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THE REFORM JEWISH DAY SCHOOL

... PRESENTS ...

(A Cantorial Concert)

Canadian Anti-Semitism
Reported At Record High

Montreal (JTA) — The
number of anti-Semitic in-
cidents in Canada has
reached its highest level in
the nine years since figures
were tabulated, according to
the Quebec branch of the
League for Human Rights of
B'nai Brith Canada.
At a news conference
called here to disclose the
findings of its 1990 audit of
anti-Semitic incidents, the
league reported a total of
210 such acts, up from 176
last year — a 19 percent in-
crease.
A news conference was
held simultaneously in
Toronto, where racist groups
have been more active of
late.
The report takes into ac-
count acts against in-
dividuals or institutions, in-
cluding harassment, hate
propaganda and vandalism
of a racial nature, which are
reported to the league,
which is affiliated with the
Anti-Defamation League of
B'nai Brith in the United
States.
Acts of harassment were
dramatically higher, up
from 113 in 1989 to 150 in

1990, an increase of 33 per-
cent. Acts of vandalism ac-
tually decreased, from 63 the
previous year to 60 last year.
But overall, the statistics
have tripled since 1987,
when there were 55 anti-
Semitic incidents.

Regionally, Toronto expe-
rienced the highest in-
cidence of anti-Semitic acts,
78 cases, of which 67 percent
constituted harassment.
There were 28 cases of anti-
Semitic acts recorded in the
rest of Ontario.
Montreal was tied with
British Columbia for the
second-highest rate of anti-
Semitic acts, 34 such in-
cidents.

The audit refers to "two
disturbing trends," that
1990 represents the third
straight year of increased
incidents and, more alarm-
ingly, that anti-Semitic acts
have dramatically risen in
severity.
The ADL issued a survey
last week reporting that in
the United States, a record
number of anti-Semitic in-
cidents was committed for
the fourth year in a row.

Gail Hirschenfang and Cantor Harold Orbach

SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1991 — 7:30 P.M.
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98

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1991

FIND IT

Israelis Irked By Civil
Defense Instructions

Jerusalem (JTA) — A
crisis of confidence is rapidly
building between the public
and the civil defense au-
thorities, whose instructions
are being flouted every time
there is an air raid alert.
The Israel Defense Force
insists everyone stay at
home in a poison gas-proof
room during an air raid
alert. The public, however,
feels more securely protected
in underground air raid
shelters.
After the devastating raid
on the Greater Tel Aviv area
early on the morning of Feb.
9, an IDF spokesman told
the public that underground
shelters sealed against both
blast and gas attack would
be the ideal solution. But
there are not many of them.
The controversy has grown
from the fact that all of the
31 Scud missiles fired into
Israel between Jan. 18 and
Feb. 9 carried conventional,
high-explosive warheads
that blasted buildings to
rubble in densely populated
areas.
Miraculously, they caused
relatively few casualties,

possibly because the public
was not following official in-
structions.
The military and civil
defense authorities are con-
vinced, however, that
Saddam Hussein still has
the capability to launch a
chemical or biological attack
on Israel, as he has
threatened.
Should that happen, the
IDF warns, underground air

The public feels
more protected in
underground air
raid shelters.

raid shelters would become
death traps, because gas is
heavier than air and seeks
the lowest level.
The IDF has broadcast
detailed instructions on how
to make rooms gas-proof. By
and large, the public has
complied. But Israelis have
felt vulnerable sitting in
their sealed rooms with gas
masks handy while their
blocks were shaken by ex-
ploding warheads.

