The Canadian Arabic newspaper, Al Forqan, based in Windsor, Ontario and “distributed in Canada and the United States described a terrorist attack against a synagogue in Jerusalem as a ‘qualitative attack’ carried out by ‘two heroes.'”

Six people were murdered in the jihad attack; the Palestinian Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) claimed responsibility.

Would a Jewish paper ever publish such a report if Muslims had been murdered in cold blood in a mosque? Of course not, but imagine the outcry if the same such despicable report were indeed published by a Jewish or Christian publication. But Jewish and Christian papers do not publish such hate and incitement. The bigotry of low expectations and the guilt for past wrongs continue to allow for a two-tier legal system, one that enables victimizers and denigrates victims and potential victims. A system that in fact ignores a stark breach of hate laws on one side (as we see in this case) and on the other, punishes people for calling out hate, discrimination, murder and intolerance of jihadists and Islamic supremacists.

Not long before Christmas, Al Forqan also published “hadith, accounts of sayings attributed directly to Muhammad, that speaks about Muslims killing Jews as part of the final Islamic fight to establish Sharia law and justice in the entire world.”

The founder, CEO and Editor-in-Chief of Al Forqan Newspaper‎ is Mohammed Khalifeh. He once “posted a video on his Facebook page accompanied with the following caption: ‘The grandsons of al-Mukhatr – a poem dedicated to the mujahideen of Gaza and Palestine. We ask Allah to help them, to plant their feet firmly. I hope you like it.'”

“Canadian Arabic Newspaper Called Terrorist Attack on Synagogue a ‘Qualitative Attack,'” by Jonathan Halevi, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, February 20, 2019: