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  • No Progress In Search For School Firebomber

    NO PROGRESS IN SEARCH FOR SCHOOL FIREBOMBER
    By Janice Arnold
    Staff Reporter

    The Canadan Jewish News
    September 14, 2006

    MONTREAL - The perpetrator of a Molotov-cocktail attack on a chassidic
    boys' school in Montreal over Labour Day weekend remains at large
    despite the act having been videotaped by the school's surveillance
    camera and despite a $5,000 reward offered by an anonymous donor for
    information leading to his arrest.

    The images released by police show, from an angle, a masked
    black-haired man, seemingly in his 20s and apparently alone, wearing
    a beige top and beige pants reaching to below the knees. He is seen
    lighting an accelerant and throwing it through a glass panel of the
    main entrance of the Skver community's Toldos Yakov Yosef school in
    the city's Outremont neighbourhood shortly after midnight on Saturday,
    Sept. 2.

    In the last frame, he removes his hood-like mask as he flees.

    School and Jewish community officials told a press conference last
    week that they're confident and grateful police are putting the
    necessary resources into their investigation.

    The community and police, however, differ on the motivation for
    the crime.

    Police have so far not labelled the incident a hate crime, because
    of the absence of evidence such as graffiti or phone calls, and are
    treating it as arson.

    But Canadian Jewish Congress, B'nai Brith Canada and Toldos
    leaders are convinced the perpetrator deliberately targeted a
    Jewish institution. No one was in the school at the time. About a
    dozen teenaged students had left the building only about 20 minutes
    beforehand.

    Damage was limited to the school's vestibule because sprinklers put out
    the fire and the fire department responded quickly, school director
    Binyomin Mayer said. He thanked the school's non-Jewish neighbours
    for immediately alerting police and coming to see if anyone was on
    the premises.

    The school reopened the next day, but it estimates it will cost
    $150,000 to repair damage and add new security features.

    Asked if he thought there was a connection between the incident and the
    recent Israel-Hezbollah conflict, Rabbi Reuben Poupko, co-chair of the
    Montreal Jewish Security Advisory Committee, told reporters that it's
    "a fair question to wonder whether the gathering of 15,000 Quebecers
    under the flag of Hezbollah - unfortunately further legitimized by
    the presence of politicians - creates an atmosphere where fanatics
    draw the conclusion that violence against Jews is somehow acceptable."

    He said many in the community have been asking themselves that
    question. Rabbi Poupko was referring to the Aug. 6 demonstration
    against the recent war in which three politicians - Bloc Quebecois
    leader Gilles Duceppe, Parti Quebecois leader Andre Boisclair and
    federal Liberal MP Denis Coderre - participated prominently.

    At the press conference, held three days after the firebombing,
    community officials asked that political leaders forcefully denounce
    the Toldos attack. But reaction was slow and scattered, unlike the
    firebombing of United Talmud Torahs' library in April 2004, when
    politicians at all levels, including then-prime minister Paul Martin,
    immediately condemned the act. (Prime Minister Stephen Harper has
    yet to issue a statement.)

    Duceppe was one of the first politicians to condemn the incident and
    affirm that Quebecers do not tolerate any such "hateful act whoever
    it is directed at, or for whatever reason." Boisclair soon after
    denounced the incident as well.

    Quebec Premier Jean Charest said: "No one can determine at this point
    if it was motivated by hate.

    But nonetheless I think it is important that all Quebec see very
    clearly on this issue that we are a society of tolerance, that we
    are a society that encourages free speech and that we should not and
    cannot tolerate these kinds of acts."

    Federal Liberal leadership candidate and Nova Scotia MP Scott Brison
    visited the school to express his revulsion against what he called
    an act of "terrorism" against children and education.

    NDP leader Jack Layton likewise stated: "How could someone be so
    callous as to attempt to strike terror into the hearts of young
    children?"

    Alex Werzberger, president of the Coalition of Chassidic Organizations
    of Outremont, pointed out there is an Armenian church and school two
    blocks away from Toldos, as well as a French school on a nearby block,
    which suggests to him that the perpetrator had "his pick of schools"
    but went for the Jewish one.

    "You can't put any other spin on it than anti-Semitism."

    Werzberger said there hasn't been a serious anti-Semitic incident in
    Outremont for a long time, nor has there been any recent contentious
    issue, such as disputes over shul locations, parking problems or an
    eruv, which were all prominent several years ago.

    "Other than someone yelling 'damned Jews,' which is almost a daily
    occurrence, there has been nothing," he said.

    FEDERATION CJA, which co-ordinates community security, is re-evaluating
    security at Jewish schools and other institutions in the wake of
    the incident, but it did not raise its threat-assessment level as a
    result of the incident. It continues to call for "heightened vigilance"
    and implementation of existing procedures.

    Since the UTT firebombing, the federation has had a full-time community
    security director, Michel Bujold, formerly in charge of security at
    Concordia University. He was on the Toldos crime scene about three
    hours later.

    After UTT, Combined Jewish Appeal raised $2.3 million specifically
    for security, and all 40 school and day-care sites were assessed by
    a U.S security professional. Toldos was found to be at risk and CJA
    heavily subsidized the installation of a surveillance camera. The
    school, located a former industrial area that is now mainly home to
    condominiums, has been defaced with swastikas in the past. Its girls'
    school is down the street, as is a Belzer chassidic school.

    CJC Quebec region chair Jeffrey Boro said it will be determined if
    additional security at the schools is needed. Rabbi Poupko said the
    incident proved that the security structure in place worked well and
    the community's investment paid off.

    The psychological damage from the attack may last a while, Mayer
    said. Some Toldos students, especially those between six and 12, are
    showing signs of anxiety and counsellors have been hired to help them.

    Toldos has about 250 boys from age three to 16, Mayer said. There
    are about 200 Skver families in Montreal.

    Originally from Ukraine, the community is headquartered near Spring
    Valley, N. Y., where its Grand Rebbe, David Twersky, lives.

    Boro, a criminal lawyer by profession, admitted that no matter how
    many layers of security are in place, there's no way to totally
    prevent acts such as the firebombing.

    "What we have to do is educate people. Civil discourse is the rule
    of the day. We have to continue outreach programs and show people we
    are not so different."

    The UTT firebombing was immediately called a hate crime by police
    because of a note left at the school, but the perpetrator was not
    charged with a hate crime.

    Sleiman El-Merhebi, 20, was released from a federal prison in May
    after serving two-thirds of a 40-month sentence.

    A date for his mother's trial is to be set Sept. 25.

    Rouba El-Merhebi Fahd is charged with being an accessory after the
    fact of her son's crime.
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