OTTAWA, Canada, Oct. 26 (JTA) The recent anti-Semitic
remarks of Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohammad were on
many peopleīs minds as Canadaīs Parliament unanimously passed
a motion last week establishing a national Holocaust day.
"The timing of this announcement could not be more
appropriate," Frank Dimant, the executive vice president of
Bīnai Brith Canada, said on Oct. 21. "Once again, the Jews
of the world find themselves at the epicenter of history, the
targets of hate, vilification, and ultimately, violence. The
words may be different, as may be the tactics, but the goals are
the same."
Leo Adler, director of national affairs for the Friends of
Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies, said,"The
fact that all five parties unanimously supported this bill
speaks volumes about Canadaīs response to racists like Mahathir
Mohamad."
But Prime Minister Jean Chretien was criticized for his
failure to condemn Mahathir, who told a meeting of Islamic
leaders that "Jews rule this world by proxy." Mahathir
later said world reaction to his comments proved his point.
Adler said of Chretien, "It would have been nice for our
prime minister to have been with us as well. Perhaps itīs
symbolic in many ways that heīs not here today. Instead he
chose to shake the hand of the Malaysian prime minister without
condemning his inflammatory remarks."
Instead, Chretienīs foreign affairs minister, Bill Graham,
spoke out against Mahathirīs remarks.
Criticism of Chretien was overshadowed by the unanimity of
support for the Holocaust bill. Legislator Richard Marceau is
credited by his cosponsors for being the initiativeīs champion.
"One of the most important things about this bill is
that each and every parliamentarian, the elected officials of
Canada, regardless of their party affiliation, passed this bill
unanimously," Marceau said. "That is how strongly this
country feels the Holocaust should be remembered."
The bill is the first piece of Canadian legislation not
dealing with parliamentary business to pass by unanimous consent
since at least 1990.
When asked about his reasons for proposing the bill, Marceau
mentioned the father of a friend who survived Auschwitz and then
raised a family in Canada, putting his five children through
college.
"When he passed away a year and a half ago, I realized
that while theyīre tough, Holocaust survivors arenīt
immortal." Marceau said. "Many of them are passing
away and itīs up to us to pick up the torch and let people know
what happened."