Until recently, the CBC was one of Canada's
largest publishers of anti-Semitic material and, in some ways, still is. The
problem wasn’t the CBC reporters; it was the audience, posting anti-Semitic
attacks on the CBC web site.

Courtesy of the Canadian taxpayer, anti-Semites could reach far more people
by posting on CBC.ca than through the wacko sites that specialize in
Jew-hatred. Worse, they reached a mainstream audience, not just their fellow
bigots.
The anti-Semitic attacks reached a crescendo during Israel’s recent war with
Hamas, but this problem of Jew-haters using the CBC as their message board
stretches back for years.
Last April, I wrote about the
anti-Semitic comments that greeted a CBC.ca story about Prime Minister
Stephen Harper laying a wreath at Auschwitz. A reader calling himself
'Baltzera' asked which would be more entertaining, "a day pass to Disney’s
theme park or Dachau?"
Similar filth greeted a story about B'nai Brith's 2007 Audit of Anti-Semitic
Incidents in Canada, with one reader asserting that Jews are "despised for
all the right reasons here and globally."
Back in 2004, writing in the Globe and Mail, Margaret Wente
noted the problem with anti-Semitic reader comments at the CBC, and
quoted this one: "Jesus may have been a Jew himself but I know for a fact
that he didn’t take part in the eating of blood-filled pastries made from
the blood of Palestinian children."
The theme of Jews thirsting for blood resurfaced during Israel's war with
Hamas. For example, a reader, identifying himself as 'LoranHayden,'
portrayed Jews as racist, genocidal baby-killers, savouring "Muslim juice."
In Canada, anti-Jewish extremists like this are part of the lunatic fringe.
On the CBC message boards, they’re prolific.
For example, 536 CBC.ca readers clicked on the link to recommend a comment
by 'sandy411' in which he/she compared Israel's assault on Hamas to the
Holocaust and added a reference to Israel wanting "pounds of flesh," like
Shylock the Jew.
'Sandy411' added: "How many tons of Palestinian women and children will
settle your account, Israel?" It was the most popular comment of the day.
I wrote to the CBC to complain, citing eight of the most odious comparisons
of Jews to Nazis, all of them taken from reader comments on a single story
published Dec. 27.
While
I waited for a reply, the Hamas war got into full swing and CBC.ca readers
began posting more than 1,000 comments a day on the topic. I collected 50
more examples of anti-Semitic attacks: everything from 'DrDavid' referring
to Jews as vermin and praising Hitler to 'FRTknocker' denigrating Canadian
Jews as 'zionazis' and telling us to get out of Canada.
I could have found hundreds more, but I took my 50 examples and submitted
another complaint.
Two weeks later, the CBC replied. They had reviewed the comments I'd pointed
out and agreed the "vast majority" were unacceptable. They reviewed other
comments posted by the same users, found many were just as bad and removed
them, too.
Even better, management showed the moderators, who screen reader comments,
the anti-Semitic attacks that they had allowed, made them "aware of the
problem users," and refreshed them "on the issue of anti-Semitism in
general."
Moreover, the CBC agreed that comparisons of Israel (and Jews) to the Nazis
and of Gaza to a concentration camp "fall outside acceptable discourse on
the topic."
In short, it was an outstanding, highly professional response. And I wasn’t
satisfied.
A glance at recent stories showed the moderators were still allowing some
gross anti-Semitism and Holocaust-baiting to slip through. Besides, though
the CBC would block or remove a comment suggesting Jews are baby-killing
Nazis, the reader was welcome to come back with some more subtle
Jew-baiting.
So I wrote and
complained again.
I’m still waiting for a reply but not impatiently, because in the meanwhile
- to their great credit -the CBC has gotten better at screening out
anti-Semitic attacks.
Also,
they've posted a
new policy, stating that people who offend the CBC's policies may have
their account suspended. In other words, Jew-haters can get themselves
banned.
Many readers commenting at CBC.ca still demonize Israel. They call it
racist, terrorist, apartheid. They're still preparing a rationale for wiping
Israel off the map, still in the business of supplying a warrant for
genocide.
But the CBC has drawn a line in the sand. Attacking Jews is going a step too
far. So is comparing the Nazi Jew-killers to the Jewish state. That sort of
thing used to get posted at the CBC. Not anymore.
Brian Henry is a Toronto writer and
editor. He's an occasional Instructor at Ryerson University's G. Raymond
Chang School of Continuing Studies and a frequent contributor to
H-Anti-Semitism, a scholarly forum for the discussion of the history of
anti-Semitism. Comments are welcome at his blog:
http://brians-op-eds.blogspot.com/.