WEATHER ALERT

Expert warns of growing far-right movement in Canada

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Before Barbara Perry could begin her speech, the hotel fire alarm went off.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 14/03/2019 (2121 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Before Barbara Perry could begin her speech, the hotel fire alarm went off.

It was an apt metaphor for her presentation Thursday morning. The director of the Centre on Hate, Bias and Extremism at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology was in Winnipeg to raise the alarm about the growth of the far right in Canada.

Hours later, dozens of people were shot and killed at two mosques in New Zealand in an attack apparently motivated by anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim anger.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Barbara Perry, from the University of Ontario Institute of Technology, spoke about the rise of the far right in Canada, and why Canadians should be concerned.
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Barbara Perry, from the University of Ontario Institute of Technology, spoke about the rise of the far right in Canada, and why Canadians should be concerned.

“Few people in Canada know about the resurgence of the far right,” Perry told about 100 people gathered Thursday for Striving for Human Dignity: Race, Gender, Class & Religion, a conference organized by the Islamic Social Services Association.

Using information from her 2015 report about the rise of the far right in Canada, together with more recent observations, she said there has been a 25 to 30 per cent rise in the number of far-right groups in this country. All told, Perry said, there are nearly 300 far-right groups in Canada, with most found in Quebec, Ontario and Alberta. There are an estimated eight to 10 in Manitoba.

Governments, law enforcement and media have downplayed the threat posed by these groups, Perry said, preferring to highlight the danger posed by Islamic extremists.

She noted Justin Bourque, who killed three RCMP officers in Moncton, N.B., in 2014, was often described as a “cop killer,” without noting he was involved in sharing far-right propaganda. Yet Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, who killed Cpl. Nathan Cirillo and attacked Parliament in Ottawa, was frequently associated with Islam.

“The first one terrorized a city but wasn’t a terrorist, but the other was a Canadian-bred Muslim terrorist,” Perry said.

She went on to note police-reported hate crimes are on the rise in Canada, up 47 per cent in 2017. Most of the victims of the crimes were members of the Muslim and Jewish communities.

“It would be called a crisis if it was any other kind of crime,” Perry said.

One of the reasons for the lack of attention to the rise of the far right in Canada is they don’t look extreme, she said.

More groups are presenting “a facade of legitimacy” to deflect negative attention and attract new followers.

They are “representing themselves as educated and urbane, as opposed to more traditional skinhead or neo-Nazi look,” Perry said. They also have “sanitized” their ideology, “removing explicitly racist language, using coded words.”

The far right has also started to use music to share their ideology and recruit new members. While there is still a lot of “white power” heavy metal music videos on YouTube, far-right groups are increasingly using folk and country and western music to share their messages, Perry said.

“It’s pretty music that can lull you to sleep,” so you don’t recognize what they are really saying, she said.

All of this represents “conscious efforts to broaden the audience, bring in a different demographic,” Perry said, noting groups are increasingly targeting older Canadians. A growing number of members of these groups are “middle-aged men, employed and well-educated,” she said, noting this is “an important change in the demographic” for far-right groups.

Perry said she finds the number of present and former law enforcement and military personnel involved in these groups “very disturbing.”

“We are seeing more evidence of that,” she said, especially in a group called the III%ers, or 3%ers, which is heavily armed and whose members “show themselves with weapons and engaged in paramilitary training.”

To counter the rise of far-right groups, Perry suggested a “strong and visible” response from police forces, more attention by the media and holding politicians accountable when there is a “political climate in which hate emerges.”

Individuals and local groups can also respond by creating awareness, and through education and “anti-racism activities.”

Churches can play a role by talking to their members about the rise of hate groups, and by showing “allyship” for minority religions, Perry said.

This would include “building coalitions across faith groups and standing with minority religions,” she said.

“I don’t think the general public is aware of the danger associated with these groups,” she said, adding it is not just a big-city problem.

“It’s also happening in rural areas,” Perry said, although it is “a little more hidden.”

 

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John Longhurst

John Longhurst
Faith reporter

John Longhurst has been writing for Winnipeg's faith pages since 2003. He also writes for Religion News Service in the U.S., and blogs about the media, marketing and communications at Making the News.

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