‘It was traumatic for everyone’: Zoom prayer service hijacked by trolls screaming derogatory slurs – CBC.ca

Posted By on April 26, 2020

Like many churches and synagogues across Canada, members of the Shaarei Shomayim synagogue in Toronto have been holding daily services via the video conference appZoomsince the COVID-19 outbreak.

Rabbi Chaim Strauchler said their prayer services have been held without incident, but that all changed last Sunday night.

"Our congregation has been doing [this] since the COVID crisis began. We pray on behalf of doctors and front-line workers, and on behalf of the world. We pray for an ending of this disease and the finding of a cure," Strauchler told CBC News.

"It was specifically at that moment of the service that five or six additional accounts came on They all began one after another to scream out slurs really intense, hurtful things."

Strauchler said as the attackers screamed, they used their screens to show pornography.

"[They were screaming] a lot of things relating to the Holocaust, things like 'gas chambers' and 'Hitler was right' just derogatory stuff toward the Jewish people."

"It was traumatic for everyone."

Strauchler said there were about 20 people in the Zoom service. Many of them left immediately.

He explained that for many of them, there was an element of shock and "a recognition that anti-Semitism, which they knew intellectually was out there, it's something that was in their face, it was now touching them personally in some way."

"On that call there was a great grandmother who never experienced an anti-Semitic incident before in her life. On that call there was a Holocaust survivor who didn't know what happened, didn't know what was going on.

"There was a bar mitzvah boy, a 13-year-old young man, who was also on that call,"Strauchleradded.

Strauchlersaid even though members of thesynagogue were disturbed by the incident, they continue to hold daily prayer service.

He said there are now new security protocols for persons to participate in the online prayers services.

"We proceeded from that point forward to make use of what's called the waiting room. Anyone coming on the callhas their user name checked before being allowed into the service,"Strauchlersaid.

"We also changed [our]security settings."

Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino has condemned the incident saying anti-Semitism, hatred and division have no place anywhere in Canada.

"I condemn the attack on virtual services at Shaarei Shomayim in the strongest possible terms," he wrote in a statement to CBC News.

"It was a cowardly, offensive and deeply inappropriate intrusion on what should have been a moment of prayer, quiet contemplation and renewal."

Mendicino, who is also MP for the riding ofEglintonLawrence where the synagogue is located, said as the Jewish community and people of all faiths have had to find new ways, and often virtual ways, of worshipping because of the COVID-19 pandemic, this incident is a reminder that everyone must guard against anti-Semitism in all its ugly forms, wherever it may occur, including online.

The Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Centre for Holocaust studies (FSWC) has denounced the attack.

President and CEO Avi Benlolo said as the coronavirus pandemic brings more people online, they are seeing a disturbing trend called Zoom-bombing gain popularity.

"What is very concerning is that Jewish groups and synagogues holding online services have been especially targeted by antisemitic Zoom-bombers who are exposing members young and old to such hateful and vile messages and images," Benlolo wrote in a statement.

"Just like we have seen an increase in physical violent attacks on synagogues, we are now seeing an increase in online attacks, so we urge for more safety precautions to be taken during these times."

Meanwhile, Strauchler said the incident was reported to Toronto police who are working with the owners of the Zoom app to track down the attackers.

It's being investigate as a possible hate crime,Toronto police spokesperson Meaghan Gray told CBC News.

Zoomhas emerged as an indispensablevideo conferencing tool for remote workand study as millions of people are forced to stay home during the COVID-19 pandemic.

A growing number of so-called Zoom-bombingincidents isprompting warnings from the FBI and from the victims themselves.

Det.-Sgt. Paul Krawczyk of the Toronto Police's Child Exploitation Sectionsaid they have been receiving a number of reports of online meetings being interrupted by persons streaming either illegal or inappropriate content.

Noting that this can be "very traumatizing," Krawczyk said anyone experiencing these attacks should immediately contact police, who will investigate.

"We work closely with many of these companies that have virtual meetings software, so it would be reaching out to them, getting judicial authorizations in place and then obtaining information hopefully on the suspects," Krawczyk told CBC News.

For those organizing virtual meetings, police recommendthe following tips:

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'It was traumatic for everyone': Zoom prayer service hijacked by trolls screaming derogatory slurs - CBC.ca

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