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Canada's envoy for combatting antisemitism leaving post early

Canada's envoy for combatting antisemitism leaving post early

CBC2 days ago
Canada's special official for fighting antisemitism announced on Thursday that she is retiring her post, three months before the end of her term.
Deborah Lyons served as Canada's special envoy on preserving Holocaust remembrance and combatting antisemitism since October 2023, and was set to serve until this October.
In a social media post announcing her departure, she did not explain why she is leaving before then.
Lyons did say that she is leaving "with a heavy heart" and with some deep disappointments while also pointing to achievements, including work with institutions like universities to improve understanding of anti-Jewish hate.
She said her office fought antisemitism "with a vigour and passion not seen in many other countries," and yet she leaves with concern over Canadians who feel they must pick a side when it comes to defending humanity.
"Support to one community should never mean, or be interpreted as, minimizing another community. Our value of inclusivity has at its core our ability to hold the concerns of multiple communities in our hearts and minds," Lyons wrote.
"It was troubling in the last few years to see our lack of patience, lack of tolerance and inability to reach out across the gulf to one another."
Lyons took up the role just days after the start of the Israel-Hamas war that prompted large protests across Canada, which triggered a spike in hate crimes targeting Muslims and especially Jews. She says her office managed to "counter the negative imagery of Canada's struggle with antisemitism that followed October 2023."
She says there must be "seamless co-operation amongst the three levels of government to combat hate" and joint efforts from business, education and faith sectors.
WATCH | Lyons speaks with Rosemary Barton Live in 2023:
Communities are seeing a lot of emotion and anger, says Canada's new special envoy on antisemitism
2 years ago
Rosemary Barton speaks with Deborah Lyons, Canada's new special envoy on preserving Holocaust remembrance and combating antisemitism, about the rise in antisemitic incidents across Canada and why leaders and schools need to do more to combat hate. "This is an issue right across the country," said Lyons.
On Monday, Lyons took the unconventional step of releasing a report about issues that fall squarely into provincial jurisdiction, urging Ontario school boards to take seriously incidents of anti-Jewish bigotry targeting students, after she commissioned a survey of Jewish parents with children in the province's schools.
Lyons was the second person to hold the post of antisemitism envoy, following former attorney general Irwin Cotler, who filled the role between 2020 and 2023. She is not Jewish, but served as Canada's ambassador to Israel between 2016 and 2020.
In a statement, Canadian Heritage said Lyons's replacement will be appointed "in due course."
"The special envoy is retiring to spend more time with her family after reaching the milestone of turning 75 and a distinguished career in the public service," the statement said.
Her departure prompted messages of support from Jewish advocates.
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Digital contracts are the norm today. Is there still power in a written signature?
Digital contracts are the norm today. Is there still power in a written signature?

CBC

time3 minutes ago

  • CBC

Digital contracts are the norm today. Is there still power in a written signature?

Some of the most powerful people in the world can be recognized by their signatures. Prime Minister Mark Carney's signature adorns Canadian currency, from his time as head of the Bank of Canada. And U.S. President Donald Trump regularly displays his oversized, sloping signature for the cameras with each new executive order. But these days, it's far more common for most of us to sign our names on a touch screen, or to simply click a box on an online form, than to sign your name with a pen on paper. Author Christine Rosen isn't happy about it. "We're actively choosing to go back to a way of life where a mark is the same as a signature. So it's a devolution in terms of our skills as human beings," she told The Sunday Magazine's Peter Mitton. Rosen's book The Extinction of Experience looks at how the onslaught of digital life is hollowing out real-life experiences, like the act of physically signing your name. "I fear that our willingness to suspend that small, everyday action is sort of symbolic of some of the other important things we've discarded in our haste to embrace digitally mediated forms of communication," she said. Despite their relative rarity in most people's lives today — and the legal ambiguity that came with the introduction of electronic signatures — written signatures still carry power as a personal artistic expression, whether you've carefully designed your own or paid a professional to do it for you. E-signatures around for decades E-signatures are just over 25 years old in the U.S. In June 2000, then-U.S. president Bill Clinton signed the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act into law. The act allowed for electronic records, including digital versions of a signature, to be used for business transactions that earlier required a person's written signature for validation. 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The court ruled that, in fact, that check was as valid as a pen-and-paper signature. And, in 2024, Saskatchewan's Court of King's Bench upheld a decision that a thumbs-up emoji was confirmation of a contract between two agricultural companies. One of the companies involved asked the Supreme Court of Canada to rule on that decision; it's unclear if the Court will do so. Do young people care about signatures? Filomena Cozzolino, 27, styled her signature after her paternal grandmother, with whom she shares her name. "When I was maybe 12 or 13, I found one of her IDs and I wanted to try to copy her signature," said the publishing and creative writing student at Sheridan College in Mississauga, Ont. "Not only do we share a name, but we can share our signatures, since she's no longer here to share hers anymore." Some of her classmates had a more business-like approach to them. "I have very messy handwriting, actually, because I'm left-handed. 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