Grabbing a Jewish girl, flicking a lighter next to her hair and saying
"let's burn the Jew" is apparently not a racially motivated act in
Winnipeg.
By: Lori Lowenthal Marcus
Published: January 6th, 2014
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Canadian judge ruled flicking a lighter in Jewish girl's hair while
saying "let's burn the Jew" not racially motivated
Canadian judge ruled flicking a lighter in Jewish girl's hair while
saying "let's burn the Jew" not racially motivated
Photo Credit: Lori Lowenthal Marcus
A high school student grabbed a Jewish female classmate, held a lighter
to her hair and said out loud, “let’s burn the Jew,” but a Canadian
judge concluded that the incident was “not racially motivated.”
The incident between two 15 year old Winnipeg, Canada high school
students took place in 2010.
The lawyer for the defendant claimed, essentially, it was the girl’s
fault her hair caught on fire.
He said his client grabbed the girl, lit the lighter and made the
comments, but her hair caught fire when she pulled away. He also said
that referring to the girl as “the Jew” was simply the way people
interacted at the school, and the defendant was not the only one who
called her that. He referred to his client as “a jerk and a bully,” but
said the incident was “impulsive and unplanned.”
The defendant’s therapist claimed the incident was an “impulsive teenage
action.”
Winnipeg’s Provincial Court Judge Robert Finlayson, before whom the
trial was held, agreed with the defense. While he called the act
“totally vulgar and inappropriate,” Finlayson said he was satisfied it
was not racially motivated.
Given the judge was unwilling to classify saying “let’s burn the Jew”
and then actually grabbing a Jew and burning her hair as anti-Semitic,
perhaps he should be praised for also stating that the school culture in
which this kind of incident was commonplace was was “unhealthy and dark
and there’s no place for it in society.”
The victim claimed the incident “changed her world upside down.” She
needed therapy to deal with her fears. She also believes that the
people in the school blamed her for making a big deal of the incident.
The now-17 year old defendant was not given any prison time. Instead,
the court ordered him to serve 18 months of supervised probation. He
also has to seek out counseling, write a letter of apology to the victim
and perform 75 hours of community service work, according to the
Winnipeg Free Press. In an earlier stage of the trial, the defendant
pleaded guilty to assault with a weapon.
Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/news/judge-lets-burn-the-jew-not-racism-even-if-you-burn-a-jew/2014/01/06/
Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/news/judge-lets-burn-the-jew-not-racism-even-if-you-burn-a-jew/2014/01/06/
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