Noted bigot and PQ candidate Louise Mailloux |
Parti Quebecois'
candidate Louise Mailloux has been spreading a myth originally invented by the
Klu Klux Klan and since adopted by numerous neo-Nazi groups. According to the
PQ candidate and the neo-Nazis, Jews use kosher certificates to steal money
from non-Jews and then use the cash to fund nefarious schemes.
Mailloux doesn’t spread
vicious myths just about Jews. She doesn’t like Muslims or Christians, either. According
to her, Muslims are running the same “rip-off” with hallal meat as the Jews
with their kosher foods.
“This is a religious tax,” Ms. Mailloux said on
a March 2012 edition of Bazzo.tv, a panel show on Tele-Quebec, “and it’s a tax
we pay directly to mosques, to synagogues and to religious groups. It’s a theft.”
As for Christians, Mailloux says baptism is like rape. So is circumcision, according to
Mailloux.
The Centre for Israel and
Jewish Affairs called on the PQ to debunk the “urban legend of the kosher tax,” Instead, PQ Leader
Pauline Marois endorsed her candidate, saying she’s a respected academic who
has thought long and hard about these issues.
“Her writings are eloquent, I respect her point of view,” Ms. Marois said.
“The Parti Québécois is not an anti-Semitic party,” Pauline Marois declared to much chuckling. |
No surprise there. In the current Quebec
election, the PQ’s entire strategy is based on intolerance. The PQ is campaigning
on its so-called secular charter. Aimed primarily against Muslims, the charter
bans government employees and workers in hospitals, schools and day cares from
wearing religious symbols such as a head scarf or Star of David.
Unfortunately, part of what makes Quebec
distinct is that it’s always been less tolerant than the rest of Canada (see more here). Mailloux isn’t just some nutcase (though she is that). She’s a professor
of philosophy and a prominent Quebec feminist. And the PQ is tapping into a
deep well of suspicion against Jews and Muslims.
Quebec newspapers
and TV programs regularly run stories that detail how much of the food eaten in
the province is certified kosher or halal – as if this is somehow a problem.
Under Quebec's secular charter, large, ostentatious crosses will not be allowed. |
And the urban legend of a
kosher tax has made the rounds in Quebec for years. Back in 2008, Quebec’s Bouchard-Taylor
commission reported that among Quebecers “the most fanciful information
is circulating” about kosher food. And then went on to debunk the myth
of a kosher tax.
But while Jewish groups object to the PQ’s
support for antisemitism, Quebec’s feminists have been silent about Mailloux’s trivialization of rape. Again, no real surprise. Mailloux is
one of their own. Also, Quebec feminists tend to support the PQ and often share
Mailloux’s hostility to religious groups.
Mailloux’s support of
a myth spread by neo-Nazis and the KKK does raise a particular question: What
does the PQ’s secular charter have to say about government employees dressing
in white sheets?
According to rumour, the
PQ leader
has responded: “Of course, the white sheets are allowed. These are not
religious symbols. But there must be no burning of crosses. Other symbols are
okay. If they want to burn a swastika in someone’s front lawn, well that is not
a religious symbol, is it?”
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