancouver synagogue attack] comes just days after two Jewish schools in Montreal and Toronto were hit with gunfire. The question I’m asking myself is ‘what’s next?’ We are far, far past the need for words and condemnations. If our leaders do not immediately act, it is only a matter of time before people are injured, or worse. The violence and incitement must end now.”

Will it? Will the violence targeting Canadian Jews end now?

It hasn’t. Given the pathetic responses to date of some politicians, police and prosecutors, chances are it won’t.

Next time you are at your place of worship, think about that. Next time you are praying, think about that.

Then think about what you’d feel when a bomb hits.

[Content like this will soon be subscriber-only on Substack. Subscribe here.]

2 Comments

  1. Warren,

    Too bad we can’t lay a private prosecution against the various Attorneys General. That would get their lazy and pathetic asses in gear.

  2. The Doctor says:

    I recommend the Munk Dialogue podcast on May 6 with Charles Asher Small. His outfit has done great work uncovering the massive, massive (like multi billions of dollars) funding that the Qatari government and related entities have given to educational and other institutions in the US and Canada. This has had a direct effect on the amount of pro-Hamas and anti-Semitic rhetoric and sentiment on our campuses.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *