Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

A second Montreal kosher bakery target of attempted arson attack

“We are appalled to see Montreal Kosher Bakery, an important business in our community, become the latest victim of a potential hate crime,” B’nai Brith Canada tweeted.

Montreal skyline. Credit: Songquan Deng/Shutterstock.
Montreal skyline. Credit: Songquan Deng/Shutterstock.

A kosher bakery in Montreal was the target of attempted arson in the predawn hours Monday, making the second such incident against a kosher establishment in the city in recent weeks.

According to news reports, Montreal police responded to an alarm at the Boulangerie and found a window broken and a “heat source” inside. Less than two weeks ago, on June 13, an unknown assailant shattered the front door at Chez Benny’s and attempted to start a fire there.

Both investigations are being handled by the City of Montreal Police Department’s Arson and Explosives Unit.

“We are appalled to see Montreal Kosher Bakery, an important business in our community, become the latest victim of a potential hate crime,” B’nai Brith Canada tweeted. “We will continue to stay in touch with the police on this matter & encourage everyone to stay vigilant.”

Following the incident at Chez Benny’s, a spokesperson for the police told JNS, that “At this time, there is no indication that hatred against the Jewish community is the motive.”

Like in many other places, anti-Semitism has been on the rise in Montreal. According to recent statistics, from Jan. 1 to May 31 of this year there were 21 anti-Semitic incidents and 33 crimes; last year those numbers were 13 incidents and 11 crimes.

“[T]hese are reported events. These data do not reflect the actual situation,” said Anik de Repentigny, the Montreal Police’s chargee for the communication relations. The Montreal police “takes hate crimes and incidents very seriously” and urges people to report any incident noting that the hate crimes division, which was founded in May 2016, has been working to educate people on “aspects of hate crimes and incidents and to provide them with advice on how to protect themselves against them.”

The hate crimes division, de Repentigny said, “reiterates at every opportunity the importance of speaking out against all hateful acts in order to help us collectively stop these types of incidents and crimes.”

The Vermont senator noted that Israel was attacked on Oct. 7, but still said the Jewish state was committing war crimes like Russia and Sudan.
“The Jedwabne Pogrom is a warning of what can happen when we allow antisemitism and hate to go unchallenged,” Agnieszka Markiewicz of the American Jewish Committee said.
The sanctions target a global financial network that enriches Iran’s ruling elite and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps while restricting Tehran’s access to foreign currency, according to the U.S. Treasury Department.
A Democratic consultant told JNS that those supporting Platner “were more interested in overthrowing the Democratic establishment than they were in actually winning races against Republicans.”
The Democratic contenders for U.S. Senate in Michigan remain statistically tied in a new poll, as foreign policy and Israel emerge as flashpoints in the campaign.
Videos appear to show crowds in The Hague chanting slogans, including “Hamas, Hamas, Jews to the gas,” after France advanced with a 2-0 victory.