‘Erodes the public trust’: Elected officials react to Toronto field trip rally with anti-Israel chants

The school board has apologized and opened an investigation.
Grassy Narrows protest
Participants hold a pro-Palestinian banner while taking part in a Sept. 18 march in Toronto that was in support of the Grassy Narrows First Nations community in northern Ontario. (Socialist Project/ YouTube)

Ontario Premier Doug Ford has blasted the Toronto District School Board for allowing some teachers to “indoctrinate” students with pro-Palestinian chants during a recent field trip that was ostensibly a learning event about justice for Canada’s Indigenous people. “It’s disgusting”, he told reporters Monday. Meanwhile, Ford’s education minister, Jill Dunlop, also slammed what she called “activist” public school teachers, who she said compromised student safety and breached the trust of the parents who had signed permission forms.

The event in question involved 15 public elementary schools, which brought students to the annual Grassy Narrows River Run on Sept. 18. The rally and march spreads awareness about the First Nation community in remote Northwestern Ontario that has spent decades fighting for justice after a local factory poisoned their water system with mercury.

But parents have reported that a few teachers with a pro-Palestine agenda used the event to spread their own message about a totally separate issue: the Middle East conflict. In videos posted online, they can be seen using a megaphone to lead their students in chanting anti-Israel slogans; some are even wearing keffiyehs, while participants hold a banner that reads “From Wabigoon (a lake near Grassy Narrows) to the Dead Sea, We will all be free”.

Shelley Laskin is a school board trustee who represents the heavily Jewish Ward 8 (Eglinton-Lawrence and Toronto-St. Paul’s). Laskin joins The CJN Daily to explain why she demanded a special public school board meeting be held this Wednesday, Sept. 25, to look into the incident that “erodes the public trust” in Canada’s largest school board.

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