Observing the braying, spit-flecked mob outside the doors to Toronto’s Park Hyatt Hotel on Monday night — replete with signs (falsely) accusing Israel of genocide, and hinting (clearly) at a desired genocide of their own — it almost seemed redundant to ask: What did the anti-Israel, pro-Hamas swarm hope to accomplish?
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It’s a relevant question, too: Like, what the hell? Are you actually against books, pro-Hamas cabal? Have you, at long last, reached that low, that nadir?
Because that’s all that the tony affair at the Park Hyatt was about, folks: Books. Canadian books, in particular.
The occasion was the awarding of the Giller, which is one of the biggest such prizes for writing in the world, with $100,000 going to the winner. It’s been going for years now, and was started by the much-admired Jack Rabinovitch, a business guy who loved books. He named the prize after his wife and true love, Doris Giller, who had been editor at the books section of the Toronto Star. After Jack died in 2017, his daughter Elana Rabinovitch took up the mantle.
The finalists this year were from across Canada. There was Eric Chacour from Quebec, who wrote ‘I Know About You.’ There was Anne Fleming from Victoria, with ‘Curiosities.’ There was Guelph’s Deepa Rajagopalan, who was there for ‘Peacocks of Instagram.’ There was Conor Kerr, who is an Alberta guy and even wore his cowboy hat all night, picked for his book ‘Prairie Edge.’ And there was the winner, the soft-spoken and thoughtful Anne Michaels from Toronto, who wrote ‘Held.’
It was a nice event. Everyone there — former Toronto mayor John Tory, Canadian UN Ambassador Bob Rae, and a metric ton of folks sporting Order of Canada pins on their lapels — wanted to celebrate books generally, and Canadian books in particular. Who could be against that?
Well, the Hamas fetishists could be, and are. Last year, just a few days after Israel commenced its just and rational war against Hamas for slaughtering 1,200 Jews and non-Jews, some creeps disrupted the Giller ceremony. They jumped up on stage with signs that falsely accused the main sponsor, Scotiabank, of “funding genocide.” Screamed one: “We will not be silent anymore.”
Well, at this year’s gala, they were. There was more security present than at a typical prime ministerial speech, and everything went off without a hitch. No Hamasniks made it inside to cause trouble. Credit Elana Rabinovitch for that.
People at this year’s event — where Scotiabank’s name was absent — were clearly relieved. Some great books got promoted, and Canadian writing got celebrated. It was, as noted, nice.
But the question still nags: How can the ones who profess to be for Palestine be against books?
Because, make no mistake, they are. And it is deliberate. Culturally, the people screaming on the sidewalk outside the Giller event are the new Taliban.
Take a look at their catechism, the 1988 Hamas Charter. It’s all there. Article Two says they favour “the complete embrace of all Islamic concepts in life” — and the first “concept” they list is “culture.” Culture, to the Hamas apologists, is key to the establishment of a global caliphate: Those in the business of promoting books and the like “have ample resources that enable them to play their role in societies for the purpose of achieving the Zionist targets and to deepen the concepts that would serve the enemy. These organizations operate in the absence of Islam.”
On the day that Hamas and its ilk prevail, these cultural institutions “will be obliterated,” Hamas declares.
“The book … the popular poem, the poetic ode, the song, the play and others, contain the characteristics of Islamic art, (and) are among the requirements of ideological mobilization,” say Hamas. They are “utterly serious” about all this, they say in their Charter, because Jews, “with their money, they took control of the world media, news agencies, the press, publishing houses, broadcasting stations, and others.”
That, then, is really what the pro-Hamas cabal was protesting: Jews, and Jewish “control” of culture. Their final solution to that is to wipe out the culture found in the West — books, music, art — and replace it with the dark, bigoted, monoculture they prefer.
We can’t let them. And, at the Giller Prize event at the Park Hyatt Hotel in Toronto on Monday night?
We didn’t.