Minor tension at Toronto Pride parade over Queers Against Israeli Apartheid

Police ask people wearing Jewish Defense League T-shirts to get back to their group

The chief controversy at this year’s Toronto Pride parade, about the presence of Queers Against Israeli Aparthied (QuAIA) and Pride Toronto’s initial effort to ban the group, did not go entirely unnoticed.

The Kulanu (Jewish gay group) contingent and the QuAIA contingent were staged only about 75 metres apart on Bloor St. Each group was much larger than last year. There was some shouting and posturing back and forth, and police stepped in briefly. They asked a small group of people wearing Jewish Defense League T-shirts to get back to their group.

In the end, everything worked out just fine.

>> Free speech at Pride: All of Xtra’s coverage in one place

Watch our video report:

Read More About:
Video, Power, Activism, News, Canada, Pride

Keep Reading

A nonbinary person injects hormones with a syringe

What HRT Cafe’s shutdown means for DIY care

HRT Cafe was the largest access point for DIY transition care in the U.K. before it suddenly vanished
Urania, a feminist journal from the 20th century that challenged the gender binary.

The 20th-century journal that challenged the gender binary

From 1916 to 1940, “Urania” imagined a world beyond gender—and documented feminist movements around the globe

U.S. Supreme Court blocks California policy protecting students from forced outing

The ruling is the latest case to tackle parental rights and religion in public schools

What the Barry Neufeld tribunal ruling means for trans rights in Canada

A former Chilliwack school trustee has been ordered to pay $750,000 after years of anti-LGBTQ2S+ posts