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Independent Jewish Voices - Halifax
Independent Jewish Voices - Halifax
IJV statement on Bondi incident
Home
About
Shame on YMCA for rescinding Rana Zaman's Peace Medal
Shira Lurie speaks at Halifax vigil 7 October, 2025
AST honorary degrees for L & J Haiven
Campaign against sportswashing Israeli genocide
Medical Crisis in Gaza: A Canadian Doctor Speaks
"We refused to participate in genocide" 6 March
Statement on some Israeli peace groups
Candidacy of Tammy Jakeman, Halifax
Article in Dimension about Jakeman affair
Tribute to Zalman Amit 1934-2024
Jewish Faculty Network - Nova Scotia
Student Protests for Palestine and “Jewish Student Safety”
"Israelism" film screening
"Not in Our Name" Rally 2 Nov 2023
Vigil 28 Nov 2023
IJV National
Speech at 18 March rally by Delaney
Support IJV Montreal against injunctions
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Dalhousie student encampment
Talk on antisemitism 28 May 2024
Excellent interview with BBC radio
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IJV statement on Bondi incident
Home
About
Shame on YMCA for rescinding Rana Zaman's Peace Medal
Shira Lurie speaks at Halifax vigil 7 October, 2025
AST honorary degrees for L & J Haiven
Campaign against sportswashing Israeli genocide
Medical Crisis in Gaza: A Canadian Doctor Speaks
"We refused to participate in genocide" 6 March
Statement on some Israeli peace groups
Candidacy of Tammy Jakeman, Halifax
Article in Dimension about Jakeman affair
Tribute to Zalman Amit 1934-2024
Jewish Faculty Network - Nova Scotia
Student Protests for Palestine and “Jewish Student Safety”
"Israelism" film screening
"Not in Our Name" Rally 2 Nov 2023
Vigil 28 Nov 2023
IJV National
Speech at 18 March rally by Delaney
Support IJV Montreal against injunctions
Passover Seder 2024
Dalhousie student encampment
Talk on antisemitism 28 May 2024
Excellent interview with BBC radio
Gallery
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Bubble zones: a toxic threat to human rights

Why “Bubble Zones” Are a Toxic Threat to Democracy

Hasbara cedes to Shtika; a Backgrounder

by Larry Haiven

Over the past several years a new method of bulldozing civil rights in Canada has emerged from the playbooks of die-hard Israel-supporting organizations. It is called “bubble zones.”

It used to be that Israel and its champions employed a strategy of “hasbara” (Hebrew for explanation or propaganda) to spin bad news about Israel or persuade people to support or keep quiet about Israel’s misdeeds. For example: “Israel is a land without people for a people without a land,” or “Israel lives in a rough neighbourhood and has the right to defend itself,” or “God promised this land to the Jews.” But Hasbara is facing insurmountable challenges right now. It is almost impossible to explain away with dodgy slogans the massacre of at least 70,000 Gazans and 1,000 West Bank residents including tens of thousands of children. The world is shocked.

So a new strategy is required. And that strategy is outright “shtika” (Hebrew for the act of silencing.) Got a problem? Don’t argue. Silence it. Shtika. Got a critic? Don’t debate her. Shut her down before she speaks. Shtika.

Zionist organizations have been hosting members of parliament, police chiefs, top university administrators and the like with expenses-paid junkets to Israel for years. Do most of these come back as raving fans of Israel toeing the official line? No. Most of them come back – silent. Israel and its friends haven’t been able to buy outright support for some time. But they can buy or promote – silence, shtika, and compliance, and “look the other way.” When conscience calls upon you to speak out about Israeli transgression, self-shtika. 

Bubble zones are just newest and most potent modality of shtika. The innovation here is not the attempt to silence expression once it is uttered, but to silence it before the fact. Not only are words themselves subject to censure and censor, the mere uttering of any words of protest within a geographic space by anyone in that space for a period of time is forbidden. 

Let’s compare this to the famous Keegstra case. When Alberta teacher James Keegstra was charged with a hate crime for attempting for years to indoctrinate a captive audience of high school students with holocaust denial and conspiracy theories about Jews, he claimed the charge to be a violation of his right to free expression. A majority of the Supreme Court ruled that in light of the content of his expression, the violation of his freedom of expression was permissible. On the other hand, three out of four Supreme Court justices (including future Chief Justice Beverley McLachlan) dissented, asserting that a hate speech conviction against Keegstra’s utterings, hateful as those utterings were, was overly broad. Keegstra’s conviction stood. But let’s remember that the Keegstra case involved one man, who made clearly poisonous utterances to completely captive audiences, over several years. 

Bubble zones, on the other hand, strive to bypass hate laws by requiring no such proof, no such rigour. 

A bubble zone is a police, judicial or legislative action forbidding protests within a designated perimeter surrounding certain buildings or locations.

Pro-Israel influencers have been calling for the outright shutting-down of protests against Israel’s genocide in Gaza since those protests began. Proponents of shtika were having some success before the Bondi Beach Australia attack of December 14, 2025, but we can now expect to see a full-on over-the-top campaign given killings of Jews by two suicidal followers of ISIS. Around the world, we are being told implausibly, only full muzzling of criticism of Israel can prevent a repeat of the Australian tragedy, freedom of expression be damned. As if peaceful protest contributes to mass shootings.The idea, however, is to ramp up a climate of panic that makes all restraints on expression when it comes to Israel look reasonable.

The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and provincial human rights codes are supposed to protect freedom of assembly in spaces and freedom of expression, and those freedoms are considered fundamentals of democracy. But now there is a clash between those wishing to use those spaces without impediment and those wishing to engage in effective protest at those spaces against some events in those spaces. This is sometimes characterized as a clash between “free expression” (at the space) and “public safety and enjoyment” (of the space.) 

But enjoyment is currently demolishing free expression.à

The issue has arisen in earnest amid the ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza. Departing from religious worship and community activities, Jewish institutions like synagogues and community centres began hosting gatherings explicitly to support the Israeli side. And demonstrators have assembled to oppose those gatherings.

Up to 7 October, 2023, Canadians critical of Israel by and large gave Jewish communal institutions, especially synagogues, a wide berth out of respect for their religious function. For many years Jewish communities exploited this good will by using synagogues for political meetings and hateful sermons, without experiencing much pushback. Pass by any Canadian synagogue in Canada and you will likely see several signs displayed to passers-by that profess “[Name of congregation] stands with Israel” or “...connecting your family to Israel.” 

But this changed after the 2023 Israeli onslaught in Gaza as protest in general ramped up.

Large, vociferous rallies and marches protesting the slaughter erupted in cities around the world and in Canada. Occupations, including by Jewish critics of Israel, have taken over public places or relevant private spaces. Student tent cities emerged on campuses across the country, as across the world. Public opinion has flipped from a majority supporting Israel to the opposite. Hasbara is losing.

The turn from hasbara to shtika

Accordingly, Jewish legacy organizations turned to an option easier and much more attractive and potent than debate: what is sometimes called “cancel culture.” How comparatively effortless to change the channel and denounce all protest as antisemitic and to attempt to shut down and shut out venues, vehicles and spokespersons of dissent! These Jewish organizations also have promoted the highly controversial IHRA definition of antisemitism, which conveniently includes even accurate criticism of Israel (which other definitions do not).They successfully persuaded the Canadian government and several other legislatures and city councils to adopt the definition. That definition gives moral fuel to cancel culture. If the IHRA definition says antisemitism includes robust criticism of the State of Israel, then a public rally condemning Israeli killings in Gaza must be a form of hate speech. And that expression must be quashed before it begins.

And how much better if you can hide your pro-Israel event in a “place of worship.” Even if the contested event has nothing to do with religious worship, just keep repeating “It’s a place of worship!” and you can obscure the hateful messages being broadcast within.

Even more draconian, these pro-Israel organizations have called for the banning of protest actions ab initio i.e. before they even occur, or rendering them illegal from their inception. B’nai Brith Canada touts its “Seven-Point Plan” to outlaw pro-Palestine organizations, curtail or ban rallies, limit free speech at universities and schools, broaden the legal definition of hate speech and increase penalties for violations. They are imitating their British and other international colleagues who insist that protest marches are ipso facto (by their very nature) "disrupting the peace and the basic rights of Jews." In the wake of the Bondi shootings, the Australian so-called antisemitism envoy’s 20-point plan includes such dangerous measures as screening immigrants for antisemitic views or affiliations, visa refusals or cancellations for perceived antisemitic rhetoric, withdrawing government support for organizations deemed by the envoy as antisemitic, a report card for how universities are combating antisemitism, and monitoring and policing media for perceived antisemitic bias. Of course, the definition of antisemitism is crucial here and the definition is very broad and includes rebukes of Israel.

Soon after the Canadian protests began following October 7, 2023, a chorus of politicians weighed in. Ontario’s Doug Ford called such assemblies “reprehensible and disgusting.” Québec’s François Legault decried them as “shameful.” then Prime Minister Justin Trudeau condemned the rallies for “glorifying violence.” Federal Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre denounced them as “disgusting celebrations.” Vancouver’s Mayor Ken Sim said, “I condemn any glorifying of the indiscriminate violence...” 

One method of nipping critics of Israel in the bud is the creation of bubble zones. There are three types of bubble zone: Police-initiated, judicial and legislative.

First, police: they have broad powers to impose public order as they define it. When pro-Palestine demonstrators dropped banners about Gaza from a Toronto bridge over Highway 401 in January 2024, pro-Israel lobbyists persuaded that city’s police chief to prohibit this activity, arguing that the bridge was close to an area they claimed had a high Jewish population who might be offended. In another case, Toronto police prohibited marches down “hospital row” on University Avenue after a complaint that an acrobatic protester nicknamed “Spiderman” had, in February 2024, climbed on a scaffold at Mount Sinai Hospital, which has historic Jewish roots (he climbed on many other structures on the street as well). At the University of Calgary, wielding shields, batons and flash-bang explosives, police removed a protest encampment from the campus in May 2024. None of these instances presented a real threat to public order, but police, responding to pressure from Israel-supporters, overreacted as police often do. So police can establish small, temporary bubble zones. But sometimes police demur; their response is unreliable and, in any case, short-lived, . Larger and more permanent bans were to come. 

Judicial bubble zones

Next are judicial bubble zones.

A key case in point occurred in Montreal’s Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce borough. One evening in March 2024, the Federation CJA building (housing several Jewish organizations) held a meeting featuring Israeli soldiers celebrating the IDF’s activity in Gaza. A few evenings later, a local synagogue hosted a “real estate fair” where agents offered properties on land seized in Palestine deemed illegal by international law for sale to prospective purchasers. Both of these events, which had nothing to do with religious or cultural practice, provoked rallies of opponents claiming that the Jewish institutions had forfeited their immunity by engaging in political advocacy linked to Israeli apartheid against the Palestinians.

The response of the pro-Israel forces to these protests can best be described as legal terrorism: a series of judicial forays intended to ban future protests, intimidate and punish the protesters, and force them to engage in lengthy and costly court battles. Despite the existence of Charter protections, civil rights laws and the purported access to judicial review, under this kind of civil warfare, the advantage is massively with financially-prosperous organizations and individuals and against those without such resources. For those on the pro-Palestine side, there is no contest.

Arguing that the largely peaceful protests in Montreal were clear and present threats to the safety of Jewish community members in their own buildings, a group of lawyers and Jewish organizations convinced a Quebec Superior Court judge to issue an ex-parte injunction, banning protests within 50 metres of a cluster of Jewish institutions. This evolved into a more permanent injunction. Overlapping geographical restrictions would effectively render much of relevant neighbourhoods closed to rallies entirely. 

Preposterously in this day and age, ex-parte (in the absence of the parties at whom they are directed) provisional injunctions are (still) granted! In this case, no legal opportunity was afforded the protesters to argue against the purpose and conditions of the injunction until later in the game.

But worse was yet to come. When distribution of the injunction did not immediately clear the protesters away, the lawyers commenced contempt of court proceedings. Alleged failure to abide by a court-ordered injunction (which you initially had no chance to argue against) renders you subject to criminal fines and possible jail time. Montreal members of the Jewish organization Independent Jewish Voices Canada and that association itself faced up to a $100,000 penalty if convicted. Failure to pay the fine could mean jail time.. 

Even if the defendants could beat back these attacks in the higher reaches of courts, their legal and other costs would be exorbitant. Moreover, it could be years before these judicial bubble zone cases are finally resolved in the courts.

However, if judicial route is onerous on the protesters, it is also on their pro-Israel legal proponents. If protesters subject to judicial bubble zoning dig in and fight, they can drag out proceedings and rob those proponents of the quick victories they seek.

So that brings us to an even more ruthless initiative: legislative bubble zones. 

Legislative bubble zones

In the same March 2024 as the Israeli real estate sale in Montreal, synagogues in the City of Vaughan, Ontario north of Toronto, hosted similar events. As in Montreal, dissidents appeared outside, with signs like “Palestine is not for sale.” One protester told the CBC why they were targeting a synagogue: “"We weren't there because it's a synagogue, we were there because we were protesting against a real estate show…[These events] shouldn't be allowed to happen when they're explicitly advertising land on occupied territory."

Jon Allen, former Canadian ambassador to Israel, told the Toronto Star he is “sharply critical of the synagogues for hosting these events…The settlements are illegal under international law and Canada considers them illegal.”

Nevertheless, politicians of several political parties, including Vaughan Mayor Steven Del Duca and some councillors, castigated the protesters for attacking places of worship, conveniently omitting what those places of worship were really doing, or that police had charged a man for allegedly shooting a nail gun at the pro-Palestine protesters.

Three months later, Vaughan council passed the Protecting Vulnerable Social Infrastructure By-law, forbidding “nuisance demonstrations” within 100 metres of childcare centres, hospitals, schools, and places of worship. The definition of nuisance demonstrations includes one or more persons “protesting against something or expressing views on any issue, in any manner, whether it is intended or not, that is likely, on an objective standard, to cause a reasonable person to be intimidated, meaning that they are either concerned for their safety or security, or they are unable to access” the location. The threshold for what would cause a reasonable person to be intimidated is not specified, though such intimidation need not include hate speech or incitements of violence and is highly subjective. The penalty for flouting the bylaw is up to $100,000 per occasion.

The Vaughan bylaw also allows a city official to close “any highway, including roadway, boulevard, sidewalk, trail or pathway, the closure of any public place, including facility, park, or parking lot… where necessary to ensure the health, safety, and well-being of any Person.” 

Bubble zone laws are not entirely new. Some were introduced to protect abortion clinics. A spate of them emerged during the COVID epidemic to deal with anti-vax, anti-mask protesters attempting to block access to hospitals and to prevent other gatherings (see a court decision on that below).

Calgary was the first city to pass a bubble zone bylaw, ostensibly to protect school children, in 2023.

But it was the Palestine issue where bubble zones began to proliferate and free expression came seriously under attack.

Brampton, Oakville, and Toronto have emulated the Vaughan bylaw with more cities to come. The recent election in Montreal of conservative Mayor Soraya Martinez Ferrada, presages bubble zones there. And British Columbia premier David Eby has promised provincial legislation to that effect. Other legislatures and municipalities are contemplating similar moves. 

And Canada’s Combatting Hate Act (Bill C-9) proposes new Criminal Code offences for intimidating or obstructing access to a variety of community spaces, breathing federal oxygen into the provincial and municipal bubble zoning initiative.

Toronto’s bubble zone bylaw

Toronto passed its bylaw that went into effect on July 2, 2025. It permits owners of places of worship, schools, and child care centres to apply to the City to enforce a 50-metre bubble zone for one-year, affecting at least 3,000 institutions, with fines of up to $5,000.

Just how confining the bubble zones could be in a city like Toronto was illustrated in a map developed by the publication Toronto Today to illustrate the impact of 100-metre areas of restriction. But even the 50-metre limitation eventually enacted would look similar.

A mere glance at this map shows us just how outrageous these new bubble zone bylaws could be. Indeed, if implemented to their fullest extent, the bubble zones could eliminate pretty much all legal protests in city cores.

Toronto city council’s public consultation on the bylaw drew comments from 42,747 people (with 63% opposed) and 184 groups. In the two virtual sessions, 86% of the first session’s participants and 90% of the participants in the second session said they oppose a bylaw. The Toronto Social Planning Council vigorously opposed the bylaw and warned:

…the proposed bylaw amendment won’t protect Torontonians from hate. It won’t target those who engage in hateful expression. Instead, it will end up targeting marginalized communities that need their rights and freedoms protected.

Toronto city lawyers warned Council that their bubble zone would likely offend the Charter rights of free expression and constitute overreach. The lawyers suggested an amendment that would weaken the bylaw but still offend expression rights. Toronto councillors disregarded the legal advice.

Even some Toronto police officers spoke against the severity of the bylaw, insisting that it could seriously offend Charter rights and that police already have less intrusive powers to ensure public safety. Toronto police Staff Supt. Frank Barredo told a city council meeting:

In all honesty, a bylaw would be somewhat low on the range of things that we would be looking at. Public safety is our paramount concern, but of course Charter rights weigh very heavily as we wrestle with the limitations on Charter expression with reasonable enjoyment of the city by other people not involved in demonstrations.

While bylaws like Toronto’s may seem like a dream come true for the pro-Israel lobby, they horrify civil libertarians.

Civil libertarians oppose

The new spate of bubble zones has elicited the opposition of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA) which launched a Charter challenge to the City of Vaughan’s bubble zone bylaw on June 24, 2025. It is worth exploring the CCLA’s rationale. The CCLA makes the following key points:

  • The health, safety and wellbeing of community members in using spaces must not unduly interfere with peaceful protests.

  • The punitive nature of the bylaws is greatly disproportional to any harmful potential of protests. They are examples of legislative overreach.

  • Police already have broad powers to prevent physical violence at protests in these spaces and thus bubble zones are not necessary.

  • “This bylaw is about prohibiting peaceful protests because some people find them disruptive. It is about chilling and suppressing speech because some people find it offensive…These limits strike at the heart of what it means to live in a free and democratic society.”.

  • “If left unchecked, anti-protest bylaws like Vaughan’s will mark the beginning of a slippery slope that will erode people’s constitutionally protected right to use civic space to voice their thoughts, opinions and beliefs.”

A crucial concept here is that the “health, safety and wellbeing” of people using the protected spaces is not supposed to mean their complete absence of discomfort. In other words, if I want to attend a meeting at a Jewish institution and that event arguably celebrates apartheid and genocide, then in a “free and democratic society” I must be prepared to experience some unease, discomfort, inconvenience and challenge when confronted by those who disagree with the meeting. If I am a student who supports Israel and I encounter a table supporting Palestine in my student union building and that makes me uncomfortable, I should be prepared to either debate the partisans or ignore them. Also if the mere presence of the protest makes me feel uncomfortable, or even squirm inside, it does not mean that I am unsafe, as many proponents of cancel culture insist. As we are reminded consistently, but often forget, freedom of expression applies not only to expression I agree with, but also to expression I disagree with.

The proponents of bubble zones would seem to have us believe that only a complete or effective removal of discomfiture will satisfy their rights. But that is contrary to the spirit and likely the letter of Canadian civil liberties law.

Minimally invasive

How have the Canadian courts treated the clash of rights between those engaging in protest and those discomfited by that action? Section 2 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms says that the rights and freedoms are subject to: “such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.” Or, as the example often used to illustrate reasonable limits puts it, my freedom of expression can be limited if I want to use it to yell fire in a crowded theatre, which could put lives in danger.

The test for any limitation on fundamental rights and freedoms is sometimes called the “Oakes test” after a Supreme Court case of that name. If a fundamental right is to be limited by a government, the limitation should meet the following criteria. Using bubble zones as an evident limitation on the freedom of expression, the champions of limitation must prove:

  • The legislative goal of the bubble zone must be pressing and substantial (not trivial)

  • There must be proportionality between the objective (achieving public safety and enjoyment) and the means used to achieve it (the bubble zone)

  • The limit (bubble zone) must be rationally connected to the objective (achieving public safety and enjoyment)

  • There must be a causal link between the impugned measure (bubble zones) and the pressing and substantial objective (safety and enjoyment);

  • "Minimal Impairment": the limit must impair the right or freedom no more than is reasonably necessary to accomplish the objective. The government imposing the limitation (bubble zones) will be required to show that there are no less rights-impairing means of achieving the objective (safety and enjoyment) “in a real and substantial manner”

  • "Final Balancing": there must be proportionality between the deleterious and salutary effects of the bubble zone.

When the constitutionality of bubble zones is finally decided in the higher courts, the above are the questions that must be answered. Completely barring protesters from the sight and earshot of those attending the spaces in question would certainly remove any discomfiture by attendees. But such measures are arguably overkill of freedom of expression. So what measures minimally impair that freedom? Often forgotten is that people have been protesting at spaces and events for many decades, if not centuries, and somehow the objects of their protest survive. One “minimally impairing” response to protests is to simply allow them to happen even if they make some people feel bruised emotionally.

Labour and “expressive action”

A helpful analogy comes from a long line of history involving the labour movement, strikes and picket lines. Disputes involving strikes by trade unions can be very discomfiting for those targeted by them. As non-strikers cross picket lines or even try to work during a strike, they are subject to no small degree of insult, abuse, disruption and intimidation. Before 1872 merely combining into unions was illegal, deemed a “restraint of trade” harmful to business. Then, when unions were decriminalized, strikes remained illegal. When strikes were finally decriminalized (conditionally) in 1944, employers still regularly obtained ex-parte injunctions from judges to remove or impair picket lines. But these overreaches are now history. While employers and governments still employ stratagems to limit the power of trade unions, from 2015 the right to strike and to picket have been Charter-protected (again with conditions). Indeed the right to picket even locations secondary to the main employer as well as primary locations, has been ruled as Charter-protected. 

In fact, the present group of bubble zone bylaws took pains specifically to exempt labour picket lines. That is ironic.

Why is it that employers now have great difficulty obtaining bubble zones against striking workers yet governments feel they can ban protests that are arguably far less disruptive than union picket lines?

As the Supreme Court has pronounced on picketing (emphasis added):

Picketing, however defined, always involves expressive action. As such, it engages one of the highest constitutional values: freedom of expression, enshrined in section 2(b) of the Charter. This Court’s jurisprudence establishes that both primary and secondary picketing are forms of expression, even when associated with tortious acts …. The Court, moreover, has repeatedly reaffirmed the importance of freedom of expression. It is the foundation of a democratic society …. The core values which free expression promotes include self-fulfilment, participation in social and political decision-making, and the communal exchange of ideas. Free speech protects human dignity and the right to think and reflect freely on one’s circumstances and condition. It allows a person to speak not only for the sake of expression itself, but also to advocate change, attempting to persuade others in the hope of improving one’s life and perhaps the wide social, political and economic environment.

Other than the first sentence of the above paragraph, which refers specifically to picketing during trade union strikes, the words of the Supreme Court certainly applies to the free expression rights of any group of people involved in “expressive action,” including, of course, those expressing disagreement with the Israeli treatment of Palestinians.

COVID restrictions ruled overly restrictive

In April 2025, the Ontario Court of Appeal made a very important ruling that the province had overstepped the limits in restricting gatherings during the COVID-19 pandemic. The court decreed that a blanket prohibition on gatherings violated freedom of assembly and that the ban was not “demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society” even though it was ostensibly for the purpose of public safety. Not only safety, but as we now know about the COVID pandemic, a question of life and death. As one commentary put it:

The court found that deleterious effects of these measures included complete elimination of the fundamental right to freedom of assembly for two months, and that outdoor protests are especially effective at amplifying minority voices and expressing political dissent, and that people who wished to take part in this activity were denied the opportunity to influence public policy by this “time-honoured” method.

So what is different about the flurry of protests that have occasioned the quest for such restrictive bubble zones?  A key difference is the accusation that the protests and the individual protesters are motivated by antisemitic hatred. Even where no explicitly antisemitic expressions are made, it is argued, antisemitism is embedded in any action that criticizes Israel. Proponents argue that our collective horror of the Nazi Holocaust and the possible rise of anti-Jewish feeling should make us agree that only by eliminating expression of criticism of Israel can Jews feel safe. Even if, perchance, a protester shouts a demonstrably racist remark, we have hate speech laws for that. But if the definition of “unsafe” is a criticism of Israel that disturbs some Jews, we have a circular argument to nowhere.

The driving force behind bubble zones is a combination of identity politics and power. Historian David S. Koffman, current editor-in-chief of Canadian Jewish Studies, has written about the evolution of Canadian Jews from a group with little power and experiencing great discrimination to one whose influence in Canadian society has grown enormously amid a drastic lessening of discrimination.

Canadian Jewish communal resources increasingly moved away from what was once called “community relations” (and is now called “allyship”). Instead, we invested in vertical alliances: forging strong ties with police chiefs, university presidents, Members of Parliament and Members of Provincial Parliaments, and other officials. This made sense at the time: Jews were entering the highest echelons of power and elite institutions and had more access to these officials. But the focus on vertical alliances came at the expense of horizontal ones—with labor unions, teachers’ federations, municipal councils, churches, temples, mosques, and grassroots organizations. And so, we arrive at today’s condition: Canadian Jews are politically enfranchised but socially estranged; powerful in official circles, but uncertain of our neighbors.

One symptom of this evolution is that Canadian Jews increasingly abandoned the outward-facing, horizontal and universalist human rights advocacy among other vulnerable groups that sustained them in the first three quarters of the 20th century and concentrated their advocacy efforts for the past fifty years inward solely on antisemitism and Israel. We have now reached the point that a group that once championed freedom of expression is now leading the charge against it.

Why would the same politicians who extoll Canada’s human rights regime and our multicultural mosaic rush to give in to a single group that wants to claw back those rights? Why would they support legislation that has a very good chance of being declared unconstitutional in the higher courts? The answers are complex and sometimes contradictory.

  • At the core of all attempts to prohibit manifestations critical of Israel is the suggestion that that criticism and the people making it are antisemitic, indeed that even those who oppose prohibitions are antisemitic. While this accusation is wearing exceedingly thin, it still packs a punch in a country whose grandfathers and grandmothers refused to lift a finger to protect the victims of Nazi Germany before and during World War II. While the bubble zones are likely eventually to be judicially overturned, that process could take up the better part of a decade. Many of those politicians imposing the bubble zones will be out of office by then. As with many controversial legislative ventures, a decade of existence can change the political calculus irreversibly.

  • If someone engaging in a protest makes antisemitic expressions, they can be charged with a hate crime under the Criminal Code. Even if Israel supporters feel that merely protesting against Israeli actions is in itself antisemitic, those offended can take their chances in court. So why don’t they do that? If a single individual is convicted of hate speech, then it is a single individual, not the whole group of protesters. If a bunch of folks are charged simply because they protest,  unlikely to be in a court of law. How much better to have a bubble zone declared where protesters cannot protest at all?

  • An important question is: What is effective expression? If my protest is so far away from the event I am protesting or the people attending that event that they cannot see or hear me, do I really have the right of expression? If I am disallowed from attempting to speak to those attending that event and communicating my views with them, what has happened to my freedom of expression?

  • While civil liberties organizations are challenging bubble zones, each bylaw is different. A court ruling overturning one may not apply to others and each may have to be adjudicated separately.

  • Even if these muzzling adventures are reversed down the road, they may establish a “new normal” for protest. Even though bubble zones chill and cripple free expression, dissidents may avoid bubble zones and find other ways to express their displeasure with the Israeli regime. And that will be some kind of victory for the “safe spaces” bullies.

  • If Canadians have the right to express themselves, do other Canadians have the right to be protected from having to listen to that expression? Professor Richard Moon, a specialist in expression freedom, ponders this question in a provocative essay for the Centre for Free Expression, suggesting that the fate of bubble zones may be more complicated than we suppose. In the battle over bubble zones, the very right to protest is at stake.

  • The bubble zone bylaws are cleverly worded to include not only Jewish places of worship, schools etc., but those of other ethno-religious groups. As social and anti-racist activist Desmond Cole says, “Bubble zones allow politicians to claim they’re standing up for the rights and safety of minority groups. But in practice, these laws diminish the value of public space, and temporarily pacify some communities while permanently eroding the freedoms and expressions of others.” In Toronto to date, of the fifty-odd bubble zone applications granted, almost all are from Jewish institutions. As in the famous saying by Anatole France, “the law, in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread.”

  • The campaign for bubble zones is not only directed at protesters who are attempting to send a message about the genocide in Gaza. More importantly, it is directed at Jews who frequent the institutions within the bubble, who the Jewish legacy organizations want to keep in an echo chamber. Insofar as the protesters threaten to disrupt that echo chamber, pro-Israel supporters are doubling down on their pursuit of shtika.

  • Compared to other, more recently-arrived groups, the Canadian Jewish community is older, more settled, more cohesive (though Israel’s current onslaughts are playing havoc with that), and more powerful. That community has formidable lobbying power, both for itself and for Israel. Politicians confronted by powerful lobbies regularly practise appeasement, especially in jurisdictions where an ethno-religious group is numerous, knowing that appearances are often more important than actuality. Even if the hate speech provisions, bubble zones and other palliatives are in time deemed to constitute overreach, the powerful can say, “Well look, we tried. What more could we do?”

  • As I have written, the conservative white power elites in the settler-colonialist Canadian society have a soft spot for settler colonialism in other places. And Israel is such a place, a bastion of white Western power that our politicians instinctively favour over Israel’s brown neighbours and subjugants.The powerful have a residual stake in shtika.

Whatever the eventual outcome of the bubble zones, human rights principles like freedom of expression are irreparably harmed when they are abandoned for political expediency for any length of time; they need constant nourishment and defending as the temptation to obliterate them when some feel offended is too tempting.

One might suppose that two years of slaughter by Israel would damage the hasbara. And it has. But now the pro-Israel forces have poured their energy not in “explaining”, but in shtika, or silencing, not only protests outside Jewish institutions, not only through legal terror, but through civil terror everywhere in civil society, from service organizations like the YMCA and the Girl Guides, to professors and doctors and students. Canada’s human rights regime weighs in the balance.


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Independent Jewish Voices - Halifax

ijv-halifax@ijvcanada.org

902-240-2782