Monday, February 17, 2025

Everyone in Canada is talking about Trump's tariffs. What about religious leaders?


 









Politicians are talking about it. So are entertainers, comedians and the media. Even hockey fans are sharing their feelings about Trump’s tariffs and threats to annex Canada when they boo the U.S. national anthem at hockey games. 

Everyone is talking about it, it seems — in coffee shops, stores, workplaces, you name it. What about in places of worship? 

That was the question on my mind as I saw the crescendo of conversation rise in Canada over the first few weeks of Trump’s presidency. In particular, I wondered what local clergy are saying about it to their members. I reached out to some for their thoughts. 

Read those thoughts in my latest Free Press column.

Monday, February 10, 2025

Antisemitism and other hate on the rise online: Researcher











When a Jewish school is shot at in Canada, it makes the news. So does an arson attack on a synagogue, or graffiti spray painted on Jewish-owned buildings. 

When those things happen, police, governments and the media all leap into action — as they should. Acts of hate against Jews, against Muslims, or against any group need to be called out and firmly addressed. 

But almost nothing is done about another form of hate that comes directly into our homes on a regular basis: online hate. And that concerns Andre Oboler, CEO of Australia’s Online Hate Prevention Institute. 

Prior to 2008, before social media, this form of online hate “did not exist because the platforms did not exist,” he said. “But it’s a different world today.” 

Through the institute, Oboler tracks online hate directed at Jews and other groups. Since Oct. 7, when Hamas attacked Israel, the Institute has seen a 400 per cent rise in antisemitism on social media platforms such as X (formerly Twitter), Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and others. 

The biggest increases are in the platforms dominated by the far right, he said. “But it is growing everywhere.”

Read more in my recent Free Press column.

Monday, February 3, 2025

Your invitation to support faith coverage at the Winnipeg Free Press









If you think stories about religion should be reported by the media, here’s your chance to make sure that continues to happen at the Winnipeg Free Press.

 

The Free Press is the only major daily media outlet in Canada that still has a faith beat—and I am the only faith reporter in the country.

 

The beat is made possible by support from faith groups in Winnipeg that support the Religion in the News project at the Free Press—founded in 2019 to make sure stories about faith were reported by the newspaper.

 

Since that time, over 850 articles about faith in the province have been produced, along with 250 columns.

 

Along with support from faith groups, people like you are invited to make contributions to the project! You can ensure the paper can continue to report about faith by making a contribution of $25, $50 or more at the Religion in the News support page at the Free Press. (Note: Contributions are not tax deductible.)  

 

You can support this coverage even if you don’t live in Winnipeg—all stories are free to read on the Free Press website (along with religion stories from across Canada and around the world).

 

In case you are wondering what kinds of stories about faith are published by the Free Press, here’s a list from January:

 

·       ‘Gaza, but in slower motion’: Local Mennonites share about visit to West Bank

·       Federal committee urges end to tax deductions for places of worship

·       ‘Hate goes viral’: CMHR talk to focus on rising antisemitism

·       Indigenous, Muslim conference delves into colonization, racism

·       2025 marks the 500th anniversary of Anabaptism

·       Mosque becomes a reality for Morden’s Muslim families

·       Let’s live peacefully and meaningfully together in this land

·       Winnipeg Roman Catholic archbishop retires

·       From Ten Commandments to Synod on Synodality, it was quite a year

·       Sikh community builder to receive interfaith award

·       Spiritual care providers at personal care homes serve residents’ spiritual needs

·       Interfaith outreach program brings Winnipeggers together

·      Winnipeg festival to celebrate history, significance of Yiddish language

 

Thanks for supporting Religion in the News!

Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Government committee recommends eliminating charitable tax deduction for giving to places of worship









Why should you get a charitable tax receipt for donating to the salary of your minister, priest or rabbi?

That’s the question asked by the B.C. Humanist Association — and now it’s also on a list of proposed recommendations for the federal government from the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance.

In its report, titled “Pre-Budget Consultations In Advance Of The 2025 Budget,” the Committee recommends the next budget of the federal government “amend the Income Tax Act to provide a definition of a charity which would remove the privileged status of ‘advancement of religion’ as a charitable purpose.”

It’s one of 462 recommendations in the report, which was created following consultations with Canadians last summer. It is the first time that idea has appeared in the Committee’s report. 

Read about this proposed change to Canada’s charitable tax law in my recent Free Press column.

 

Sunday, January 12, 2025

Challenging historical notions about Indigenous people and religion in Canada











“In earnest, my dear brother, I am sorry for you from the bottom of my soul. Take my advice and turn Wendat; for I see plainly a vast difference between your condition and mine.”


That’s what Kondiaronk, a Wendat chief who lived from 1649-1701 in what is now Canada, said to a Frenchman when comparing his life, and religious beliefs, with those of the French.

 

Kondiaronk’s words, as recorded by Baron de Lahontan, challenge the old assertion that Europe and its religion was superior to the beliefs and way of life of Indigenous people—or that all Indigenous people felt that way.

 

Not even all of the French believed it. One missionary conceded there were aspects of Indigenous life that were superior to that of the French. “They have no lawsuits and take little pains to acquire the goods of this life, for which we Christians torment ourselves so much, and for our excessive and insatiable greed in acquiring them we are justly and with reason reproved by their quiet life and tranquil dispositions,” he wrote.

 

Read more about Kondiaronk, the French colonizers and religion in my Free Press column.


Photo above from Canadian Encyclopedia: Kondiaronk.

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

500 years ago, Anabaptists began to explore the meaning of true evangelical faith








Under cover of darkness, a dozen or so men quietly walked through the falling snow in Zurich, Switzerland, on Jan. 21, 1525. The winter wind seemed to match the chill in their hearts as they made their way through the narrow streets to the home of Anna Manz, mother of Felix. 

The city council had ordered them to stop meeting for Bible study. What should they do? 

Once inside, they prayed for guidance. When the prayers ended, George Blaurock, a former priest, asked Conrad Grebel to baptize him. Grebel did so, and Blaurock proceeded to baptize the others. 

The Anabaptist movement was born. 

When what they had done became known, the Bible study group was arrested and jailed. But as soon as they were released, they began to travel and preach. 

2025 is the 500th anniversary of Anabaptism. Read my story about the start of the Anabaptist movement in the Free Press. Also read about the persecution of the early Anabaptists in my article here in Anabaptist World.

Photo above: The Limmat River in Zurich, Switzerland, birthplace of Anabaptism, where Felix Manz became the city’s first Anabaptist martyr, drowned in the river on Jan. 5, 1527.

Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Two retiring politicians, Liberal and Conservative, reflect on their faith and politics











Faith is not a component of my life. It’s just my life. I don’t separate them.” That’s how John McKay, 76, Liberal Member of Parliament for Scarborough-Guildwood, describes how his Christian faith impacted his work as a politician for the past 23 years.



 





Adds Ed Fast, 69, who represents Abbotsford, B.C., for the Conservative Party of Canada: “My faith forms every aspect of my life,” an MP for 19 years. “Everything I have done as a politician is rooted in my faith values.” 

McKay and Fast, who are both retiring from politics in 2025, reflect on how their faith influenced their lives as politicians in my article about them in the most recent issue of Faith Today.